This is a guide to installation and administration for R.
The current version of this document is 2.9.0 (2009-04-17).
ISBN 3-900051-09-7
Sources, binaries and documentation for R can be obtained via CRAN, the “Comprehensive R Archive Network” whose current members are listed at http://cran.r-project.org/mirrors.html.
The simplest way is to download the most recent R-x.y.z.tar.gz file, and unpack it with
tar xvfz R-x.y.z.tar.gz
on systems that have GNU tar installed. On other systems you need at least to have the gzip program installed. Then you can use
gzip -dc R-x.y.z.tar.gz | tar xvf -
The pathname of the directory into which the sources are unpacked should not contain spaces, as make (specifically GNU make 3.81) does not expect spaces.
If you want the build to be usable by a group of users, set umask
before unpacking so that the files will be readable by the target group
(e.g., umask 022
to be usable by all users). (Keep this
setting of umask
whilst building and installing.)
A patched version of the current release, ‘r-patched’ and the current development version, ‘r-devel’, are available as daily tarballs and via access to the R Subversion repository. (For the two weeks prior to the release of a minor (2.x.0) version, ‘r-patched’ will refer to beta/release candidates of the upcoming release, the patched version of the current release being available only via Subversion.)
The tarballs are available from ftp://ftp.stat.math.ethz.ch/pub/Software/R/. Download either R-patched.tar.gz or R-devel.tar.gz (or the .tar.bz2 versions) and unpack as described in the previous section. They are built in exactly the same way as distributions of R releases.
Sources are also available via https://svn.R-project.org/R/, the R Subversion repository. If you have a Subversion client (see http://subversion.tigris.org/), you can check out and update the current r-devel from https://svn.r-project.org/R/trunk/ and the current r-patched from ‘https://svn.r-project.org/R/branches/R-x-y-branch/’ (where x and y are the major and minor number of the current released version of R). E.g., use
svn checkout https://svn.r-project.org/R/trunk/ path
to check out ‘r-devel’ into directory path. The alpha, beta and RC versions of an upcoming x.y.0 release are available from ‘https://svn.r-project.org/R/branches/R-x-y-branch/’ in the four-week period prior to the release.
Note that ‘https:’ is required, and that the SSL certificate for the Subversion server of the R project is
Certificate information: - Hostname: svn.r-project.org - Valid: from Jul 16 08:10:01 2004 GMT until Jul 14 08:10:01 2014 GMT - Issuer: Department of Mathematics, ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland, CH - Fingerprint: c9:5d:eb:f9:f2:56:d1:04:ba:44:61:f8:64:6b:d9:33:3f:93:6e:ad
(currently, there is no “trusted certificate”). You can accept this certificate permanently and will not be asked about it anymore.
Note that retrieving the sources by e.g. wget -r or svn export from that URL will not work: the Subversion information is needed to build R.
The Subversion repository does not contain the current sources for the
recommended packages, which can be obtained by rsync or
downloaded from CRAN. To use rsync
to install the
appropriate sources for the recommended packages, run
./tools/rsync-recommended
from the top-level of the R sources.
If downloading manually from CRAN, do ensure that you have the correct versions of the recommended packages: if the number in the file VERSION is ‘x.y.z’ you need to download the contents of ‘http://CRAN.R-project.org/src/contrib/dir’, where dir is ‘x.y.z/Recommended’ for r-devel or x.y-patched/Recommended for r-patched, respectively, to directory src/library/Recommended in the sources you have unpacked. After downloading manually you need to execute tools/link-recommended from the top level of the sources to make the requisite links in src/library/Recommended. A suitable incantation from the top level of the R sources using wget might be
wget -r -l1 --no-parent -A\*.gz -nd -P src/library/Recommended \ http://CRAN.R-project.org/src/contrib/dir ./tools/link-recommended
R will configure and build under a number of common Unix and Unix-alike platforms including ‘cpu-*-linux-gnu’ for the ‘alpha’, ‘arm’, ‘hppa’, ‘ix86’, ‘ia64’, ‘m68k’, ‘mips’, ‘mipsel’, ‘powerpc’, ‘s390’, ‘sparc’, and ‘x86_64’ CPUs, ‘powerpc-apple-darwin’, ‘i386-apple-darwin’, ‘x86_64-apple-darwin’, ‘x86_64-sun-solaris’, and ‘powerpc-ibm-aix6*’ as well as probably (it is tested less frequently on these platforms) ‘i386-*-freebsd’, ‘x86_64-*-freebsd’, ‘i386-*-netbsd’, ‘i386-*-openbsd’, ‘i386-sun-solaris’, ‘sparc-sun-solaris’, ‘mips-sgi-irix’ and ‘alpha-dec-osf*’.
In addition, binary distributions are available for some common Linux distributions and for Mac OS X. See the FAQ for current details. These are installed in platform-specific ways, so for the rest of this chapter we consider only building from the sources.
First review the essential and useful tools and libraries in Essential and useful other programs under Unix, and install those you want or need. Ensure that the environment variable TMPDIR is either unset (and /tmp exists and can be written in and executed from) or points to a valid temporary directory.
Choose a place to install the R tree (R is not just a binary, but has additional data sets, help files, font metrics etc). Let us call this place R_HOME. Untar the source code. This should create directories src, doc, and several more. (At this point North American readers should consult Setting paper size.) Issue the following commands:
./configure make
(See Using make if your make is not called ‘make’.)
Then check the built system works correctly by
make check
Failures are not necessarily problems as they might be caused by missing
functionality,1 but you
should look carefully at any reported discrepancies. (Some non-fatal
errors are expected in locales that do not support Latin-1, in
particular in true C
locales and non-UTF-8 non-European locales.)
A failure in tests/ok-errors.R may indicate inadequate resource
limits (see Running R).
More comprehensive testing can be done by
make check-devel
or
make check-all
see tests/README.
If the command configure and make commands execute successfully, the R binary will be copied to R_HOME/bin/exec/R. In addition, a shell-script front-end called R will be created and copied to R_HOME/bin. You can copy this script to a place where users can invoke it, for example to /usr/local/bin/R. You could also copy the man page R.1 to a place where your man reader finds it, such as /usr/local/man/man1. If you want to install the complete R tree to, e.g., /usr/local/lib/R, see Installation. Note: you do not need to install R: you can run it from where it was built.
You do not necessarily have to build R in the top-level source directory (say, TOP_SRCDIR). To build in BUILDDIR, run
cd BUILDDIR TOP_SRCDIR/configure make
and so on, as described further below. This has the advantage of always keeping your source tree “clean” and is particularly recommended when you work with a version of R from Subversion. (You may need GNU make to allow this, and the pathname of the build directory should not contain spaces.)
Make will also build plain text help pages as well as HTML and
LaTeX versions of the R object documentation (the three kinds can
also be generated separately using make help
, make html
and make latex
).
For those obtaining R via Subversion, one additional step is necessary:
make vignettes
which makes the grid vignettes (which are contained in the tarballs): it takes several minutes.
Now rehash
if necessary, type R, and read the R manuals
and the R FAQ (files FAQ or
doc/manual/R-FAQ.html, or
http://CRAN.R-project.org/doc/FAQ/R-FAQ.html which always
has the latest version).
There is a set of manuals that can be built from the sources,
To make these (except ‘fullrefman’), use
make dvi to create DVI versions make pdf to create PDF versions make info to create info files (not ‘refman’).
You will not be able to build any of these unless you have makeinfo version 4.7 or later installed, and for DVI or PDF you must have texi2dvi and texinfo.tex installed (which are part of the GNU texinfo distribution but are, especially texinfo.tex, often made part of the TeX package in re-distributions).
The DVI versions can be previewed and printed using standard programs such as xdvi and dvips. The PDF versions can be viewed using any recent PDF viewer: they have hyperlinks that can be followed. The info files are suitable for reading online with Emacs or the standalone GNU Info. The DVI and PDF versions will be created using the papersize selected at configuration (default ISO a4): this can be overridden by setting R_PAPERSIZE on the make command line, or setting R_PAPERSIZE in the environment and using make -e. (If re-making the manuals for a different papersize, you should first delete the file doc/manual/version.texi.)
There are some issues with making the reference manual, and in particular with the PDF version refman.pdf. The help files contain both ISO Latin1 characters (e.g. in text.Rd) and upright quotes, neither of which are contained in the standard LaTeX Computer Modern fonts. We have provided four alternatives:
times
lm
times
.
cm-super
ae
The default can be overridden by setting the environment variables R_RD4PDF and R_RD4DVI. (On Unix, these will be picked up at install time.) The default value for R_RD4PDF is ‘times,hyper’: omit ‘hyper’ if you do not want hyperlinks, e.g. for printing. The default for R_RD4DVI is ‘ae’.
To ensure that the installed tree is usable by the right group of users,
set umask
appropriately (perhaps to ‘022’) before unpacking
the sources and throughout the build process.
After
./configure make make check
(or, when building outside the source,
TOP_SRCDIR/configure
, etc) have been completed
successfully, you can install the complete R tree to your system by
typing
make install
This will install to the following directories:
where prefix is determined during configuration (typically /usr/local) and can be set by running configure with the option --prefix, as in
./configure --prefix=/where/you/want/R/to/go
This causes make install to install the R executable to /where/you/want/R/to/go/bin, and so on. The prefix of the installation directories can be seen in the status message that is displayed at the end of configure. You can install into another directory tree by using
make prefix=/path/to/here install
at least with GNU make (but not e.g. Solaris 8's make).
More precise control is available at configure time via options: see configure --help for details. (However, many of them are currently unused.)
Configure options --bindir and --mandir are supported and govern where a copy of the R script and the man page are installed.
The configure option --libdir controls where the main R files are installed: the default is ‘eprefix/LIBnn’, where eprefix is the prefix used for installing architecture-dependent files, defaults to prefix, and can be set via the configure option --exec-prefix.
Each of bindir
, mandir
and libdir
can also be
specified on the make install command line (at least for GNU
make).
The configure or make variables rdocdir
and
rsharedir
can be used to install the system-independent
doc and share directories to somewhere other than
libdir
. The C header files can be installed to the value of
rincludedir
: note that as the headers are not installed into a
subdirectory you probably want something like
rincludedir=/usr/local/include/R-2.9.0
.
If you want the R home to be something other than libdir/R, use rhome: for example
make install rhome=/usr/local/lib64/R-2.6.0
will use a version-specific R home on a Linux 64-bit system.
If you have made R as a shared/dynamic library you can install it in your system's library directory by
make prefix=/path/to/here install-libR
where prefix
is optional, and libdir
will give more
precise control.
make install-strip
will install stripped executables, and on platforms where this is supported, stripped libraries in directories lib and modules and in the standard packages.
To install DVI, info and PDF versions of the manuals, use one or more of
make install-dvi make install-info make install-pdf
Once again, it is optional to specify prefix
, libdir
or
rhome
(the DVI and PDF manuals are installed under the R home
directory).
More precise control is possible. For info, the setting used is that of
infodir
(default ‘prefix/info’, set by configure
option --infodir). The DVI and PDF files are installed into
the R doc tree, set by the make variable
rdocdir
.
A staged installation is possible, that it is installing R into a
temporary directory in order to move the installed tree to its final
destination. In this case prefix
(and so on) should reflect the
final destination, and DESTDIR should be used: see
http://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/html_node/DESTDIR.html.
You can optionally install the run-time tests that are part of make check-all by
make install-tests
which populates a tests directory in the installation.
You can uninstall R by
make uninstall
specifying prefix
etc in the same way as specified for
installation.
This will also uninstall any installed manuals. There are specific targets to uninstall DVI, info and PDF manuals in doc/manual/Makefile.
Target uninstall-tests
will uninstall any installed tests, as
well as removing the directory tests containing the test results.
Some platforms can support closely related builds of R which can share all but the executables and dynamic objects. Examples include builds under Solaris for different chips (in particular, 32- and 64-bit builds), 64- and 32- bit builds on ‘x86_64’ Linux and different CPUs (‘ppc’, ‘ppc64’, ‘i386’ and ‘x86_64’) under Mac OS >= 10.4.
R supports the idea of architecture-specific builds, specified by
adding ‘r_arch=name’ to the configure line. Here
name can be anything non-empty, and is used to name subdirectories
of lib, etc, include and libs. Example
names from other systems are the use of sparcv9 on Sparc Solaris
and 32 by gcc
on ‘x86_64’ Linux.
If you have two or more such builds you can install them over each other (and for 32/64-bit builds on one architecture, one build can be done without ‘r_arch’). The space savings can be considerable: on ‘x86_64’ Linux a basic install (without debugging symbols) took 63Mb, and adding a 32-bit build added 6Mb. If you have installed multiple builds you can select which build to run by
R --arch=name
and just running ‘R’ will run the last build that was installed.
R CMD INSTALL
will detect if more than one build is installed and
try to install packages with the appropriate library objects for each.
This will not be done if the package has an executable configure
script or a src/Makefile file. In such cases you can install for
extra builds by
R --arch=name CMD INSTALL --libs-only pkg(s)
If you want to mix sub-architectures compiled on different platforms (for example ‘x86_64’ Linux and ‘i686’ Linux), it is wise to use explicit names for each, and you may also need to set libdir to ensure that they install into the same place.
When sub-architectures are used the version of Rscript in e.g. /usr/bin will be the last installed, but architecture-specific versions will be available in e.g. /usr/lib64/R/bin/execR_ARCH. Normally all installed architectures will run on the platform so the architecture of Rscript does not matter.
When running post-install tests with sub-architectures, use
R --arch=name CMD make check[-devel|all]
to select a sub-architecture to check.
On Linux, there is an alternative mechanism for mixing 32-bit and 64-bit libraries known as multilib. If a Linux distribution supports multilib, then parallel builds of R may be installed in the sub-directories lib (32-bit) and lib64 (64-bit). The build to be run may then be chosen using the setarch command. For example, a 32-bit build may be chosen by
setarch i686 R
The setarch command is only operational if both 32-bit and 64-bit builds are installed. If there is only one installation of R, then this will always be run regardless of the architecture specified by the setarch command.
There can be problems with installing packages on the non-native
architecture. It is a good idea to run e.g. setarch i686 R
for
sessions in which packages are to be installed, even if that is the only
version of R installed (since this tells the package installation
code the architecture needed).
At present there is a potential problem with packages using Java, as the post-install for a ‘i386’ RPM on ‘x86_64’ Linux reconfigures Java and will find the ‘x86_64’ Java. If you know where a 32-bit Java is installed you may be able to run (as root)
export JAVA_HOME=<path to jre directory of 32-bit Java> setarch i686 R CMD javareconf
to get a suitable setting.
When this mechanism is used, the version of Rscript in e.g. /usr/bin will be the last installed, but an architecture-specific version will be available in e.g. /usr/lib64/R/bin. Normally all installed architectures will run on the platform so the architecture of Rscript does not matter.
Full testing is possible only if the test files have been installed with
make install-tests
which populates a tests directory in the installation.
If this has been done, two testing routes are available.
The first is to move to the home directory of the R installation
(as given by R.home()
) and run
cd tests ## followed by one of ../bin/R CMD make check ../bin/R CMD make check-devel ../bin/R CMD make check-all
and other useful targets are test-BasePackages
and
test-Recommended
to the run tests of the standard and
recommmended packages (if installed) respectively.
This re-runs all the tests relevant to the installed R (including for example code in the package vignettes), but not for example the ones checking the example code in the manuals nor making the standalone Rmath library. This can occasionally be useful when the operating environment has been changed, for example by OS updates or by substituting the BLAS (see Shared BLAS).
Alternatively, the installed R can be run, preferably with --vanilla. Then
library("tools") testInstalledBasic("both") testInstalledPackages("base") testInstallPackages("recommended")
runs the basic tests and then all the tests on the standard and recommended packages. These tests can be run from anywhere: they write their results in the tests folder of the R home directory. They run slightly fewer tests than the first approach: in particular they do not test Internet access.
It is possible to test the installed packages (but not the
package-specific tests) by testInstallPackages
even if
make install-tests was not run.
The bin/windows directory of a CRAN site contains binaries for a base distribution and a large number of add-on packages from CRAN to run on Windows 2000 or later on ix86 CPUs (including AMD64/EM64T chips and Windows x64).
Your file system must allow long file names (as is likely except perhaps for some network-mounted systems).
Installation is via the installer R-2.9.0-win32.exe. Just double-click on the icon and follow the instructions. You can uninstall R from the Control Panel. (Note that you will probably (depending on the Windows language settings) be asked to choose a language for installation, and that choice applies to both installation and un-installation but not to running R itself.)
See the R Windows FAQ for more details on the binary installer.
If you want to build R from the sources, you will first need to collect, install and test an extensive set of tools. See The Windows toolset (and perhaps updates in http://www.murdoch-sutherland.com/Rtools/) for details.
The Rtools.exe executable installer described in The Windows toolset also includes some additions to the R source as
noted below. You should run it first, to obtain a working tar
and other necessities. Choose a “Full installation”, and install
the extra files into your intended R source directory, e.g.
C:/R. The directory name should not contain spaces. We
will call this directory R_HOME below.
To avoid warnings you may need to set the environment variable CYGWIN to ‘nodosfilewarning’.
You need to collect the following sets of files:
tar zxvf R-2.9.0.tar.gz
to create the source tree in R_HOME. Beware: do use tar to extract the sources rather than tools such as WinZip that do not understand about symbolic links.
It is also possible to obtain the source code using Subversion; see Obtaining R for details.
make
link-recommended
. If you have an Internet
connection, you can do this automatically using
make rsync-recommended
USE_ATLAS
and ATLAS_PATH
in the file MkRules. Set
USE_ATLAS = YES
and ATLAS_PATH
to where the ATLAS
libraries are located. You will need to make the libraries
yourself2: none of the binaries we have seen are compiled for the
correct compiler. Since R has its own ‘xerbla’ it is necessary
to delete that in ATLAS by
ar d /path/to/libf77blas.a xerbla.o
There used to be support for AMD's AMD Core Math Library (ACML) and Kazushige Goto's BLAS, but neither is currently available for use with the compilers used.
The following additional items are normally installed by Rtools.exe. If instead you choose to do a completely manual build you will also need
libpng
and jpeg
sources (available, e.g., from
http://www.libpng.org/,
ftp://ftp.uu.net/graphics/[png,jpeg],
http://www.libtiff.org/). You will need files
libpng-1.2.18.tar.gz, jpegsrc.v6b.tar.gz,
tiff-3.8.0.tar.gz or later.
Working in the directory R_HOME/src/gnuwin32/bitmap,
install the libpng
and jpeg
sources in sub-directories.
The libpng
sub-directory must be named libpng (as required
by the libpng
documentation). The jpeg
sub-directory for
version 6b is named jpeg-6b; if you use a different version, edit
Makefile and change the definition of JPEGDIR
.
Example:
> tar xzvf libpng-1.2.20.tar.gz > mv libpng-1.2.20 libpng > tar xzvf jpegsrc.v6b.tar.gz > tar xzvf tiff-3.8.2.tar.gz > mv tiff-3.8.2/libtiff . > rm -rf libtiff-3.8.2
You may need to compile under a case-honouring file system: we found that a samba-mounted file system (which maps all file names to lower case) did not work.
Open a command window at R_HOME/src/gnuwin32. Edit MkRules to set the appropriate paths as needed and to set the type(s) of help that you want built. Beware: MkRules contains tabs and some editors (e.g., WinEdt) silently remove them. Then run
make all recommended
and sit back and wait while the basic compile takes place.
Notes:
malloc
in the file
R_HOME/src/gnuwin32/malloc.c is used for R's internal memory
allocations. You can opt out of this by commenting the line
LEA_MALLOC=YES
in MkRules, in which case the
malloc
in msvcrt.dll is used. This does work but
imposes a considerable performance penalty.
make -j4 all make recommended
but this is only likely to be worthwhile on a multi-core machine with ample memory. Note that this may sometimes stop and have to be restarted.
The file R_HOME/bin/Rbitmap.dll is not built automatically.
Running make
in R_HOME/src/gnuwin32/bitmap
or make bitmapdll
in R_HOME/src/gnuwin32
should build Rbitmap.dll and install it in R_HOME/bin.
You can test a build by running make check
. You may need to set
TMPDIR to the absolute path to a suitable temporary directory: the
default is ‘c:/TEMP’. (Use forward slashes and do not use a path
including spaces. It will be ignored if not set to a directory.)
The recommended packages can be checked by
make check-recommended
Other levels of checking are
make check-devel
for a more thorough check of the R functionality, and
make check-all
for check-devel
and check-recommended
.
The PDF manuals can be made by
make manuals
If you want to make the info versions (not the Reference Manual), use
cd ../../doc/manual make -f Makefile.win info
To make DVI versions of the manuals use
cd ../../doc/manual make -f Makefile.win dvi
(all assuming you have tex and latex installed and in your path).
See the Making the manuals section in the Unix section for setting options such as the paper size.
You need to have the files for a complete R build, including bitmap and Tcl/Tk support and the manuals, as well as the recommended packages and Inno Setup (see The Inno Setup installer).
Once everything is set up
make distribution make check-all
will make all the pieces and the installers and put them in the gnuwin32/cran subdirectory, then check the build. This works by building all the parts in the sequence:
Rpwd.exe (a utility needed in the build) rbuild (the executables, the FAQ docs etc.) rpackage (the base packages) htmldocs (the HTML documentation) bitmapdll (the bitmap support files) recommended (the recommended packages) vignettes (the vignettes in package grid: only needed if building from svn checkout) manuals (the PDF manuals) rinstaller (the install program) crandir (the CRAN distribution directory)
The parts can be made individually if a full build is not needed, but earlier parts must be built before later ones. (The Makefile doesn't enforce this dependency—some build targets force a lot of computation even if all files are up to date.) The first four targets are the default build if just ‘make’ is run.
If you want to customize the installation by adding extra packages,
replace make rinstaller
by something like
make rinstaller EXTRA_PKGS='pkg1 pkg2 pkg3'
An alternative way to customize the installer starting with a binary distribution is to first make a full installation of R from the standard installer (that is, select ‘Full Installation’ from the ‘Select Components’ screen), then add packages and make other customizations to that installation. Then in src/gnuwin32/installer run
make myR IMAGEDIR=rootdir
where rootdir is the path to the root of the customized installation (forward slashes and no spaces, please). This creates an executable with the standard name, R-2.9.0-win32.exe, so please rename it to indicate that it is customized.
The defaults for the startup parameters may also be customized. For example
make myR IMAGEDIR=rootdir MDISDI=1
will create an installer that defaults to installing R to run in SDI mode. See src/gnuwin32/installer/Makefile for the names and values that can be set.
It is also possible to build an installer for use with Microsoft Installer. This is intended for use by sysadmins doing automated installs, and is not recommended for casual use.
It makes use of the Windows Installer XML (WiX) toolkit (wersion 2.0) available from http://wix.sourceforge.net/. (This needs the .NET 1.1 framework installed: it ran on a vanilla Windows XP SP2 machine. Unfortunately the file format has been changed within the same version: currently our code works with releases 2.0.4221.0 and 2.0.5805.0 – the latter is now said to be `production/stable' so hopefully there will be no more format changes.) Once WiX is installed, set the path to its home directory in MkRules.
You need to have the files for a complete R build, including bitmap and Tcl/Tk support and the manuals, as well as the recommended packages. Then
cd installer make msi
which will results in a file of about 40Mb with a name like R-2.6.0-win32.msi. This can be double-clicked to be installed, but those who need it will know what to do with it.
Thanks to David del Campo (Dept of Statistics, University of Oxford) for suggesting WiX and building a prototype installer.
Support for cross-building has been withdrawn as from R 2.9.0.
The Windows installer contains a set of test files used when building R. These are an optional part of the installation, and if it is desired to run tests on the installation these should be selected as well as the help source files (perhaps most easily by doing a `Full Installation').
The Rtools
are not needed to run these tests. but more
comprehensive analysis of errors will be given if diff is in
the path.
Once this has been done, launch either Rgui
or Rterm
,
preferably with --vanilla. Then
library("tools") testInstalledBasic("both") testInstalledPackages("base") testInstallPackages("recommended")
runs the basic tests and then all the tests on the standard and
recommended packages. These tests can be run from anywhere: they write
their results in the tests folder of the R home directory (as
given by R.home()
).
The bin/macosx directory of a CRAN site contains binaries for Mac OS X for a base distribution and a large number of add-on packages from CRAN to run on Mac OS X version 10.4.4 or higher.
The simplest way is to use R-2.9.0.dmg. Just double-click on the icon and the disk image file will be mounted. Read the ReadMe.txt inside the disk image and follow the instructions.
See the R for Mac OS X FAQ for more details.
If you want to build this port from the sources, you can read the above mentioned R for Mac OS X FAQ for full details. You will need to collect and install some tools as explained in the document. Then you have to expand the R sources and configure R appropriately, for example
tar zxvf R-2.9.0.tar.gz cd R-2.9.0 ./configure --with-blas='-framework vecLib' --with-lapack --with-ICU \ --with-aqua --enable-R-framework make
and then sit back and wait. The first two options are the default (and
strongly recommended), and with some toolsets have been essential.
Selecting --with-ICU replaces Apple's wcscoll
with
one3 that works correctly in UTF-8
locales, and is the default as from R 2.9.0.
The second line of options is also default on Mac OS X, but needed only
if you want to build R for use with R.app
Console, and imply
--enable-R-shlib to build R as a shared/dynamic library.
These options configure R to be built and installed as a framework
called R.framework. The default path for R.framework is
/Library/Frameworks but this can be changed at configure time by
specifying the flag --enable-R-framework[=DIR] or at
install time as
make prefix=/where/you/want/R.framework/to/go install
(the R.framework directory should not be included in the path).
For compatibility with the CRAN distribution you may need to specify --with-included-gettext to avoid linking against a ‘libintl’ dynamic library you may have available, for example in /usr/local/lib.
Note that building the R.app GUI console is a separate project: see the FAQ for details.
How to start R and what command-line options are available is discussed in Invoking R.
You should ensure that the shell has set adequate resource limits: R expects a stack size of at least 8MB and to be able to open at least 256 file descriptors. (Any modern OS will have default limits at least as large as these, but apparently NetBSD does not.)
R makes use of a number of environment variables, the default values of many of which are set in file R_HOME/etc/Renviron (there are none set by default on Windows and hence no such file). These are set at configure time, and you would not normally want to change them – a possible exception is R_PAPERSIZE (see Setting paper size). The paper size will be deduced from the ‘LC_PAPER’ locale category if it exists and R_PAPERSIZE is unset, and this will normally produce the right choice from ‘a4’ and ‘letter’ on modern Unix-alikes (but can always be overridden by setting R_PAPERSIZE).
Various environment variables can be set to determine where R creates its per-session temporary directory. The environment variables TMPDIR, TMP and TEMP are searched in turn and the first one which is set and points to a writable area is used. If none do, the final default is /tmp on Unix-alikes and the value of R_USER on Windows.
Some Unix-alike systems are set up to remove files and directories periodically from /tmp, for example by a cron job running tmpwatch. Set TMPDIR to another directory before running long-running jobs on such a system.
Note that TMPDIR will be used to execute configure
scripts when installing packages, so if /tmp
has been mounted as
‘noexec’, TMPDIR needs to be set to a directory from which
execution is allowed.
It is helpful to use the correct terminology. A package is
loaded from a library by the function library()
. Thus a
library is a directory containing installed packages; the main library
is R_HOME/library, but others can be used, for example by
setting the environment variable R_LIBS or using the R function
.libPaths()
.
The set of packages loaded on startup is by default
> getOption("defaultPackages") [1] "datasets" "utils" "grDevices" "graphics" "stats" "methods"
(plus, of course, base) and this can be changed by setting the option in startup code (e.g. in ~/.Rprofile). It is initially set to the value of the environment variable R_DEFAULT_PACKAGES if set (as a comma-separated list). Setting R_DEFAULT_PACKAGES=NULL ensures that only package base is loaded.
Changing the set of default packages is normally used to reduce the set for speed when scripting: in particular not using methods will reduce the start-up time by a factor of two or more (and this is done by Rscript). But it can also be used to customize R, e.g. for class use.
R packages are installed into libraries, which are directories in the file system containing a subdirectory for each package installed there.
R comes with a single library, R_HOME/library which is the value of the R object ‘.Library’ containing the standard and recommended4 packages. Both sites and users can create others and make use of them (or not) in an R session. At the lowest level ‘.libPaths()’ can be used to add paths to the collection of libraries or to report the current collection.
R will automatically make use of a site-specific library R_HOME/site-library if this exists (it does not in a vanilla R installation). This location can be overridden by setting5 ‘.Library.site’ in R_HOME/etc/Rprofile.site, or (not recommended) by setting the environment variable R_LIBS_SITE. Like ‘.Library’, the site libraries are always included by ‘.libPaths()’.
Users can have one or more libraries, normally specified by the environment variable R_LIBS_USER. This has a default value (use ‘Sys.getenv("R_LIBS_USER")’ within an R session to see what it is), but only is used if the corresponding directory actually exists (which by default it will not).
Both R_LIBS_USER and R_LIBS_SITE can specify multiple library paths, separated by colons (semicolons on Windows).
Packages may be distributed in source form or compiled binary form. Installing source packages requires that compilers and tools (including Perl 5.8.0 or later) be installed. Binary packages are platform-specific and generally need no special tools to install, but see the documentation for your platform for details.
Note that you need to specify implicitly or explicitly the library to which the package is to be installed. This is only an issue if you have more than one library, of course.
If installing packages to be used by other users, ensure that the system
umask
is set to give sufficient permissions (see also
Sys.umask
in R).
For most users it suffices to call ‘install.packages(pkgname)’ or its GUI equivalent if the intention is to install a CRAN package and internet access is available.6 On most systems ‘install.packages()’ will allow packages to be selected from a list box.
To install packages from source in Unix use
R CMD INSTALL -l /path/to/library pkg1 pkg2 ...
The part ‘-l /path/to/library’ can be omitted, in which case the first library in R_LIBS is used if set, otherwise the main library R_HOME/library is used. (R_LIBS is looked for in the environment: note that .Renviron is not read by R CMD.) Ensure that the environment variable TMPDIR is either unset (and /tmp exists and can be written in and executed from) or points to a valid temporary directory.
There are a number of options available: use R CMD INSTALL --help
to see the current list.
Alternatively, packages can be downloaded and installed from within
R. First set the option CRAN
to your nearest CRAN
mirror using chooseCRANmirror(). Then download
and install packages pkg1 and pkg2 by
> install.packages(c("pkg1", "pkg2"))
The essential dependencies of the specified packages will also be fetched.
Unless the library is specified (argument lib
) the first library
in the library search path is used: if this is not writable, R will
ask the user (in an interactive session) if the default user library
should be created, and if allowed to will install the packages there.
If you want to fetch a package and all those it depends on that are not already installed, use e.g.
> install.packages("Rcmdr", dependencies = TRUE)
install.packages
can install a source package from a local
.tar.gz file by setting argument repos
to NULL
:
this will be selected automatically if the name given is a single
.tar.gz file.
install.packages
can look in several repositories, specified as a
character vector by the argument repos
: these can include a
CRAN mirror, Bioconductor, Omegahat, local archives, local
files, ...). Function setRepositories()
can select amongst
those the R installation is aware of.
What install.packages
does by default is different on Unix-alikes
(except Mac OS X) and Windows. On Unix-alikes it consults the list of
available source packages on CRAN (or other
repository/ies), downloads the latest version of the package sources,
and installs them (via R CMD INSTALL
). On Windows it looks (by
default) at the list of binary versions of packages available for
your version of R and downloads the latest versions (if any),
although optionally it will also download and install a source package
by setting the type
argument.
On Windows install.packages
can also install a binary package
from a local zip file by setting argument repos
to
NULL
. Rgui.exe
has a menu Packages
with a GUI
interface to install.packages
, update.packages
and
library
.
R CMD INSTALL works in Windows to install source packages if
you have the source-code package files (option “Source Package
Installation Files” in the installer) and toolset (see The Windows toolset) installed. Installation of binary packages must be done by
install.packages
. R CMD INSTALL --help will tell you
the current options under Windows (which differ from those on a
Unix-alike): in particular there is a choice of the types of
documentation to be installed.
If you have only a source package that is known to work with current R and just want a binary Windows build of it, you could make use of the building service offered at http://win-builder.r-project.org/.
On Mac OS X install.packages
works as it does on other Unix-like
systems, but there is an additional type mac.binary
(the default
in the CRAN distribution) that can be passed to install.packages
in order to download and install binary packages from a suitable
repository, and is the default for CRAN builds of R. These Macintosh
binary package files have the extension ‘tgz’. The R GUI
provides for installation of either binary or source packages, from
CRAN or local files.
The R system and package-specific compilation flags can be overridden or
added to by setting the appropriate Make variables in the personal file
HOME/.R/Makevars-R_PLATFORM (but
HOME/.R/Makevars.win on Windows), or if that does not
exist, HOME/.R/Makevars, where ‘R_PLATFORM’ is the
platform for which R was built, as available in the platform
component of the R variable R.version
.
Package developers are encouraged to use this mechanism to enable a reasonable amount of diagnostic messaging (“warnings”) when compiling, such as e.g. -Wall -pedantic for tools from GCC, the Gnu Compiler Collection.
Note that this mechanism can also be used when it necessary to change the optimization level for a particular package. For example
## for C code CFLAGS=-g -O ## for C++ code CXXFLAGS=-g -O ## for Fortran code FFLAGS=-g -O ## for Fortran 95 code FCFLAGS=-g -O
The command update.packages()
is the simplest way to ensure that
all the packages on your system are up to date. Set the repos
argument as in the previous section. The update.packages()
downloads the list of available packages and their current versions,
compares it with those installed and offers to fetch and install any
that have later versions on the repositories.
An alternative interface to keeping packages up-to-date is provided by
the command packageStatus()
, which returns an object with
information on all installed packages and packages available at multiple
repositories. The print
and summary
methods give an
overview of installed and available packages, the upgrade
method
offers to fetch and install the latest versions of outdated packages.
Packages can be removed in a number of ways. From a command prompt they can be removed by
R CMD REMOVE -l /path/to/library pkg1 pkg2 ...
From a running R process they can be removed by
> remove.packages(c("pkg1", "pkg2"), lib = file.path("path", "to", "library"))
Finally, in most installations one can just remove the package directory from the library (but for a package from a bundle, be sure to remove the whole bundle).
Utilities such as install.packages
can be pointed at any
CRAN-style repository, and R users may want to set up their own. The
`base' of a repository is a URL such as
http://www.omegahat.org/R/: this must be an URL scheme that
download.packages
supports (which also includes ‘ftp://’ and
‘file://’). Under that base URL there should be directory trees
for one or more of the following types of package distributions:
"source"
: located at src/contrib and containing
.tar.gz files.
"win.binary"
: located at bin/windows/contrib/x.y for
R versions x.y.z and containing .zip files.
"mac.binary"
: located at
bin/macosx/universal/contrib/x.y for R versions x.y.z
and containing .tgz files. If the repository contains only
packages for a specific architecture, the package distribution type
can be set to "mac.binary.xxx"
where xxx specifies the
architecture, replacing universal
by xxx in the path
above.
Each terminal directory must also contain a PACKAGES file. This
can be a concatenation of the DESCRIPTION files of the packages
separated by blank lines (provided there are no bundles), but only a few
of the fields are needed. The simplest way to set up such a file is to
use function write_PACKAGES
in the tools package, and its
help explains which fields are needed. Optionally there can also be
a PACKAGES.gz file, a gzip-compressed version of
PACKAGES—as this will be downloaded in preference to
PACKAGES it should be included for large repositories.
To add your repository to the list offered by setRepositories()
,
see the help file for that function.
A repository can contain subdirectories, when the descriptions in the PACKAGES file of packages in subdirectories must include a line of the form
Path: path/to/subdirectory
Internationalization refers to the process of enabling support for many human languages, and localization to adapting to a specific country and language.
Historically R worked in the ISO Latin-1 8-bit character set and so covered English and most Western European languages (if not necessarily their currency symbols). Since R 2.1.0 it has supported (where possible) multi-byte character sets such as UTF-8 and others used in Chinese, Japanese and Korean.
Full internationalization of the character sets is enabled unless R is built under Unix-alikes using configure option --disable-mbcs provided the OS can support it: see Configuration on Unix. Under Windows, support for Windows' own MBCS is always included.
All builds of R support all single-byte character sets that the
underlying OS can handle. These are interpreted according to the
current locale
, a sufficiently complicated topic to merit a
separate section. Fully internationalized builds can also handle most
multi-byte locales, in which a single character is represented by one,
two or more consecutive bytes: examples of such locales are those using
UTF-8 (becoming standard under Linux but non-existent under Windows) and
those for Chinese, Japanese and Korean.
The other aspect of the internationalization is support of the translation of messages. This is enabled in almost all builds of R.
A locale is a description of the local environment of the user,
including the preferred language, the encoding of characters, the
currency used and its conventions, and so on. Aspects of the locale are
accessed by the R functions Sys.getlocale
and
Sys.localeconv
.
The system of naming locales is OS-specific. There is quite wide agreement on schemes, but not on the details of their implementation. A locale needs to specify
R is principally concerned with the first (for translations) and third. Note that the charset may be deducible from the language, as some OSes offer only one charset per language, and most OSes have only one charset each for many languages. Note too the remark above about Chinese.
Modern Linux uses the XPG locale specifications which have the form ‘en_GB’, ‘en_GB.utf8’, ‘aa_ER.utf8@saaho’, ‘de_AT.iso885915@euro’, the components being in the order listed above. (See man locale and locale -a for more details.) Similar schemes (but often in different cases) are used by most Unix-alikes: some use ‘.UTF-8’ rather than ‘.utf8’.
Windows also uses locales, but specified in a rather less concise way. Most users will encounter locales only via drop-down menus, but more information and lists can be found at http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/default.asp?url=/library/en-us/vccore98/html/_crt_language_and_country_strings.asp.
It offers only one encoding per language.
Mac OS X supports locales in its own particular way, but the R GUI tries to make this easier for users. See http://developer.apple.com/documentation/MacOSX/Conceptual/BPInternational/ for how users can set their locales. As with Windows, end users will generally only see lists of languages/territories. Users of R in a terminal may need to set the locale to something like ‘en_GB.UTF-8’ if it defaults to ‘C’.
Internally Mac OS X uses a form similar to Linux but without
specifying the encoding (which is UTF-8
). It is based on ICU
locales (http://icu.sourceforge.net/userguide/locale.html) and
not POSIX ones.
The preferred language for messages is by default taken from the locale. This can be overridden first by the setting of the environment variable LANGUAGE and then7 by the environment variables LC_ALL, LC_MESSAGES and LANG. (The last three are normally used to set the locale and so should not be needed, but the first is only used to select the language for messages.) The code tries hard to map locales to languages, but on some systems (notably Windows) the locale names needed for the environment variable LC_ALL do not all correspond to XPG language names and so LANGUAGE may need to be set. (One example is ‘LC_ALL=es’ on Windows which sets the locale to Estonian and the language to Spanish.)
It is usually possible to change the language once R is running
via (not Windows) Sys.setlocale("LC_MESSAGES",
"new_locale")
, or by setting an environment variable such as
LANGUAGE, provided8 the language you are changing to can be output in the current
character set.
Messages are divided into domains, and translations may be available for some or all messages in a domain. R makes use of the following domains.
R
for basic C-level error messages.
R-
pkg for the R stop
, warning
and
message
messages in each package, including R-base
for the
base package.
RGui
for the menus etc of the R for Windows GUI front-end.
Dividing up the messages in this way allows R to be extensible: as packages are loaded, their message translation catalogues can be loaded too.
Translations are looked for by domain according to the currently specified language, as specifically as possible, so for example an Austrian (‘de_AT’) translation catalogue will be used in preference to a generic German one (‘de’) for an Austrian user. However, if a specific translation catalogue exists but does not contain a translation, the less specific catalogues are consulted. For example, R has catalogues for ‘en_GB’ that translate the Americanisms (e.g., ‘gray’) in the standard messages into English. Two other examples: there are catalogues for ‘es’, which is Spanish as written in Spain and these will by default also be used in Spanish-speaking Latin American countries, and also for ‘pt_BR’, which are used for Brazilian locales but not for locales specifying Portugal.
Translations in the right language but the wrong charset be made use of by on-the-fly re-encoding (on almost all systems). The LANGUAGE variable (only) can be a colon-separated list, for example ‘se:de’, giving a set of languages in decreasing order of preference. One special value is ‘en@quot’, which can be used in a UTF-8 locale to have English/American error messages with pairs of quotes translated to Unicode directional quotes.
If no suitable translation catalogue is found or a particular message is not translated in any suitable catalogue, `English'9 is used.
See http://developer.r-project.org/Translations.html for how to prepare and install translation catalogues.
Many current CPUs have both 32- and 64-bit sets of instructions: this has long been true for UltraSparc and more recently for MIPS, PPC and ‘x86_64’ (AMD Opteron and Athlon64, Intel Xeon and Pentium/'Core' supporting EM64T). Many OSes running on such CPUs offer the choice of building a 32-bit or a 64-bit version of R (and details are given below under specific OSes). For most a 32-bit version is the default, but for some (e.g., ‘x86_64’ Linux) 64-bit is.
All current versions of R use 32-bit integers and IEC 6055910 double-precision reals, and so compute to the same precision11 and with the same limits on the sizes of numerical quantities. The principal difference is in the size of the pointers.
64-bit builds have both advantages and disadvantages:
R allocates memory for large objects as needed, and removes any unused ones at garbage collection. When the sizes of objects become an appreciable fraction of the address limit, fragmentation of the address space becomes an issue and there may be no hole available that is the size requested. This can cause more frequent garbage collection or the inability to allocate large objects. As a guide, this will become an issue with objects more than 10% of the size of the address space (around 300Mb) or when the total size of objects in use is around one third (around 1Gb).
So, for speed you may want to use a 32-bit build, but to handle large datasets (and perhaps large files) a 64-bit build. You can build both and install them in the same place: See Sub-architectures.
Even on 64-bit builds of R there are limits on the size of R
objects (see help("Memory-limits")
, some of which stem from the
use of 32-bit integers (especially in FORTRAN code). On all versions of
R, the maximum length (number of elements) of a vector is
2^31-1, about 2 billion, and on 64-bit systems the size of a
block of memory allocated is limited to 2^34-1 bytes (8GB). It
is anticipated these will be raised eventually but routine use of 8GB
objects is (when this was written in 2005) several years off.
Currently the Windows build of R from CRAN is a 32-bit executable. This runs happily on Windows 64 on AMD64 and EM64T, but is limited to an address space of 2 to 4GB (see the `R for Windows FAQ' for details). It will not be possible fro the R project to provide a native version for Windows 64 until suitable non-commercial compilers are available, and currently (early 2009) the experimental version of MinGW for 64-bit Windows is not yet good enough to build a working R. Commercial 64-bit compilers have been used, and R can be be built with such compilers with minimal changes to the sources (and constructing suitable project files).
The routines supporting the distribution and special13 functions in R and a few others are declared in C header file Rmath.h. These can be compiled into a standalone library for linking to other applications. (Note that they are not a separate library when R is built, and the standalone version differs in several ways.)
The makefiles and other sources needed are in directory src/nmath/standalone, so the following instructions assume that is the current working directory (in the build directory tree on Unix if that is separate from the sources).
Rmath.h contains ‘R_VERSION_STRING’, which is a character
string containing the current R version, for example "2.6.0"
.
There is full access to R's handling of NaN
s, Inf
and
-Inf
via special versions of the macros and functions
ISNAN, R_FINITE, R_log, R_pow and R_pow_di
and (extern) constants R_PosInf
, R_NegInf
and NA_REAL
.
There is no support for R's notion of missing values, in particular
not for NA_INTEGER
nor the distinction between NA
and
NaN
for doubles.
A little care is needed to use the random-number routines. You will need to supply the uniform random number generator
double unif_rand(void)
or use the one supplied (and with a shared library or DLL you will have to use the one supplied, which is the Marsaglia-multicarry with an entry point
set_seed(unsigned int, unsigned int)
to set its seeds).
The facilties to change the normal random number generator are available through the constant N01_kind. This takes values from the enumeration type
typedef enum { BUGGY_KINDERMAN_RAMAGE, AHRENS_DIETER, BOX_MULLER, USER_NORM, INVERSION, KINDERMAN_RAMAGE } N01type;
(and ‘USER_NORM’ is not available).
If R has not already be made in the directory tree, configure must tbe run as described in the main build instructions.
Then
make
will make standalone libraries libRmath.a and libRmath.so.
‘make static’ and make shared
will create just one of them.
NB: certain compilers are unable to do compile-time IEEE-754
arithmetic and so cannot compile mlutils.c and several other
files. The known example is old versions of Sun's cc
(e.g.
Forte 6 and 7).
To use the routines in your own C or C++ programs, include
#define MATHLIB_STANDALONE #include <Rmath.h>
and link against ‘-lRmath’ (and ‘-lm’ if needed on your OS). The example file test.c does nothing useful, but is provided to test the process (via make test. Note that you will probably not be able to run it unless you add the directory containing libRmath.so to the LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable.
The targets
make install make uninstall
will (un)install the header Rmath.h and shared and static
libraries (if built). Both prefix=
and DESTDIR are
supported, together with more precise control as described for the main
build.
‘make install’ installs a file for pkg-config to use by e.g.
$(CC) `pkg-config --cflags libRmath` -c test.c $(CC) `pkg-config --libs libRmath` test.o -o test
On some systems ‘make install-strip’ will install a stripped shared library.
You need to set up almost all the tools to make R and then run (in a Unix-like shell)
(cd ../../include; make -f Makefile.win config.h Rconfig.h Rmath.h) make -f Makefile.win
For cmd.exe use
cd ../../include make -f Makefile.win config.h Rconfig.h Rmath.h cd ../nmath/standalone make -f Makefile.win
This creates a static library libRmath.a and a DLL Rmath.dll. If you want an import library libRmath.dll.a (you don't need one), use
make -f Makefile.win shared implib
To use the routines in your own C or C++ programs using MinGW, include
#define MATHLIB_STANDALONE #include <Rmath.h>
and link against ‘-lRmath’. This will use the first found of libRmath.dll.a, libRmath.a and Rmath.dll in that order, so the result depends on which files are present. You should be able to force static or dynamic linking via
-Wl,-Bstatic -lRmath -Wl,dynamic -Wl,-Bdynamic -lRmath
or by linking to explicit files (as in the ‘test’ target in
Makefile.win: this makes two executables, test.exe which
is dynamically linked, and test-static
, which is statically
linked).
It is possible to link to Rmath.dll using other compilers, either directly or via an import library: if you make a MinGW import library as above, you will create a file Rmath.def which can be used (possibly after editing) to create an import library for other systems such as Visual C++.
If you make use of dynamic linking you should use
#define MATHLIB_STANDALONE #define RMATH_DLL #include <Rmath.h>
to ensure that the constants like NA_REAL
are linked correctly.
(Auto-import will probably work with MinGW, but it is better to be
sure. This is likely to also work with VC++, Borland and similar
compilers.)
This appendix gives details of programs you will need to build R on Unix-like platforms, or which will be used by R if found by configure.
Remember that some package management systems (such as RPM and deb) make a distinction between the user version of a package and the development version. The latter usually has the same name but with the extension ‘-devel’ or ‘-dev’: you need both versions installed.
You need a means of compiling C and FORTRAN 77 (see Using FORTRAN). Some add-on packages also need a C++ compiler. Your C
compiler should be IEC 6005914, POSIX 1003.1 and C99-compliant if at all
possible. R tries to choose suitable flags for the C compilers it
knows about, but you may have to set CC
or CFLAGS
suitably. For recent versions of gcc with glibc
this
means including -std=gnu9915. If the compiler is detected as
gcc, -std=gnu99 will be appended to CC
unless
it conflicts with a setting of CFLAGS
.
Unless you do not want to view graphs on-screen you need ‘X11’ installed, including its headers and client libraries. For recent Fedora distributions it means (at least) ‘libX11’, ‘libX11-devel’, ‘libXt’ and ‘libXt-devel’. On Debian we recommend the meta-package ‘xorg-dev’. If you really do not want these you will need to explicitly configure R without X11, using --with-x=no.
The command-line editing depends on the readline
library
available from any GNU mirror: version 4.2 or later is
needed for all the features to be enabled. Otherwise you will need to
configure with --with-readline=no (or equivalent).
The use of multi-byte characters, conversion between encodings
(including for translated messages) and the R iconv
function
depend on having the system iconv
function: this is part of
recent versions of glibc
and many Unixes. You can also install
GNU libiconv
(which is not the same as that in
glibc
), possibly as a plug-in replacement: see
http://www.gnu.org/software/libiconv/. Note that the R
usage requires iconv
to be able to translate between
"latin1"
and "UTF-8"
, to recognize ""
as the
current encoding and to translate to and from the Unicode wide-character
formats "UCS-[24][BL]E"
— this is not true of most commercial
Unixes. This is regarded as essential from R 2.5.0: if you do not
have it will need to configure with --without-iconv (or
equivalent), and make check (and other checks) are likely to
fail.
Perl version 5.8.0 or later, available via http://www.perl.com/CPAN/, is essential.
You will not be able to build most of the manuals unless you have makeinfo version 4.7 or later installed, and if not some of the HTML manuals will be linked to CRAN. (Version 4.6 is known to create incorrect HTML files.) To make DVI or PDF versions of the manuals you will also need texinfo.tex installed (which is part of the GNU ‘texinfo’ distribution but is often made part of the TeX package in re-distributions) as well as texi2dvi (part of the GNU texinfo distribution).
The DVI and PDF documentation and building vignettes needs tex and latex, or pdftex and pdflatex.
If you want to build from the R Subversion repository you need both makeinfo and pdflatex.
The ability to use translated messages makes use of gettext
and
most likely needs GNU gettext
: you do need this to work
with new translations, but otherwise the version contained in the R
sources will be used if no suitable external gettext
is found.
The `modern' version of X11
, jpeg()
, png()
and
tiff()
uses the cairo
and (optionally) Pango
libraries. Cairo version 1.0 or later is required16, and some features require 1.2 or later (and may not
work before 1.4). Pango needs to be at least version 1.10, and 1.12 is
the earliest version we have tested. (For Fedora users we believe the
pango-devel
RPM and its dependencies suffice.) R checks for
pkg-config, and uses that to check first that the
‘pangocairo’ package is installed (and if not, ‘cairo’) and if
additional flags are needed for the ‘cairo-xlib’ package, then if
suitable code can be compiled. These tests will fail if
pkg-config is not installed, and are likely to fail if
cairo
was built statically (unusual). Most systems with
Gtk+
2.8 or later installed will have suitable libraries, but
some (e.g. Solaris 10) may need cairo
added separately. Mac OS
X comes with none of these libraries, but cairo
support has been
added to the binary distribution.
For the best font experience with these devices you need suitable fonts
installed: Linux users will want the urw-fonts
package. Another
useful set of fonts is the `liberation' truetype fonts available at
https://www.redhat.com/promo/fonts/, which cover the Latin,
Greek and Cyrillic alphabets plus a fair range of signs. These share
metrics with Arial, Times New Roman and Courier New, and contain fonts
rather similar to the first two
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberation_fonts).
The bitmapped graphics devices jpeg()
, png()
and
tiff()
need the appropriate headers and libraries installed:
jpeg
(version 6b or later) or libpng
(version 1.2.3 or
later) and zlib
(version 1.1.3 or later) or libtiff
(any
recent version – 3.8.2 was tested) respectively.
The bitmap
and dev2bitmap
devices and also
embedFonts()
use ghostscript
(http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost).
If you have them installed (including the appropriate headers and of
recent enough versions), zlib
, libbz2
and PCRE will be
used if specified by --with-system-zlib,
--with-system-bzlib or --with-system-pcre: otherwise
versions in the R sources will be compiled in. As the latter suffice
and are tested with R you should not need to change this. In
particular, the version of zlib
1.2.3 in the R sources has
enhancements to work with large file systems on 32-bit platforms.
Use of the X11 clipboard selection requires the Xmu
headers and
libraries. These are normally part of an X11 installation (e.g. the
Debian meta-package ‘xorg-dev’), but some distributions have split
this into smaller parts, so for example recent versions of Fedora
require the ‘libXmu’ and ‘libXmu-devel’ RPMs.
Some systems (notably Mac OS X and at least some FreeBSD systems) have
inadequate support for collation in multibyte locales. It is possible
to replace the OS's collation support by that from ICU (International
Components for Unicode, http://www.icu-project.org/), and this
provides much more precise control over collation on all systems. ICU
is available as sources and as binary distributions for (at least) most
Linux distributions, Solaris 9/10, AIX and Windows, usually as
libicu
or icu4c
. It will be used by default where
available (including on Mac OS X >= 10.4).
The tcltk package needs Tcl/Tk >= 8.3 installed: the sources are available at http://www.tcl.tk/. To specify the locations of the Tcl/Tk files you may need the configuration options
or use the configure variables TCLTK_LIBS
and
TCLTK_CPPFLAGS
to specify the flags needed for linking against
the Tcl and Tk libraries and for finding the tcl.h and
tk.h headers, respectively. If you have both 32- and 64-bit
versions of Tcl/Tk installed, setting the paths to the correct config
files may be necessary to avoid confusion between them.
Versions of Tcl/Tk from 8.3.x to 8.5.6 have been used successfully.
configure looks for Java support on the host system, and if it finds it sets some settings which are useful for Java-using packages. JAVA_HOME can be set during the configure run to point to a specific JRE/JDK.
Principal amongst these are some library paths to the Java libraries and JVM, which are stored in environment variable R_JAVA_LD_LIBRARY_PATH in file R_HOME/etc/ldpaths (or a sub-architecture-specific version). A typical setting for Sun Java is
/usr/java/jdk1.5.0_06/jre/lib/amd64/server:/usr/java/jdk1.5.0_06/jre/lib/amd64
Note that this unfortunately depends on the exact version of the JRE/JDK
installed, and so will need updating if the Java installation is
updated. This can be done by running R CMD javareconf
. The
script re-runs Java detection in a manner similar to that of the
configure
script and updates settings in both Makeconf and
R_HOME/etc/ldpaths. See R CMD javareconf --help
for
details.
Another alternative of overriding those setting is to set R_JAVA_LD_LIBRARY_PATH (e.g. in ~/.Renviron), or use /etc/ld.so.conf to specify the Java runtime library paths to the system. Other settings are recorded in etc/Makeconf (or a sub-architecture-specific version), e.g.
JAVA = /usr/bin/java JAVAC = /usr/bin/javac JAVA_HOME = /usr/java/jdk1.5.0_06/jre JAVA_LD_LIBRARY_PATH = $(JAVA_HOME)/lib/amd64/server:$(JAVA_HOME)/lib/amd64:\ $(JAVA_HOME)/../lib/amd64:/usr/local/lib64 JAVA_LIBS = -L$(JAVA_HOME)/lib/amd64/server -L$(JAVA_HOME)/lib/amd64 -L$(JAVA_HOME)/../lib/amd64 -L/usr/local/lib64 -ljvm
where ‘JAVA_LIBS’ contains flags necessary to link JNI programs.
Some of the above variables can be queried using R CMD config
.
The linear algebra routines in R can make use of enhanced BLAS (Basic Linear Algebra Subprograms, http://www.netlib.org/blas/faq.html) routines. However, these have to be explicitly requested at configure time: R provides an internal BLAS which is well-tested and will be adequate for most uses of R.
You can specify a particular BLAS library via a value for the configuration option --with-blas and not to use an external BLAS library by --without-blas (the default). If --with-blas is given with no, its value is taken from the environment variable BLAS_LIBS, set for example in config.site. If neither the option nor the environment variable supply a value, a search is made for a suitable BLAS. If the value is not obviously a linker command (starting with a dash or giving the path to a library), it is prefixed by ‘-l’, so
--with-blas="foo"
is an instruction to link against ‘-lfoo’ to find an external BLAS (which needs to be found both at link time and run time).
The configure code checks that the external BLAS is complete (it must
include all double precision and double complex routines17, as well as
LSAME
), and appears to be usable. However, an external BLAS has
to be usable from a shared object (so must contain position-independent
code), and that is not checked.
Some enhanced BLASes are compiler-system-specific (libsunperf
on
Sun Sparc18, libessl
on IBM, vecLib
on Mac OS X). The
correct incantation for these is usually found via
--with-blas with no value on the appropriate platforms.
Some of the external BLASes are multi-threaded. One issue is that R
profiling (which uses the SIGPROF
signal) may cause problems, and
you may want to disable profiling if you use a multi-threaded BLAS.
Note that using a multi-threaded BLAS can result in taking more CPU time
and even more elapsed time (occasionally dramatically so) than using a
similar single-threaded BLAS.
Note that under Unix (but not under Windows) if R is compiled against a non-default BLAS and --enable-BLAS-shlib is not used, then all BLAS-using packages must also be. So if R is re-built to use an enhanced BLAS then packages such as quantreg will need to be re-installed.
ATLAS (http://math-atlas.sourceforge.net/) is a “tuned” BLAS that runs on a wide range of Unix-alike platforms. Unfortunately it is usually built as a static library that on some platforms cannot be used with shared libraries such as are used in R packages. Be careful when using pre-built versions of ATLAS (they seem to work on ‘ix86’ platforms, but not on ‘x86_64’ ones).
The usual way to specify ATLAS will be via
--with-blas="-lf77blas -latlas"
if the libraries are in the library path, otherwise by
--with-blas="-L/path/to/ATLAS/libs -lf77blas -latlas"
For systems with multiple processors it is possible to use a multi-threaded version of ATLAS, by specifying
--with-blas="-lptf77blas -lpthread -latlas"
Consult its file INSTALL.txt for how to build ATLAS with position-independent code (at least on version 3.8.0): this also describes how to build ATLAS as a shared library.
ATLAS can also be used on Windows: see see Getting the source files when building from source, and R Windows FAQ for adding pre-compiled support to binary versions.
For ‘x86_64’ processors under Linux and Solaris 10 there is the AMD Core Math Library (ACML) http://www.amd.com/acml. For the gcc version we could use
--with-blas="-lacml"
if the appropriate library directory (such as /opt/acml4.2.0/gfortran64/lib) is in the LD_LIBRRARY_PATH. For other compilers, see the ACML documentation. There is a multithreaded Linux version of ACML available for gfortran which needs gcc >= 4.2.0 (or some RedHat versions of 4.1.x). To make use of this you will need something like
--with-blas="-L/opt/acml4.2.0/gfortran64_mp/lib -lacml_mp"
See see Shared BLAS for an alternative (and in many ways preferable) way to use ACML.
Dr Kazushige Goto has written another tuned BLAS which is available for several processors and OSes.
This has been made available in several formats, but is currently available only as source code. For academic use only (after registering) it can be obtained via http://www.tacc.utexas.edu/resources/software/software.php. Once this is built and installed, it can be used by configuring with
--with-blas="-lgoto"
See see Shared BLAS for an alternative (and in many ways preferable) way to use recent versions of the Goto BLAS.
Note that currently a multi-threaded Goto BLAS will be built by default if and only if the building is on a multi-processor system (counting multiple cores and hyperthreading), and at run time the default number of threads is the number of CPUs detected.
It has been reported that on some RedHat-based Linux systems it is
necessary to set GOTO_NUM_THREADS=1
or OMP_NUM_THREADS=1
(to disable multiple threads) in the environment when using a
multi-threaded Goto BLAS, but ours run happily with multiple threads.
For Intel processors under Linux, there is Intel's Math Kernel Library (http://www.intel.com/software/products/mkl/). You are strongly encouraged to read the MKL User's Guide, which is installed with the library, before attempting to link to MKL.
Version 10 of MKL supports two linking models: the default model,
which is backward compatible with version 9 (see below), and the pure
layered model. The layered model gives the user fine-grained control
over four different library layers: interface, threading, computation,
and run-time library support. Some examples of linking to MKL using this
layered model are given below. These examples are for GCC compilers on
‘x86_64’. The choice of interface layer is important on
‘x86_64’ since the Intel Fortran compiler returns complex
values differently from the GNU fortran compiler. You must therefore
use the interface layer that matches your compiler (mkl_intel*
or mkl_gf*
).
R can be linked to a sequential version of MKL by
MKL_LIB_PATH=/opt/intel/mkl/10.0.3.020/lib/em64t/ export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$MKL_LIB_PATH MKL="-L${MKL_LIB_PATH} -lmkl_gf_lp64 -lmkl_sequential -lmkl_lapack -lmkl_core" ./configure --with-blas="$MKL" --with-lapack
The order of the libraries is important. The option --with-lapack is used since MKL contains a copy of LAPACK as well as BLAS (see LAPACK).
Threaded MKL may be used by replacing the line defining the variable MKL
with
MKL="-L${MKL_LIB_PATH} -lmkl_gf_lp64 -lmkl_gnu_thread \ -lmkl_lapack -lmkl_core -liomp5 -lpthread"
The default number of threads will be chosen by the OpenMP* software,
but can be controlled by setting OMP_NUM_THREADS
or
MKL_NUM_THREADS
.
Static MKL may be used with
MKL=" -L${MKL_LIB_PATH} \ -Wl,--start-group \ ${MKL_LIB_PATH}/libmkl_gf_lp64.a \ ${MKL_LIB_PATH}/libmkl_gnu_thread.a \ ${MKL_LIB_PATH}/libmkl_core.a \ -Wl,--end-group \ -lgomp -lpthread"
(Thanks to Ei-Ji Nakama).
The default linking model, which is also used by version 9 of MKL, can be used by
--with-blas="-lmkl -lguide -lpthread"
This is multi-threaded, but in version 9 the number of threads defaults
to 1. It can be increased by setting OMP_NUM_THREADS
. (Thanks to
Andy Liaw for the information.)
Note that the BLAS library will be used for many of the add-on packages as well as for R itself. This means that it is better to use a shared/dynamic BLAS library, as most of a static library will be compiled into the R executable and each BLAS-using package.
R offers the option of compiling the BLAS into a dynamic library
libRblas
stored in R_HOME/lib and linking both R
itself and all the add-on packages against that library.
This is the default on all platforms except AIX unless an external BLAS is specified and found: for the latter it can be used by specifying the option --enable-BLAS-shlib, and it can always be disabled via --disable-BLAS-shlib.
This has both advantages and disadvantages.
libRblas
, and that can be replaced. Note though that any dynamic
libraries the replacement links to will need to be found by the linker:
this may need the library path to be changed in etc/ldpaths.
Another option to change the BLAS in use is to symlink a dynamic BLAS library (such as ACML or Goto's) to R_HOME/lib/libRblas.so. For example, just
mv R_HOME/lib/libRblas.so R_HOME/lib/libRblas.so.keep ln -s /opt/acml4.0.1/gfortran64_mp/lib/libacml_mp.so R_HOME/lib/libRblas.so
will change the BLAS in use to multithreaded ACML. A similar link works for recent versions of the Goto BLAS and for MKL (provided the appropriate lib directory is in the run-time library path or ld.so cache).
Provision is made for using an external LAPACK library, principally to
cope with BLAS libraries which contain a copy of LAPACK (such as
libsunperf
on Solaris, vecLib
on Mac OS X and ACML on
‘ix86’/‘x86_64’ Linux and Solaris). However, the likely
performance gains are thought to be small (and may be negative), and the
default is not to search for a suitable LAPACK library, and this is
definitely not recommended. You can specify a specific LAPACK
library or a search for a generic library by the configuration option
--with-lapack. The default for --with-lapack is to
check the BLAS library and then look for an external library
‘-llapack’. Sites searching for the fastest possible linear
algebra may want to build a LAPACK library using the ATLAS-optimized
subset of LAPACK. To do so specify something like
--with-lapack="-L/path/to/libs -llapack -lcblas"
since the ATLAS subset of LAPACK depends on libcblas
. A value
for --with-lapack can be set via the environment
variable
LAPACK_LIBS, but this will only be used if --with-lapack
is specified (as the default value is no
) and the BLAS library
does not contain LAPACK.
Since ACML contains a full LAPACK, if selected as the BLAS it can be used as the LAPACK via --with-lapack.
If you do use --with-lapack, be aware of potential problems
with bugs in the LAPACK 3.0 sources (or in the posted corrections to those
sources). In particular, bugs in DGEEV
and DGESDD
have
resulted in error messages such as
DGEBRD gave error code -10
(seen with the Debian ‘-llapack’ which was current in late 2002,
Fedora Core 4 Extras ‘-llapack’ in September 2005 and 64-bit
libsunperf
in Forte 7). Other potential problems are incomplete
versions of the libraries: for example libsunperf
from Sun Forte
6.x was missing the entry point for DLANGE
and vecLib
has
omitted the BLAS routine LSAME
. For problems compiling LAPACK
using recent versions of gcc
on ‘ix86’ Linux, see
New platforms.
Please do bear in mind that using --with-lapack is `definitely not recommended': it is provided only because it is necessary on some platforms.
As with all libraries, you need to ensure that they and R were
compiled with compatible compilers and flags. For example, this has
meant that on Sun Sparc using the native compilers the flag
-dalign is needed so libsunperf
can be used.
On some systems it is necessary that an external BLAS/LAPACK was built with the same FORTRAN compiler used to build R: known problems are with R built with gfortran, see Using gfortran.
configure has many options: running
./configure --help
will give a list. Probably the most important ones not covered elsewhere are (defaults in brackets)
Rprof()
[yes]
You can use --without-foo or --disable-foo for the negatives.
You will want to use --disable-R-profiling if you are building a profiled executable of R (e.g. with ‘-pg)’.
Flag --enable-R-shlib causes the make process to build R as a dynamic (shared) library, typically called libR.so, and link the main R executable R.bin against that library. This can only be done if all the code (including system libraries) can be compiled into a dynamic library, and there may be a performance19 penalty. So you probably only want this if you will be using an application which embeds R. Note that C code in packages installed on an R system linked with --enable-R-shlib is linked against the dynamic library and so such packages cannot be used from an R system built in the default way. Also, because packages are linked against R they are on some OSes also linked against the dynamic libraries R itself is linked against, and this can lead to symbol conflicts.
If you need to re-configure R with different options you may need to run
make clean
or even make distclean
before doing so.
R can be compiled with support for multi-byte character sets (MBCS), in particular for UTF-8 locales (which are usually identified by suffix ‘.utf8’ or ‘UTF-8’, something like ‘en_GB.utf8’). UTF-8 is an encoding of Unicode and in principle covers all human languages simultaneously: however, a given system may not have fonts capable of displaying more than a few of these languages.
Support for MBCS is selected if possible at configure time
(unless disabled with --disable-mbcs). This will check for a
large number of features, notably support for the C99/UNIX98 wide
character functions, for UTF-8 or MBCS support in X11 and for
iconv with a rich enough functionality. If enough of these
are found, MBCS
will be listed as one of the “Additional
capabilities”. Then if R is started in a UTF-8 locale it assumes
that the terminal will supply and display UTF-8-encoded
characters20.
If run in a single-byte locale, R behaves almost exactly as if it was
configured with --disable-mbcs.
A version of R built with MBCS support can also be run in other multi-byte locales, for example those using the EUC-JP, EUC-KR and EUC-TW encodings on Unix-alikes and the code pages for Chinese, Japanese and Korean on Windows.
Translation of messages is supported via GNU gettext
unless
disabled by the configure option --disable-nls or the
underlying OS has insufficiently standard C functions to support it.
The configure
report will show NLS
as one of the
`Additional capabilities' if support has been compiled in, and running
in an English locale (but not the C
locale) will include
Natural language support but running in an English locale
in the greeting on starting R.
If you need or want to set certain configure variables to something other than their default, you can do that by either editing the file config.site (which documents all the variables you might want to set) or on the command line as
./configure VAR=value
If you are building in a directory different from the sources, there can be copies of config.site in the source and the build directories, and both will be read (in that order). To force a single file to be read, set the environment variable CONFIG_SITE to the location of the file.
These variables are precious, implying that they do not have to be exported to the environment, are kept in the cache even if not specified on the command line and checked for consistency between two configure runs (provided that caching is used), and are kept during automatic reconfiguration as if having been passed as command line arguments, even if no cache is used.
See the variable output section of configure --help
for a list of
all these variables.
If you find you need to alter configure variables, it is worth noting that some settings may be cached in the file config.cache, and it is a good idea to remove that file (if it exists) before re-configuring. Note that caching is turned off by default: use the command line option --config-cache (or -C) to enable caching.
One common variable to change is R_PAPERSIZE, which defaults to ‘a4’, not ‘letter’. (Valid values are ‘a4’, ‘letter’, ‘legal’ and ‘executive’.)
This is used both when configuring R to set the default, and when running R to override the default. It is also used to set the papersize when making DVI and PDF manuals.
The configure default will most often be ‘a4’ if R_PAPERSIZE is unset. (If the (Debian Linux) program paperconf is found or the environment variable PAPERSIZE is set, these are used to produce the default.)
Another precious variable is R_BROWSER, the default browser, which should take a value of an executable in the user's path or specify a full path.
If you have libraries and header files, e.g., for GNU
readline, in non-system directories, use the variables LDFLAGS
(for libraries, using ‘-L’ flags to be passed to the linker) and
CPPFLAGS
(for header files, using ‘-I’ flags to be passed to
the C/C++ preprocessors), respectively, to specify these locations.
These default to ‘-L/usr/local/lib’ (LDFLAGS
,
‘-L/usr/local/lib64’ on most 64-bit Linux OSes) and
‘-I/usr/local/include’ (CPPFLAGS
) to catch the most common
cases. If libraries are still not found, then maybe your
compiler/linker does not support re-ordering of -L and
-l flags (this has been reported to be a problem on HP-UX with
the native cc). In this case, use a different compiler (or a
front end shell script which does the re-ordering).
These flags can also be used to build a faster-running version of R.
On most platforms using gcc, having ‘-O3’ in
CFLAGS
produces worthwhile performance gains. On systems using
the GNU linker (especially those using R as a shared library), it is
likely that including ‘-Wl,-O1’ in LDFLAGS
is worthwhile,
and on recent systems21
‘'-Bdirect,--hash-style=both,-Wl,-O1'’ is recommended at
http://lwn.net/Articles/192624/. Tuning compilation to a
specific CPU family (e.g. ‘-mtune=core2’ for gcc) can
give worthwhile performance gains, especially on older architectures
such as ‘ix86’.
The default settings for making the manuals are controlled by R_RD4PDF, R_RD4DVI and R_PAPERSIZE.
By default the shell scripts such as R will be ‘#!/bin/sh’ scripts (or using the SHELL chosen by configure). This is almost always satisfactory, but on a few systems /bin/sh is not a Bourne shell or clone, and the shell to be used can be changed by setting the configure variable R_SHELL to a suitable value (a full path to a shell, e.g. /usr/local/bin/bash).
To compile R, you will most likely find it easiest to use GNU make. On Solaris 2.6/7/8 in particular, you need a version of GNU make different from 3.77; 3.79.1 and later work fine, as does the Sun make. The native make is reported to fail on SGI Irix 6.5 and Alpha/OSF1 (aka Tru64).
To build in a separate directory you need a make that uses the
VPATH
variable, for example GNU make, or Sun
make on Solaris 2.7 or later.
dmake has also been used. e.g, on Solaris 10.
If you want to use a make by another name, for example if your
GNU make is called ‘gmake’, you need to set the
variable MAKE
at configure time, for example
./configure MAKE=gmake
Note the comment in Installation about using a parallel make.
To compile R, you need a FORTRAN compiler. The default
is to search for
f95, fort, xlf95,
ifort, ifc, efc, pgf95
lf95, gfortran, ftn, g95,
f90, xlf90, pghpf, pgf90,
epcf90,
g77, f77, xlf, frt,
pgf77, cf77, fort77, fl32,
af77 (in that order)22, and use whichever is found first; if none is found,
R cannot be compiled.
However, if CC is gcc, the matching FORTRAN compiler
(g77 for gcc 3 and gfortran
for
gcc 4) is used if available.
The search mechanism can be changed using the configure variable
F77
which specifies the command that runs the FORTRAN 77
compiler. If your FORTRAN compiler is in a non-standard location, you
should set the environment variable PATH accordingly before
running configure, or use the configure variable F77
to
specify its full path.
If your FORTRAN libraries are in slightly peculiar places, you should also look at LD_LIBRARY_PATH or your system's equivalent to make sure that all libraries are on this path.
Note that only FORTRAN compilers which convert identifiers to lower case are supported.
You must set whatever compilation flags (if any) are needed to ensure
that FORTRAN integer
is equivalent to a C int
pointer and
FORTRAN double precision
is equivalent to a C double
pointer. This is checked during the configuration process.
Some of the FORTRAN code makes use of COMPLEX*16
variables, which
is a Fortran 90 extension. This is checked for at configure
time23, but you may need to avoid
compiler flags24 asserting
FORTRAN 77 compliance.
For performance reasons25 you may want to choose a FORTRAN 90/95 compiler.
It is possible to use f2c, the FORTRAN-to-C converter
(http://www.netlib.org/f2c), via a script. (An example script
is given in scripts/f77_f2c: this can be customized by setting
the environment variables F2C, F2CLIBS, CC and
CPP.) You may need to ensure that the FORTRAN type integer
is translated to the C type int
. Normally f2c.h contains
‘typedef long int integer;’, which will work on a 32-bit platform
but not on a 64-bit platform. If your compiler is not gcc you
will need to set FPICFLAGS appropriately.
gfortran is the F95 compiler that is part of gcc 4.x.y. There were problems compiling R with the first release (gcc 4.0.0) and more with pre-releases, but these are resolved in later versions.
On Linux ‘x86_64’ systems there is an incompatibility in the
return conventions for double-complex functions between
gfortran and g77 which results in the final example
in example(eigen)
hanging or segfaulting under external BLASs
built under g77. This should be detected by a
configure test.
The default FFLAGS
chosen (by autoconf) for a GNU
FORTRAN compiler is ‘-g -O2’. This seems not to be documented for
gfortran, and has caused problems (segfaults and infinite
loops) on ‘x86_64’ Linux (and the optimizer will be shared with
other platforms on that CPU type). A maximum optimization of ‘-O’
is recommended there.
A wide range of flags can be set in the file config.site or as configure variables on the command line. We have already mentioned
CPPFLAGS
LDFLAGS
and others include
CFLAGS
MAIN_CFLAGS
SHLIB_CFLAGS
FFLAGS
SAFE_FFLAGS
MAIN_FFLAGS
SHLIB_FFLAGS
MAIN_LDFLAGS
SHLIB_LDFLAGS
LIBnn
CPICFLAGS
FPICFLAGS
CXXPICFLAGS
FCPICFLAGS
DEFS
Library paths specified as -L/lib/path in LDFLAGS
are
collected together and prepended to LD_LIBRARY_PATH (or your
system's equivalent), so there should be no need for -R or
-rpath flags.
Variables such as CPICFLAGS are determined where possible by configure. Some systems allows two types of PIC flags, for example ‘-fpic’ and ‘-fPIC’, and if they differ the first allows only a limited number of symbols in a shared library. Since R as a shared library has about 6200 symbols, if in doubt use the larger version.
To compile a profiling version of R, one might for example want to use ‘MAIN_CFLAGS=-pg’, ‘MAIN_FFLAGS=-pg’, ‘MAIN_LDFLAGS=-pg’ on platforms where ‘-pg’ cannot be used with position-independent code.
Beware: it may be necessary to set CFLAGS
and
FFLAGS
in ways compatible with the libraries to be used: one
possible issue is the alignment of doubles, another is the way
structures are passed.
On some platforms configure will select additional flags for
CFLAGS
, CPPFLAGS
, FFLAGS
, CXXFLAGS
and
LIBS
in R_XTRA_CFLAGS
(and so on). These are for options
which are always required, for example to force IEC 60559
compliance.
This section provides some notes on building R on different Unix-like platforms. These notes are based on tests run on one or two systems in each case with particular sets of compilers and support libraries. Success in building R depends on the proper installation and functioning of support software; your results may differ if you have other versions of compilers and support libraries.
The ‘X11()’ graphics device is the one started automatically on Unix-alikes when plotting. As its name implies, it displays on a (local or remote) X server, and relies on the services and in particular the fonts provided by the X server. So if you sometimes use R at a console and sometimes remotely from an X11 session running on a Windows machine, you may have to setup the fonts differently for the two usages.
The `modern' version of the ‘X11()’ device is based on ‘cairo’ graphics and uses ‘fontconfig’ to pick and render fonts. This is done on the server, and although there can be selection issues, they are more amenable than the issues with ‘X11()’ discussed in the rest of this section.
When X11 was designed, most displays were around 75dpi, whereas today they are of the order of 100dpi or even higher. If you find that X11() is reporting26 missing font sizes, especially larger ones, it is likely that you are not using scalable fonts and have not installed the 100dpi versions of the X11 fonts. The names and details differ by system, but will likely have something like Fedora's
xorg-x11-fonts-75dpi xorg-x11-fonts-100dpi xorg-x11-fonts-truetype xorg-x11-fonts-Type1 xorg-x11-fonts-cyrillic
and you need to ensure that the ‘-100dpi’ versions are installed and on the X11 font path (check via xset -q). The ‘X11()’ device does try to set a pointsize and not a pixel size: laptop users may find the default setting of 12 too large (although very frequently laptop screens are set to a fictitious dpi to appear like a scaled-down desktop screen).
More complicated problems can occur in non-Western-European locales, so
if you are using one, the first thing to check is that things work in
the C
locale. The likely issues are a failure to find any fonts
or glyphs being rendered incorrectly (often as a pair of ASCII
characters). X11 works by being asked for a font specification and
coming up with its idea of a close match. For text (as distinct from
the symbols used by plotmath), the specification is the first element of
the option "X11fonts"
which defaults to
"-adobe-helvetica-%s-%s-*-*-%d-*-*-*-*-*-*-*"
If you are using a single-byte encoding, for example ISO 8859-2 in Eastern Europe or KOI8-R in Russian, use xlsfonts to find an appropriate family of fonts in your encoding (the last field in the listing). If you find none, it is likely that you need to install further font packages, such as ‘xorg-x11-fonts-cyrillic’ shown in the listing above.
Multi-byte encodings (most commonly UTF-8) are even more complicated. There are few fonts in ‘iso10646-1’, the Unicode encoding, and they only contain a subset of the available glyphs (and are often fixed-width designed for use in terminals). In such locales fontsets are used, made up of fonts encoded in other encodings. If the locale you are using has an entry in the ‘XLC_LOCALE’ directory (typically /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/locale, it is likely that all you need to do is to pick a suitable font specification that has fonts in the encodings specified there. If not, you may have to get hold of a suitable locale entry for X11. This may mean that, for example, Japanese text can be displayed when running in ‘ja_JP.utf8’ but not when running in ‘en_GB.utf8’ on the same machine (although on some systems many UTF-8 X11 locales are aliased to ‘en_US.utf8’ which covers several character sets, e.g. ISO 8859-1 (Western European), JISX0208 (Kanji), KSC5601 (Korean), GB2312 (Chinese Han) and JISX0201 (Kana)).
On some systems scalable fonts are available covering a wide range of glyphs. One source is TrueType fonts, and these can provide high coverage. Another is Type 1 fonts: the URW set of Type 1 fonts provides standard typefaces such as Helvetica with a larger coverage of Unicode glyphs than the standard X11 bitmaps, including Cyrillic. These are generally not part of the default install, and the X server may need to be configured to use them. They might be under the X11 fonts directory or elsewhere, for example,
/usr/share/fonts/default/Type1 /usr/share/fonts/ja/TrueType
Linux is the main development platform for R, so compilation from the sources is normally straightforward with the standard compilers.
Remember that some package management systems (such as RPM and
deb) make a distinction between the user version of a package and the
developer version. The latter usually has the same name but with the
extension ‘-devel’ or ‘-dev’: you need both versions
installed. So please check the configure
output to see if the
expected features are detected: if for example ‘readline’ is
missing add the developer package. (On most systems you will also need
‘ncurses’ and its developer package, although these should be
dependencies of the ‘readline’ package(s).)
When R has been installed from a binary distribution there are sometimes problems with missing components such as the FORTRAN compiler. Searching the ‘R-help’ archives will normally reveal what is needed.
It seems that ‘ix86’ Linux accepts non-PIC code in shared
libraries, but this is not necessarily so on other platforms, in
particular for 64-bit CPUs such as ‘x86_64’. So care can be
needed with BLAS libraries and when building R as a shared library to
ensure that position-independent code is used in any static libraries
(such as the Tcl/Tk libraries, libpng
, libjpeg
and
zlib
) which might be linked against. Fortunately these are
normally built as shared libraries with the exception of the ATLAS BLAS
libraries.
For platforms with both 64- and 32-bit support, it is likely that
LDFLAGS="-L/usr/local/lib64 -L/usr/local/lib"
is appropriate since most (but not all) software installs its 64-bit libraries in /usr/local/lib64. To build a 32-bit version of R on ‘x86_64’ with Fedora 8 we used
CC="gcc -m32" CXXFLAGS="-m32 -O2 -g" FFLAGS="-m32 -O2 -g" FCFLAGS="-m32 -O2 -g" LDFLAGS="-L/usr/local/lib" LIBnn=lib
64-bit versions of Linux are built with support for files > 2Gb, and 32-bit versions will be if possible unless --disable-largefile is specified.
R used to include the compiler flag -mieee-fp, but it seems
this was really an alias for the linker flag -lieee. Neither
are needed for a modern Linux (e.g. using glibc
2.2/3/4) but
could conceivably be needed on an older version. glibc
2.1
required -D__NO_MATH_INLINES to achieve
IEC 60059-compliance for exp
, and this is included
in R_XTRA_CFLAGS
if required.
There are known problems with several early versions of gcc 4, but gcc 4.1.0 and later seem to cause no special difficulties.
To build a 64-bit version of R on ‘ppc64’ (also known as ‘powerpc64’) with gcc 4.1.1, Ei-Ji Nakama used
CC="gcc -m64" CXX="gxx -m64" F77="gfortran -m64" FC="gfortran -m64" CFLAGS="-mminimal-toc -fno-optimize-sibling-calls -g -O2" FFLAGS="-mminimal-toc -fno-optimize-sibling-calls -g -O2"
the additional flags being needed to problems linking against libnmath.a and when linking R as a shared library.
On some earlier27 glibc
systems,
‘-fgnu89-inline’ needs to be added to CFLAGS when using
gcc 4.3.x, since wchar.h is not set up properly
for C99-style inlines.
Intel compilers have been used under ‘ix86’ and ‘x86_64’ Linux and R contains code to set the FPU options suitably. Brian Ripley tried version 9.0 of the compilers for ‘ix86’ on Fedora Core 3 via
CC=icc F77=ifort CXX=icpc ICC_LIBS=/opt/compilers/intel/cc/9.0/lib IFC_LIBS=/opt/compilers/intel/fc/9.0/lib LDFLAGS="-L$ICC_LIBS -L$IFC_LIBS -L/usr/local/lib" SHLIB_CXXLD=icpc
and adding optimization flags failed: at least src/main/regex.c and src/modules/lapack/dlamc.f needed to be compiled without optimization. For ‘x86_64’ on Fedora Core 5 he used
CC=icc CFLAGS="-g -O3 -wd188 -ip" F77=ifort FLAGS="-g -O3" CXX=icpc CXXFLAGS="-g -O3" FC=ifort FCFLAGS="-g -O3 -mp" ICC_LIBS=/opt/compilers/intel/cce/9.1.039/lib IFC_LIBS=/opt/compilers/intel/fce/9.1.033/lib LDFLAGS="-L$ICC_LIBS -L$IFC_LIBS -L/usr/local/lib64" SHLIB_CXXLD=icpc
configure will add ‘-c99’ to CC
for
C99-compliance. This causes warnings with icc
10, so use
CC="icc -std=c99"
there. R will add ‘-mp’ in
R_XTRA_{C,F,CXX}FLAGS
to maintain correct
IEC 60559 arithmetic. The flag -wd188
suppresses a large number of warnings about the enumeration type
‘Rboolean’. Because the Intel C compiler sets ‘__GNUC__’
without complete emulation of gcc, we suggest adding
CPPFLAGS=-no-gcc
.
For some comments on building on an Itanium (‘ia64’) Linux system with gcc or the Intel compilers see http://www.nakama.ne.jp/memo/ia64_linux/.
Jennifer Lai used the Portland Group compilers on ‘x86_64’ to build pre-2.2.0. Updated versions of the settings she used are
PG_HOME=/usr/pgi/linux86-64/6.0 CC=pgcc CFLAGS="-g -O2 -Kieee" CPPFLAGS="-I$PG_HOME/include -I$PG_HOME/include/CC" F77=pgf77 FFLAGS="-g -O2 -Kieee" CXX=pgCC CXXFLAGS="-g -O2 -Kieee" FC=pgf95 FCFLAGS="-g -O2 -Kieee" SHLIB_CXXLDFLAGS=-shared SHLIB_LDFLAGS=-shared LDFLAGS="-L$PG_HOME/libso -L/usr/lib64"
Note particularly the last, which is needed to ensure that a shared
version of libc
is found. The flag -Kieee ensures strict
compliance to IEC60659. Also,
http://www.amd.com/us-en/assets/content_type/DownloadableAssets/dwamd_PGI_nov603.pdf
suggests that -pc64 may be desirable.
Brian Ripley tested the SunStudio 12 (aka Sun Ceres) compilers (http://developers.sun.com/sunstudio/index.jsp) on ‘x86_64’ Linux with
CC=suncc CFLAGS="-xO5 -xc99 -xlibmil -nofstore" CPICFLAGS=-Kpic F77=sunf95 FFLAGS="-O5 -libmil -nofstore" FPICFLAGS=-Kpic CXX=sunCC CXXFLAGS="-xO5 -xlibmil -nofstore" CXXPICFLAGS=-Kpic FC=sunf95 FCFLAGS=$FFLAGS FCPICFLAGS=-Kpic LDFLAGS=-L/opt/sunstudio12/lib/amd64 SHLIB_LDFLAGS=-shared SHLIB_CXXLDFLAGS="-G -lCstd" SHLIB_FCLDFLAGS=-G SAFE_FFLAGS="-O5 -libmil"
-m64 could be added, but was the default. Do not use -fast: see the warnings under Solaris.
The resulting build of R was not quite as fast as that built with gcc 4.3.2 at ‘-O3’.
You can build R as a Unix application on Mac OS X using the Apple Developer Tools (`Xcode') and g77 or gfortran. You will also need to install an X sub-system or configure with --without-x. The X window manager is part of the standard Mac OS X distribution since Mac OS X version 10.3 (Panther), but it is typically not pre-installed prior to 10.5 (Leopard).
For more information on how to find these tools please read the R for Mac OS X FAQ.
If you use the X window manager and prefer Terminal.app
to
xterm
, you should be aware that R, like many Unix tools, uses
the existence of a DISPLAY environment variable to determine
whether an X system is running. This affects the default graphics
device for the command-line version of R and the behaviour of the
png
and jpeg
devices.
The vecLib
library can be used via the (default)
configuration options
--with-blas="-framework vecLib" --with-lapack
to provide higher-performance versions of the BLAS and LAPACK routines. Building R without these options via
--without-blas --without-lapack
can be done (and is provided as an alternative in the binary distribution).
64-bit builds are supported on 10.5.x (Leopard) only. All that is needed is to select suitable compiler options, e.g. for recent Intel Macs
CC='gcc -arch x86_64' CXX='g++ -arch x86_64' F77='gfortran -arch x86_64' FC='gfortran -arch x86_64' OBJC='gcc -arch x86_64'
in config.site or on the configure command line.
R has been built successfully on Solaris 10 (both Sparc and ‘x86’) using gcc 3/g77, gcc 4/gfortran and the (zero cost) Sun Studio (aka Ceres) 11/12 compilers. Sun packages for R are available from http://www.sunfreeware.com/ for both architectures. (Recent Sun machines are Opterons (‘x86-64’) rather than ‘x86’, but 32-bit ‘x86’ executables are the default.)
There are also reports of success on OpenSolaris (aka Solaris Express Community Edition, and sometimes as Solaris 11) on ‘x86’.
The Solaris versions of several of the tools needed to build R (e.g. make, ar and ld) are in /usr/ccs/bin, so if using those tools ensure this is in your path.
Modern Solaris systems allow a large selection of Open Source software
to be installed from http://www.opencsw.org (formerly
http://www.blastwave.org) via pkg-get: a Sparc Solaris 10
system came with libreadline
and libiconv
and a choice of
gcc3
and gcc4
compilers, installed under /opt/csw.
(You will need GNU libiconv
: the Solaris version of iconv
is not sufficiently powerful.)
If using gcc, do ensure that the compiler was compiled for the version of Solaris in use. (This can be ascertained from gcc -v.) gcc makes modified versions of some header files, and several reports of problems were due to using gcc compiled on one version of Solaris on a later version. A version of gcc optimized for Sparc (using technology from Sun's compilers) is available from Sun.28
When using the Sun compilers29 do not specify -fast, as this disables IEEE arithmetic and make check will fail.
Jeff Long reported problems if R is built as a shared library and
‘libintl’ was installed via pkg-get: in particular
segfaults using read.spss
from package foreign: this can be
avoided by not building R as a shared library or configuring with
--with-included-gettext.
To compile for a 64-bit Sparc target with gcc 4 we used
CC="gcc -m64" F77="gfortran -m64" CXX="g++ -m64" FC="gfortran -m64" LDFLAGS="-L/opt/csw/gcc4/lib/sparcv9 -L/opt/csw/lib/sparcv9"
replacing ‘gfortran’ with ‘g77’ for gcc 3.x.y. Note that paths such as /opt/csw/gcc4/lib/sparcv9 may need to be in the LD_LIBRARY_PATH during configuration.
For the Sun Studio compilers a little juggling of paths was needed to
ensure GNU libiconv
is used rather than the Solaris iconv
:
we used
CC="cc -xc99" CPPFLAGS=-I/opt/csw/include CFLAGS="-O -xlibmieee" F77=f95 FFLAGS=-O4 CXX=CC CXXFLAGS=-O FC=f95 FCFLAGS=$FFLAGS LDFLAGS=-L/opt/csw/lib SHLIB_CXXLDFLAGS="-G -lCstd"
to ensure that the libiconv
version of iconv.h was found.
For a 64-bit target add -xarch=v9 (or v9b
, or
amd64
) to each of the compiler commands, or for Sun Studio 12 add
-m64. You can target specific Sparc architectures for (slightly)
higher performance: Sun recommend
32-bit: -xtarget=ultra3 -xarch=v8plusa 64-bit: -xtarget=ultra3 -xarch=v9a
(in CFLAGS
etc.) as a good compromise for recent Sparc chipsets.
By default the Sun Studio compilers do not conform to the C99 standard
(appendix F 8.9) on the return values of functions such as log
:
use -xlibmieee to ensure this. Also, errors have been reported
on ‘x86_64’ if -xc99 is omitted.
On ‘x86’ you will get marginally higher performance via
CFLAGS="-xO5 -xc99 -xlibmieee -xlibmil -nofstore" FFLAGS="-O5 -libmil -nofstore" CXXFLAGS="-xO5 -xlibmil -nofstore" SAFE_FFLAGS="-O5 -libmil -fstore"
Building on ‘x86’ with gcc 4 failed make check in the complex LAPACK tests: using Sun Studio 11 worked correctly.
There is limited support for ‘x86_64’ builds in the pre-built GNU software repositories, with 64-bit libraries (which are installed in /opt/csw/lib/amd64 and so on) being scarce (and not including the gcc support libraries). The Sun Studio compilers do support 64-bit builds via -xarch=amd64 (or, for version 12, -m64).
The Sun performance library libsunperf
is available with the Sun
Studio compilers. If selected as a BLAS, it must also be selected as
LAPACK via
./configure --with-blas=sunperf --with-lapack
However, our tests were none too successful: Sparc 64-bit builds crashed.
These are now obsolete operating systems, so this subsection refers to equally old compiler versions.
Sun packages for R are available from http://www.sunfreeware.com/ for both Sparc and ‘x86’.
R 2.6.2 was built successfully on Sparc Solaris 8 (aka Solaris 2.8 aka SunOS 5.8) using gcc 3/g77, gcc 4/gfortran and the `Sun ONE Studio 7 Compiler Suite' (aka Forte 7).
The Solaris versions of several of the tools needed to build R (e.g. make, ar and ld) are in /usr/ccs/bin, so if using those tools ensure this is in your path.
gcc 3.2.1 and 3.2.2 generate incorrect code on 32-bit Solaris
builds with optimization, but versions 3.2.3 and later work correctly.
(The symptom was that make check
failed at the first attempt to
plot.)
If using gcc, do ensure that the compiler was compiled for the
version of Solaris in use. (This can be ascertained from gcc
-v.) gcc makes modified versions of some header files, and
so (for example) gcc compiled under Solaris 2.6 will not
compile R under Solaris 2.7. Also, do ensure that it was compiled
for the assembler/loader in use: if you download gcc from
http://www.sunfreeware.com/ then you need to download
binutils
too. To avoid all these pitfalls we recommended you
compile gcc from the sources yourself.
It was reported by Mike Pacey that Sun Forte 9 requires
‘-xopenmp=stubs’ added to LDFLAGS
.
When using the Sun compilers do not specify -fast, as this disables IEEE arithmetic and make check will fail. The maximal set of optimization options known to work on Sparc Solaris 8 is
-xlibmil -xO5 -dalign
(‘x86’ versions do not need ‘-dalign’, and some do not
support it.) To get correct results for log
requires
-xlibmieee, but R works around that.
We have found little performance difference between gcc and
cc but considerable benefit from using a SunPro Fortran
compiler: the gcc/f77 combination worked well. For
many C++ applications Forte 7 requires ‘-lCstd’, which the
configure script will add to SHLIB_CXXLDFLAGS
if it identifies
the compiler correctly.
To compile for a 64-bit target on Sparc Solaris (which needs an UltraSparc chip and for support to be enabled in the OS) with the Forte 7 compilers we used
CC="cc -xarch=v9 -xc99" CFLAGS="-xO5 -xlibmil -dalign" F77="f95 -xarch=v9" FFLAGS="-xO5 -xlibmil -dalign" CXX="CC -xarch=v9" CXXFLAGS="-xO5 -xlibmil -dalign" FC="f95 -xarch=v9" FCFLAGS="-xO5 -xlibmil -dalign"
in config.site.
For 64-bit compilation with gcc 3.4.x we used
CC="gcc -m64" F77="g77 -m64" CXX="g++ -m64" FC="gfortran -m64" LDFLAGS="-L/usr/local/lib/sparcv9 -L/usr/local/lib"
replacing ‘g77’ with ‘gfortran’ for gcc 4.x.y. Note
that /usr/local/lib/sparcv9 may need to be in the
LD_LIBRARY_PATH during configuration. (configure will
append -std=gnu99 to CC
.)
Solaris on Sparc CPUs need ‘PIC’ and not ‘pic’ versions of CPICFLAGS and FPICFLAGS since the ‘pic’ version only allows 1024 symbols on a 64-bit build (and 2048 on a 32-bit build).
Note that using f95 allows the Sun performance library
libsunperf
to be selected: it may not work30 with f77, and will not with g77.
libsunperf
contains both BLAS and LAPACK code, and
--with-lapack may be required if you use it. On our test
system using libsunperf
failed for 64-bit builds with both Forte
7 and Sun Studio 11, albeit in different ways. Our experience has been
that ATLAS's BLAS is faster than libsunperf
, especially for
complex numbers.
For a 64-bit build, 64-bit libraries must be used. As the configuration
process by default sets LDFLAGS
to ‘-L/usr/local/lib’, you
may need to set it to avoid finding 32-bit addons (as in the
gcc -m64 example above). It is possible to build Tcl/Tk as
64-bit libraries with the configure option --enable-64bit, but
only with the Sun compilers (and not with gcc) as of
Tcl/Tk 8.4.5.
There have been alignment issues, with Sun libraries requiring 8-byte alignment of doubles (which gcc generated by default, but cc did not).
Fan Long built R 2.6.0 on HP-UX 11.23 on ‘ia64’ using the native compilers via
CC=cc CFLAGS="+z +DD64" CXX=aCC CXXFLAGS="-b -lxnet +z +DD64" FC=f90 FCFLAGS=+DD64 F77=f90 FFLAGS=+DD64 LDFLAGS="-L/usr/lib/hpux64 -L/opt/fortran90/lib"
Here ‘+z’ selects PIC code and +DD64
a 64-bit build.
He found that stdbool.h was detected but was non-standard, so ‘HAVE_STDBOOL_H’ had to be undefined in src/include/config.h. In addition, the compiler objected to
static const pthread_once_t fresh_once = {PTHREAD_ONCE_INIT};
(line 362 of src/extra/intl/lock.c) and needed the braces removed.
The remaining reports on HP-UX here predate R 2.0.0.
R has been built successfully on HP-UX 11.0 using both native compilers and gcc. By default, R is configured to use gcc and g77 on HP-UX (if available). Some installations of g77 only install a static version of the g2c library that cannot be linked into a shared library since its files have not been compiled with the appropriate flag for producing position independent code (PIC). This will result in make failing with a linker error similar to
ld: CODE_ONE_SYM fixup to non-code subspace in file foo.o - shared library must be position independent. Use +z or +Z to recompile.
(+z and +Z are the PIC flags for the native compiler cc.) If this is the case you either need to modify your g77 installation or configure with
F77=fort77
to specify use of the native POSIX-compliant FORTRAN 77 compiler.
You may find that configure detects other libraries that R needs to use as shared libraries but are only available as static libraries. If you cannot install shared versions you will need to tell configure not to use these libraries, or make sure they are not in the library path. The symptom will be the linker error shown in the last paragraph. Static libraries that might be found and would cause problems are
BLAS use --without-blas Tcl/Tk use --without-tcltk libpng use --without-libpng jpeg use --without-jpeglib zlib use --without-system-zlib
and bzip2
and pcre
are problematic when building
libR.so, only. These can be avoided by
--without-system-bzlib and --without-system-pcre
respectively, but these are the defaults.
Some versions of gcc may contain what appears to be a bug at the -O2 optimization level that causes
> 2 %/% 2
[1] 1
> 1:2 %/% 2
[1] 0 0 # wrong!!
which will cause make check to fail. If this is the case, you
should use CFLAGS
to specify -O as the optimization
level to use.
You can configure R to use both the native cc and fort77 with
./configure CC=cc F77=fort77
f90 insists on linking against a static libF90.a which
typically resides in a non-standard directory (e.g.,
/opt/fortran90/lib). Hence, to use f90 one needs to
add this directory to the linker path via the configure variable
LDFLAGS
(e.g.,
./configure F77=f90 LDFLAGS=/opt/fortran90/lib).
R 2.1.0 has been successfully built on IRIX64 6.5 using both gcc and the native (MipsPro 7.4) compiler. However, neither version has passed make check due to a problem with time zones (see below). A 64-bit executable has not been successfully built.
It appears that some (but not all) versions of IRIX have broken wide-character header files and so may need --disable-mbcs.
To build R with gcc use something like the following configuration flags
CPPFLAGS="-I/usr/freeware/include" LDFLAGS="-L/usr/freeware/lib32"
To build the Tcl/Tk package you will most likely need to add
--with-tclconfig=/usr/freeware/lib/tclConfig.sh --with-tkconfig=/usr/freeware/lib/tkConfig.sh
since these configuration scripts are not on your path.
To build R with the native compilers, use something like the following configuration flags
CC=cc F77=f77 CXX=CC CPPFLAGS="-I/usr/freeware/include" LDFLAGS="-L/usr/freeware/lib32" CFLAGS="-O2" FFLAGS="-O2" CXXFLAGS="-O2" --with-system-bzlib=yes
The MipsPro compiler will not build the bzlib
library, so you must use
the external one provided by SGI as a freeware package.
After configuration, it is necessary to use gmake instead of the native make to build R.
There is a problem with the time zones on IRIX (originally reported by
George N. White III for 1.9.0) which will cause the strptime
tests to fail unless Arthur Olson's timezone data
ftp://elsie.nci.nih.gov/pub/ has been installed (see also
http://cspry.co.uk/computing/Indy_admin/TIMEZONE.html) and
‘-ltz’ is added to the list of libraries (for example, in
environment variable LIBS).
The flag -OPT:IEEE_NaN_inf=ON is added for the native compilers.
R has been built successfully on an Alpha running OSF1 V4.0 / V5.1
using gcc/g77 and cc/f77.
Mixing cc and g77 fails to configure. The
configure option --without-blas was used since the
native blas seems not to have been built with the flags needed to
suppress SIGFPE
's. Currently R does not set a signal handler
for SIGFPE
on platforms that support IEEE arithmetic,
so these are fatal.
At some point in the past using cc required -std1 to
be set so ‘__STDC__’ was defined. As far as we know this is no
longer needed, and configure no longer sets it, but it does
set -ieee_with_inexact for the C compiler and -fpe3
for the FORTRAN compiler (and -mieee-with-inexact and
-mieee for gcc/g77) (in the appropriate
R_XTRA_*
flags).
Attempts to build R on an Alpha with FreeBSD 4.3 have been only
partly successful. Configuring with -mieee added to both
CFLAGS
and FFLAGS
builds successfully, but tests fail with
SIGFPE
's. It would appear that -mieee only defers these
rather than suppressing them entirely. Advice on how to complete this
port would be greatly appreciated.
We no longer support AIX prior to 4.2, and configure will throw an error on such systems.
Ei-ji Nakama was able to build under AIX 5.2 on ‘powerpc’ with GCC 4.0.3 in several configurations. 32-bit bit versions could be configured with --without-iconv as well as --enable-R-shlib. For 64-bit versions he used
OBJECT_MODE=64 CC="gcc -maix64" CXX="g++ -maix64" F77="gfortran -maix64" FC="gfortran -maix64"
and was also able to build with the IBM xlc
and Hitachi
f90
compilers by
OBJECT_MODE=64 CC="xlc -q64" CXX="g++ -maix64" F77="f90 -cpu=pwr4 -hf77 -parallel=0 -i,L -O3 -64" FC="f90 -cpu=pwr4 -hf77 -parallel=0 -i,L -O3 -64" FLIBS="-L/opt/ofort90/lib -lhf90vecmath -lhf90math -lf90"
Some systems have f95 as an IBM compiler that does not by default accept FORTRAN 77. It needs the flag -qfixed=72, or to be invoked as xlf_r.
The AIX native iconv
does not support encodings ‘latin1’ nor
‘""’ and so cannot be used. (As far as we know GNU libiconv
could be installed.)
Fan Long reports success on AIX 5.3 using
OBJECT_MODE=64 LIBICONV=/where/libiconv/installed CC="xlc_r -q64" CFLAGS="-O -qstrict" CXX="xlC_r -q64" CXXFLAGS="-O -qstrict" F77="xlf_r -q64" AR="ar -X64" CPPFLAGS="-I$LIBICONV/include -I/usr/lpp/X11/include/X11" LDFLAGS="-L$LIBICONV/lib -L/usr/lib -L/usr/X11R6/lib"
On one AIX 6.x system it was necessary to use R_SHELL to set the default shell to be Bash rather than Zsh.
Kurt Hornik and Stefan Theussl at WU (Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien) successfully built R on a ‘powerpc’ (8-CPU Power6 system) on AIX 6.1, configuring with or without --enable-R-shlib (Ei-Ji Nakama's support is gratefully acknowledged).
It helps to describe the WU build environment first. A small part of
the software needed to build R and/or install packages is available
directly from the AIX Installation DVDs, e.g., Java 6, X11, or Perl.
Additional open source software (OSS) is packaged for AIX in .rpm
files and available from both IBM's “AIX Toolbox for Linux
Applications”
(http://www-03.ibm.com/systems/power/software/aix/linux/) and
http://www.oss4aix.org/download/. The latter website typically
offers more recent versions of the available OSS. All tools needed and
libraries downloaded from these repositories (e.g., GCC, Make,
libreadline
, etc.) are typically installed to
/opt/freeware, hence corresponding executables are found in
/opt/freeware/bin which thus needs to be in PATH for using
these tools. Like on other Unix systems one needs GNU
libiconv
as the AIX version of iconv is not sufficiently
powerful. Additionally, for proper Unicode compatibility one should
install the corresponding package from the ICU project
(http://www.icu-project.org/download/), which offers pre-compiled
binaries for various platforms which in case of AIX can be installed via
unpacking the tarball to the root file system. For full LaTeX
support one can install the TeX Live DVD distribution
(http://www.tug.org/texlive/): it is recommended to update the
distribution using the tlmgr
update manager. For 64-bit R builds
supporting Tcl/Tk this needs to installed from the sources as available
pre-compiled binaries supply only 32-bit shared objects.
The recent WU testing was done using compilers from both the GNU Compiler Collection (version 4.2.4) which is available from one of the above OSS repositories, and the IBM C/C++ (XL C/C++ 10.01) as well as FORTRAN (XL Fortran 12.01) compilers (http://www14.software.ibm.com/webapp/download/byproduct.jsp#X).
To compile for a 64-bit ‘powerpc’ (Power6 CPU) target one can use
CC ="gcc -maix64 -pthread" CXX="g++ -maix64 -pthread" FC="gfortran -maix64 -pthread" F77="gfortran -maix64 -pthread" CFLAGS="-O2 -g -mcpu=power6" FFLAGS="-O2 -g -mcpu=power6" FCFLAGS="-O2 -g -mcpu=power6"
for the GCC and
CC=xlc CXX=xlc++ FC=xlf F77=xlf CFLAGS="-qarch=auto -qcache=auto -qtune=auto -O3 -qstrict -ma" FFLAGS="-qarch=auto -qcache=auto -qtune=auto -O3 -qstrict" FCFLAGS="-qarch=auto -qcache=auto -qtune=auto -O3 -qstrict" CXXFLAGS="-qarch=auto -qcache=auto -qtune=auto -O3 -qstrict"
for the IBM XL compilers. For the latter, it is important to note that the decision for generating 32-bit or 64-bit code is done by setting the OBJECT_MODE environment variable appropriately (recommended) or using an additional compiler flag (-q32 or -q64). By default the IBM XL compilers produce 32 bit code. Thus, to build R with 64-bit support one needs to either export OBJECT_MODE=64 in the environment or, alternatively, use the -q64 compiler options.
It is strongly recommended to install Bash and use it as the configure
shell, e.g., via setting CONFIG_SHELL=/usr/bin/bash
in the
environment, and to use GNU Make (e.g., via
(MAKE=/opt/freeware/bin/make
).
Further installation instructions to set up a proper R development environment can be found in the “R on AIX” project on R-Forge (http://R-Forge.R-project.org/projects/aix/).
The Cygwin emulation layer on Windows can be treated as a Unix-alike OS. This is unsupported, but experiments have been conducted and a few workarounds added for R 2.6.0.
Only building as a shared library works,31 so use
./configure --disable-nls --disable-mbcs --enable-R-shlib make
MBCS does not work—wcstod
is missing—but would only be of any
use in a CJK locale. NLS does work, although
--with-included-gettext is preferable. You will see many
warnings about the use of auto-import.
Note that this gives you a command-line application using readline
for command editing. The ‘X11’ graphics device will work if a
suitable X server is running, and the standard Unix-alike ways of
installing source packages work. There was a bug in the
/usr/lib/tkConfig.sh script in the version we looked at, which
needs to have
TK_LIB_SPEC='-ltk84'
The overhead of using shell scripts makes this noticeably slower than a native build of R on Windows.
There are a number of sources of problems when installing R on a new hardware/OS platform. These include
Floating Point Arithmetic: R requires arithmetic compliant
with IEC 60559, also know as IEEE 754.
This mandates the use of plus and minus infinity and NaN
(not a
number) as well as specific details of rounding. Although almost all
current FPUs can support this, selecting such support can be a pain.
The problem is that there is no agreement on how to set the signalling
behaviour; Sun/Sparc, SGI/IRIX and ‘ix86’ Linux require no
special action, FreeBSD requires a call to (the macro)
fpsetmask(0)
and OSF1 requires that computation be done with a
-ieee_with_inexact flag etc. On a new platform you must find
out the magic recipe and add some code to make it work. This can often
be done via the file config.site which resides in the top level
directory.
Beware of using high levels of optimization, at least initially. On
many compilers these reduce the degree of compliance to the
IEEE model. For example, using -fast on the Solaris
SunPro compilers causes R's NaN
to be set incorrectly.
Shared Libraries: There seems to be very little agreement across platforms on what needs to be done to build shared libraries. there are many different combinations of flags for the compilers and loaders. GNU libtool cannot be used (yet), as it currently does not fully support FORTRAN: one would need a shell wrapper for this). The technique we use is to first interrogate the X window system about what it does (using xmkmf), and then override this in situations where we know better (for tools from the GNU Compiler Collection and/or platforms we know about). This typically works, but you may have to manually override the results. Scanning the manual entries for cc and ld usually reveals the correct incantation. Once you know the recipe you can modify the file config.site (following the instructions therein) so that the build will use these options.
It seems that gcc 3.4.x and later on ‘ix86’ Linux defeat attempts by the LAPACK code to avoid computations entirely in extended-precision registers, so file src/modules/lapack/dlamc.f may need to be compiled without optimization. Set the configure variable SAFE_FFLAGS to the flags to be used for this file. If configure detects GNU FORTRAN it adds flag -ffloat-store to FFLAGS. (Other settings are needed when using icc on ‘ix86’ Linux, for example.)
If you do manage to get R running on a new platform please let us know about it so we can modify the configuration procedures to include that platform.
If you are having trouble getting R to work on your platform please feel free to use the ‘R-devel’ mailing list to ask questions. We have had a fair amount of practice at porting R to new platforms ...
There is a search engine available from the front page of the HTML
help system, the page that is displayed by help.start()
. The
search engine is written in Java and invoked by Javascript code, so the
first thing to do is to ensure that both are enabled in your favourite
browser. Then try it and see: with most browsers you should see
Applet SearchEngine started
displayed in the status bar. (Internet Explorer shows Applet
started
.) Then click on one of the keywords and after a short delay
(several seconds) you should see a page of search results.
If this fails you should double-check that Java is enabled in your browser by visiting a page such as http://www.java.com/en/download/help/testvm.jsp. Java 1.4 or later is needed.
On Mozilla-based browsers the links on the results page will become inactive if you return to it: to work around this you can open a link in a new tab or window.
There is a known issue with Firefox 3.0 up to 3.0.6 (it was fixed in
3.0.7). The links in the results page may point to the wrong directory
level. This is a bug in the way Firefox is interpreting relative URLs,
and can be circumvented by opening the HTML search page
(.../doc/html/SearchEngine.html) directly rather than from
.../doc/html/index.html as shown by help.start()
.
Many thanks to Marc Schwartz in tracking down many of these issues with enabling the Java search engine.
We are aware of problems with certain older Java installations: Sun's
Java Run-time Environment version 1.5.0 or later is strongly recommended
for Mozilla-based browsers. In particular, Sun's Java Run-time
Environment j2re
1.4.2_02 to _05 do not work under
‘ix86’ Linux.
There is a Sun Java plugin (as of version 1.6.0_u12
for 64-bit
browsers on ‘x86_64’ Linux: but 32-bit browsers are often used
on that platform.
Marc Schwartz reports that the `OpenJDK' (formerly called `IcedTea') JVM that ships with Fedora 8, 9 and 10 does not work with the search applet. (The bug report is part of https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=304021.) The Sun JRE and plugin can be installed: see http://www.fedorafaq.org/#java. (See also http://www.mjmwired.net/resources/mjm-fedora-f8.html#java, http://www.mjmwired.net/resources/mjm-fedora-f9.html#java and http://www.mjmwired.net/resources/mjm-fedora-f10.html#java.)
Older but still useful links are for Firefox/Mozilla, http://plugindoc.mozdev.org/faqs/java.html, for Konqueror http://www.konqueror.org/javahowto/, for Opera http://www.opera.com/support/search/supsearch.dml?index=459 and for Debian GNU/Linux http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/debian-java-faq/.
We have much less experience than under Linux, but we do know that Sun's
Run-time Environment j2re
1.4.2_03 does not work under Sparc
Solaris 8, whereas jre
1.5.0 and j2re
1.4.2_01
(available from http://java.sun.com/products/archive/) do.
We have not seen any problems on Windows provided a Java Virtual Machine
has been installed and is operational: Sun's current
j2re
1.6.0 works in Internet Explorer, Mozilla 1.7 and
Mozilla Firefox on Windows XP/Vista. Note that a recent Windows system
may not have a JVM installed at all. Visit
http://java.sun.com/getjava/manual.html to install a Sun JVM.
Which (if any) JVM is enabled can be set in `Set Program Access and
Defaults' in Windows XP (SP1 or later), and which JVM is used by browser
plugins may also be controlled by the Sun Java applet in the Control
Panel.
Recent versions of Internet Explorer may block the use of Java applets and need the block removed via the information bar. Also, we have seen cases in which the search results come up as a blank page: go back one page in the browser history to find the real results page.
Apple's Safari 3.0.4 also works.
Java 1.5.0 ships with recent versions of Mac OS X, and the HTML search engine works with Safari under Mac OS 10.5.
If you want to build R or add-on packages from source in Windows, you will need to collect, install and test an extensive set of tools. See http://www.murdoch-sutherland.com/Rtools/ for the current locations and other updates to these instructions. (Most Windows users will not need to build add-on packages from source; see Add-on packages for details.)
Only building with gcc 4.y.z is supported, and that compiler set works out-of-the-box on Windows Vista.
We have found that the build process for R is quite sensitive to the choice of tools: please follow our instructions exactly, even to the choice of particular versions of the tools.32 The build process for add-on packages is somewhat more forgiving, but we recommend using the exact toolset at first, and only substituting other tools once you are familiar with the process.
This section contains a lot of prescriptive comments. They are here as a result of bitter experience. Please do not report problems to R-help unless you have followed all the prescriptions.
We have collected most of the necessary tools (unfortunately not all, due to license or size limitations) into an executable installer named Rtools.exe, available from http://www.murdoch-sutherland.com/Rtools/. You should download and run it, choosing the default “Package authoring installation” to build add-on packages, or the “full installation” if you intend to build R.
You will need the following items to build R and packages. See the subsections below for detailed descriptions.
A complete build of R including compiled HTML help files and PDF manuals, and producing the standalone installer R-2.9.0-win32.exe will also need the following:
It is important to set your PATH properly. The Rtools.exe optionally sets the path to components that it installs.
Your PATH may include . first, then the bin
directories of the tools, Perl, MinGW and LaTeX, as well as the Help
Workshop directory. Do not use filepaths containing spaces: you can
always use the short forms (found by dir /x
at the Windows
command line). Network shares (with paths starting \\
) are not
supported. For example, all on one line,
PATH=c:\Rtools\bin;c:\Rtools\perl\bin;c:\Rtools\MinGW\bin;c:\texmf\miktex\bin; c:\progra~1\htmhe~1;c:\R\bin;c:\windows;c:\windows\system32
It is essential that the directory containing the command line tools comes first or second in the path: there are typically like-named tools in other directories, and they will not work. The ordering of the other directories is less important, but if in doubt, use the order above.
Edit R_HOME/src/gnuwin32/MkRules to set the appropriate paths as needed and to set the type(s) of help that you want built. Beware: MkRules contains tabs and some editors (e.g., WinEdt) silently remove them.
Set the appropriate environment variables.
Our toolset contains copies of Cygwin DLLs that may conflict with other ones on your system if both are in the path at once. The normal recommendation is to delete the older ones; however, at one time we found our tools did not work with a newer version of the Cygwin DLLs, so it may be safest not to have any other version of the Cygwin DLLs in your path.
You will need a Windows port of perl5
(but only the basic
functionality, not any of the third-party Win32 extensions). The
Vanilla Perl package is included in Rtools.exe. A more full-
featured distribution is available from
http://www.activestate.com/Products/ActivePerl/, and this was
used in releases of R up to R 2.5.1. Alternatives are listed at
http://win32.perl.org/.
Beware: you do need a Windows port and not the Cygwin one. Users of 64-bit Windows can use a Win64 Perl (such as that from ActiveState) if they prefer.
To make compiled html (.chm) files you will need the Microsoft HTML Help Workshop, currently available for download at http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/en-us/htmlhelp/html/hwmicrosofthtmlhelpdownloads.asp and http://www.microsoft.com/office/ork/xp/appndx/appa06.htm. This is not included in Rtools.exe.
If this is not installed, Rcmd INSTALL will skip compiled HTML
help (with a message). However, to build R itself without CHM help,
you need to set USE_CHM = FALSE
in src/gnuwin32/MkRules.
The ‘MiKTeX’ (http://www.miktex.org/) distribution of
LaTeX includes a suitable port of pdftex
. The `basic' version
of ‘MiKTeX’ almost suffices (the grid vignettes need
fancyvrb.sty), but it will install the 15Mb ‘lm’ package if
allowed to (although that is not actually used). The Rtools.exe
installer does not include any version of LaTeX.
Please read Making the manuals about how to make refman.pdf and set the environment variables R_RD4DVI and R_RD4PDF suitably; ensure you have the required fonts installed.
To make the installer package (R-2.9.0-win32.exe) we require Inno Setup 5.1.7 or later (including 5.2.x) from http://jrsoftware.org/. This is not included in Rtools.exe.
Edit file src/gnuwin32/MkRules and change ISDIR
to the
location where Inno Setup was installed.
This item and the next are installed by the Rtools.exe installer.
If you choose to install these yourself, you will need suitable versions
of at least basename
, cat
, cmp
, comm
,
cp
, cut
, diff
, echo
, egrep
,
expr
, find
, gawk
, grep
, gzip
,
head
, ls
, make
, makeinfo
, mkdir
,
mv
, rm
, rsync
, sed
, sh
, sort
,
texindex
and touch
; we use those from the Cygwin
distribution (http://www.cygwin.com/) or compiled from the
sources. You will also need zip
and unzip
from the
Info-ZIP project (http://www.info-zip.org/). All of these tools
are in Rtools.exe.
Beware: `Native' ports of make are not suitable
(including that at the mingw site). There were also problems with
several earlier versions of the cygwin tools and DLLs. To avoid
frustration, please use our tool set, and make sure it is at the front
of your path (including before the Windows system directories). If you
are using a Windows shell, type PATH
at the prompt to find out.
This version of R is set up to use gcc 4.2.1
for
which MinGW compilers were released in August 2007. The
Rtools.exe installer currently includes the -sjlj
version
of 4.2.1
of the MinGW port of gcc from
http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=2435.
If you would like to install your own copy, we recommed downloading from the URL above, as the download links from http://www.mingw.org/ have led to obsolete versions. See the notes on http://www.murdoch-sutherland.com/Rtools/ for updates.
To download the components individually, currently you need
mingw-runtime-3.13.tar.gz w32api-3.10.tar.gz binutils-2.17.50-20060824-1.tar.gz gcc-core-4.2.1-sjlj-2.tar.gz gcc-g++-4.2.1-sjlj-2.tar.gz gcc-gfortran-4.2.1-sjlj-2.tar.gz
(and gcc-objc-4.2.1-sjlj-2.tar.gz
if you want Objective C
support). Unpack these into the same directory (using tar zxf
tarball_name). (You may need to copy bin/gcc-sjlj.exe to
bin/gcc.exe and a few badly-written packages need
bin/g++-sjlj.exe copied to bin/g++.exe.) This compiler
should work on Windows Vista without any workarounds.
Note that mingw-runtime-3.13.tar.gz
or later and gcc-4.2.1
or later are needed to get a correct build of R itself. (The
`Snapshot' binutils-2.17.50-20070129-1.tar.gz
has also be
tested.) There are known problems with using other compiler sets on
Windows Vista
(http://www.nabble.com/environment-hosed-during-upgrade-tf3305745.html#a9195667)
and that a suitable PATH
needs to be set to include the path to
cc1.
Other builds of gcc 4 are available from
http://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/GFortranBinaries/ and
http://www.tdragon.net/recentgcc/: these need the PATH
workaround on Vista.
configure
: Using makeconfigure
: Configuration variablesconfigure
: Installationconfigure
: Simple compilationinstall.packages
: Installing packagesmake
: Using makeR_HOME
: Simple compilationremove.packages
: Removing packagesupdate.packages
: Updating packagesBLAS_LIBS
: BLASCONFIG_SITE
: Configuration variablesDISPLAY
: Mac OS XJAVA_HOME
: Java supportLANG
: Localization of messagesLANGUAGE
: Localization of messagesLAPACK_LIBS
: LAPACKLC_ALL
: Localization of messagesLC_MESSAGES
: Localization of messagesLD_LIBRARY_PATH
: Sparc Solaris 9 and earlierLD_LIBRARY_PATH
: Solaris 10 and Open SolarisLD_LIBRARY_PATH
: Compile and load flagsLD_LIBRARY_PATH
: Using FORTRANLD_LIBRRARY_PATH
: ACMLLIBS
: IRIXPAPERSIZE
: Setting paper sizeR_BROWSER
: Setting the browserR_DEFAULT_PACKAGES
: Default packagesR_JAVA_LD_LIBRARY_PATH
: Java supportR_LIBS
: Installing packagesR_LIBS
: Add-on packagesR_LIBS_SITE
: Managing librariesR_LIBS_USER
: Managing librariesR_PAPERSIZE
: Making manualsR_PAPERSIZE
: Setting paper sizeR_PAPERSIZE
: Making the manualsR_RD4DVI
: LaTeXR_RD4DVI
: Making manualsR_RD4DVI
: Making the manualsR_RD4PDF
: LaTeXR_RD4PDF
: Making manualsR_RD4PDF
: Making the manualsTMPDIR
: Installing packagesTMPDIR
: Running RTMPDIR
: Checking the buildTMPDIR
: Simple compilation[1] for example, if you configured R with --without-iconv or --without-recommended.
[2] We do this using the Cygwin compilers, often with some difficulty.
[3] It makes use of an Apple-supplied modified ICU library, and is known to work with Mac OS >= 10.4.
[4] unless they were excluded in the build.
[5] its binding is looked once that files has been read, so users cannot easily change it.
[6] If a proxy needs to be set, see ?download.file.
[7] On some systems setting LC_ALL or LC_MESSAGES to ‘C’ disables LANGUAGE.
[8] If you try changing from French to Russian except in a UTF-8 locale, you will find messages change to English.
[9] with Americanisms.
[10] also known as IEC 559 and IEEE 754
[11] at least when storing quantities: the on-FPU precision is allowed to vary
[12] until recently this limit applied to all processes, not just to one process
[13] e.g. Bessel, beta and gamma function
[14] also known as IEEE 754
[15] -std=c99 excludes POSIX functionality, but config.h will turn on all GNU extensions to include the POSIX functionality.
[16] We recommend that people with cairo 1.0.x, install 1.4.x or later from the sources, which works well
[17] unless FORTRAN double complex is not supported on the platform
[18] Using the Sun Ceres cc and f95 compilers
[19] We have measured 15–20% on i686 Linux and around 10% on ‘x86_64’ Linux.
[20] You may have to set this with luit
, but it
should be the default in a window manager session started in UTF-8.
[21] e.g. Fedora Core 6 and later
[22] On HP-UX fort77 is the POSIX compliant FORTRAN compiler, and comes after g77.
[23] as well as its equivalence to the Rcomplex
structure defined in R_ext/Complex.h.
[24] In particular, avoid g77's -pedantic, which gives confusing error messages.
[25] e.g., to use an optimized BLAS on Sun/Sparc
[26] for example, X11 font at size 14 could not
be loaded
.
[27] e.g. Fedora Core 5
[28] http://www.sun.com/download/index.jsp?cat=Application%20Development&tab=3&subcat=Development%20Tools
[29] including gcc for Sparc from Sun.
[30] recent versions have f77 as a wrapper for f95, and these do work.
[31] Windows DLLs need to have all links resolved at build time and so cannot resolve against R.bin.
[32] For
example, the Cygwin version of make 3.81
fails to work
correctly.