-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA512 Evening folks:
Running R 4.2.0 on Linux Mint 19.3. When I tried to update package nloptr the operation failed with this error text seeming to be key to the problem. CMake Error: The source directory "/tmp/RtmpCNCU3l/R.INSTALL21c510095118/nloptr/src/CMAKE_RANLIB=/usr/bin /ranlib" does not exist. Specify --help for usage, or press the help button on the CMake GUI. Unknown argument -j Unknown argument 2 Usage: cmake --build <dir> [options] [-- [native-options]] Options: <dir> = Project binary directory to be built. --target <tgt> = Build <tgt> instead of default targets. May only be specified once. --config <cfg> = For multi-configuration tools, choose <cfg>. --clean-first = Build target 'clean' first, then build. (To clean only, use --target 'clean'.) --use-stderr = Ignored. Behavior is default in CMake >= 3.0. -- = Pass remaining options to the native tool. CMake Error: The source directory "/tmp/RtmpCNCU3l/R.INSTALL21c510095118/nloptr/src/nlopt" does not exist. Specify --help for usage, or press the help button on the CMake GUI. cp: cannot stat 'nlopt/include/*': No such file or directory Uninstalled the package and tried reinstalling. Same stumble so I now no longer have it at all, and it's needed to load Rcmdr. Any help sorting this out would be appreciated. Please... :-( - -- Brian Lunergan Russell, Ontario Canada -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQEzBAEBCgAdFiEEQnNPvUcw8TGKI+uNUQG1sc4S+04FAmKG1+AACgkQUQG1sc4S +06RxQgAo4Hq7rB99Gpvhv9RvzgvhoxVUXsFYuEmFMzysCIwFzfBVS+ZVgydSoRW FfAxZYLruYOU2+i+9PGD/J3cW9sMaXw7NJQRUhYINTc1Q4vrSQZBmvRxwil8tPBq z+KB5yxuEVMsyfhSRFjWdRGaBEnxVeRBlPnvWHRYgUYKFqrsosvwY1hdnlIwRMh9 /J9qfsi98mbSZB2HZd1OaCACxP+fAM0+jQuMJhTSNvvt4l3O583J6ewbvJE53YFT 2+gU9JJI7yn6rIamX2iHGKaueF9N+HPHMMnLfuO6lsmeE6OfzqyiFzy13Rr3H6yF ptDrR2NTURpt5LyipIlK7vamJnt6pA== =QWJP -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.