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r2u: CRAN as Ubuntu Binaries

Key features

Brief Demo

The gif below shows how one install.packages("tidyverse") command on an Ubuntu 20.04 system installs all packages and dependencies as binaries in 18 seconds (by passing the R package installation to apt using bspm).

This uses the Docker container referenced below, which has been set up with the five easy setup steps detailed here.

What is Covered ?

We generally support amd64 (i.e. standard 64-bit Intel/AMD cpus, sometimes also called x86_64) for the current Ubuntu LTS release and its predecessor release (more on this here). We use 'r-release' just like CRAN. So currently the 'focal' 20.04 LTS, 'jammy' 22.04 LTS and 'noble' 24.04 releases are fully supported.

Support for other cpu architectures is certainly possible but somewhat unlikely due to a lack of (additional hardware) resources and time. Support for other distributions is possible but unlikely right now (due to a lack of resources and time). P3M/PPM/RSPM now appears to also support Debian which could be added at some later point.

Current versions are based on R 4.4.0, and BioConductor release 3.20 packages are provided when required by CRAN packages. Binaries are generally R 4.4.* based. Some older packages released when we used R 4.2.* or 4.3.* may have been built with R 4.2.* or R 4.3., they will still work the same with R 4.4. as R is generally forward-compatible.

What is Selected ?

Everything :)

Initially, we started from cran-logs by picking the N most-downloaded packages, along with their dependencies from BioConductor. (It should be noted that for example the first 100 packages already account for approximately half the total downloads: it is a very skewed distribution.) We iterated, and fairly soon arrived of full coverage of CRAN.

So we now cover

This currently results in 24141, 24056, 21682 binary packages from CRAN in "focal", "jammy", and "noble", respectively, and 420, 420, and 448 BioConductor packages, respectively, from the 3.19 releases. (See this FAQ about why this number is higher than CRAN, and variable between releases.)

The sole exception are two packages we cannot build (as we do not have the required commercial software it accessess) plus less than a handful of 'odd builds' that fail and are skipped.

What is it Based On?

For the CRAN binaries we either repackage P3M/RSPM/PPM builds (where available) or build natively. All selected BioConductor packages are built natively. For all of these, full dependency resolution and integration with the system is a key feature.

Everything is provided as .deb binary files with proper dependency resolution by using a proper apt repo which also has a signed Release file.

Usage and Setup

(Note that you could use one of the scripts add_cranapt_noble.sh (for Ubuntu 24.04), or add_cranapt_jammy.sh (for Ubuntu 22.04), or add_cranapt_focal.sh (for the older Ubuntu 20.04) to facilitate the setup. They are tested on 'empty' Ubuntu containers of the corresponding release. However, you may prefer to execute the steps outlined here by hand.) You can use lsb_release -cs to generate your release name: "focal", "jammy", and "noble" are supported and you could swap "focal" or "noble" in below (or use one of the scripts).

Here, we show the setup step by step for 'jammy' aka Ubuntu 22.04 (as it is still the most-widely used distribution per our logs). You should run all these commands as root to carefully review each one. If you prefer the newer Ubuntu 24.04, please see the add_cranapt_noble.sh script which also avoids the now-deprecated apt-key command).

Step 1: Update apt, install tools, fetch key

First add the repository key so that apt knows it (this is optional but recommended)

apt update -qq && apt install --yes --no-install-recommends wget \
    ca-certificates gnupg
wget -q -O- https://eddelbuettel.github.io/r2u/assets/dirk_eddelbuettel_key.asc \
    | tee -a /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d/cranapt_key.asc

Step 2: Add the apt repo

Second, add the repository to the apt registry. We recommend the well-connected main mirror provide at University of Illinois:

echo "deb [arch=amd64] https://r2u.stat.illinois.edu/ubuntu jammy main" \
     > /etc/apt/sources.list.d/cranapt.list
apt update -qq

Step 3: Ensure you have current R binaries (optional)

Third, and optionally, if you do not yet have the current R version, run these two lines (or use the standard CRAN repo setup)

wget -q -O- https://cloud.r-project.org/bin/linux/ubuntu/marutter_pubkey.asc \
    | tee -a /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d/cran_ubuntu_key.asc
echo "deb [arch=amd64] https://cloud.r-project.org/bin/linux/ubuntu jammy-cran40/" \
    > /etc/apt/sources.list.d/cran_r.list
apt-key adv --keyserver keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv-keys \
    67C2D66C4B1D4339 51716619E084DAB9
apt update -qq
DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive apt install --yes --no-install-recommends \
    r-base-core

Step 4: Use pinning for the r2u repo (optional)

Fourth, add repository 'pinning' as apt might get confused by some older packages (in the Ubuntu distro) which accidentally appear with a higher version number. See the next section for a short discussion how it ensures 'CRANapt' sorts highest.

echo "Package: *" > /etc/apt/preferences.d/99cranapt
echo "Pin: release o=CRAN-Apt Project" >> /etc/apt/preferences.d/99cranapt
echo "Pin: release l=CRAN-Apt Packages" >> /etc/apt/preferences.d/99cranapt
echo "Pin-Priority: 700"  >> /etc/apt/preferences.d/99cranapt

After that the package are known (under their r-cran-* and r-bioc-* names). You can install them on the command-line using apt and apt-get, via aptitude as well as other front-ends.

Step 5: Use bspm (optional)

Fifth, and also optional, install and enable the bspm package so that the r2u (or CRANapt) as well as other R packages (available as r-*.deb binaries) become available via install.packages() and update.packages(). Note that you may need to install it directly from source via sudo Rscript -e 'install.packages("bspm")' to ensure it integrates correctly with the packaging system. You should also install Python components used internally by bspm via the sudo apt-get install python3-{dbus,gi,apt} command.

apt install --yes --no-install-recommends python3-{dbus,gi,apt}
## Then install bspm (as root) and enable it, and enable a speed optimization
Rscript -e 'install.packages("bspm")'
RHOME=$(R RHOME)
echo "suppressMessages(bspm::enable())" >> ${RHOME}/etc/Rprofile.site
echo "options(bspm.version.check=FALSE)" >> ${RHOME}/etc/Rprofile.site

That's it! Now try it out!

About Pinning

Packages can be found in different repositories, and generally the highest available version is the one we what---and apt picks it for us. Now, because we let apt (and related tools) pick the packages based on versions, we may want to ensure that the CRANapt repo sorts higher than the default repo as (older) package builds in the distribution itself may appear (to apt) to be newer via a quirk in the sorting algorithm. A case in point was package gtable whose version in Ubuntu was 0.3.0+dfsg-1 which accidentally sorts higher than the rebuild we made under a newer and more consistent version number 0.3.0-1.ca2004.1.

For this issue, one possible and popular fix is to use 'apt pinning'. It can give 'higher weight' to packages from a particular repositor or tag. In the suggested example above, we give the r2u / cranapt repo a weight of 700 which is higher than the package default value of 500.

Docker

There are also Docker containers for Ubuntu 20.04 'focal', 22.04 'jammy', and 24.04 'noble', respectively. Initially published as eddelbuettel/r2u, these are now also available also as rocker/r2u. They all have the features detailed above, including pinning and bspm support, already set up.

Each of the Ubuntu LTS flavors, i.e., 'focal' and 'jammy' is also available as an identical image using the release version, i.e., '20.04', '22.04', and '24.04', respectively.

Note that with some builds of Docker (and possibly related to Ubuntu hosts) you may have to add the --security-opt seccomp=unconfined option to your Docker invocation to take advantage of bspm and the full system integration inside the container. This is also documented in the FAQ.

GitHub Actions

There are two basic ways to take advantage of r2u in a GitHub Actions. The first, and simplest, is to switch to using the Docker container (see previous section). This is as simple as adding the container: statement after runs-on: in jobs: section:

    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    container:
      image: rocker/r2u:22.04

A complete example is provided in this R package repo. The key advantage of this approach is that everything is already set up.

A second approach consists of adding r2u as a step via the r2u-setup GitHub Action:

      - name: Setup r2u
        uses: eddelbuettel/github-actions/r2u-setup@master

A complete example is provided in this repo where we use it because using the Docker container approach makes committing back via git a little harder.

Try It

Via codespaces

See the vignette Codespaces about how to launch a 'Codespace' directly in your browser, launched from the gitrepo within minutes.

This also works from your vscode installation as a remote codespace.

The vignette has more details.

Via gitpod.io

Use this link below (after possibly signing up for gitpod.io first)

Open in Gitpod

and run one of the three example scripts, or just start R in the terminal window.

The gif below display running one such example to install brms from binaries in a few seconds. Using this requires only (free) GitHub and GitPod accounts.

Usage Statistics

Usage is vibrant. As of summer 2024, over 300,000 packages are shipped per week, with a total of now over twenty four million packages shipped. Early September 2023 also had the most recent and dramatic spike of over three million packages in two days. The following chart gives a summary of cumulative and average weekly downloads (the latter one on a log scale) as of August.

Support

Please file issues at the GitHub issues for r2u.

Frequently Asked Questions

Please also see the FAQ for answers to Frequently Asked Questions.

Known Issues

Author

Dirk Eddelbuettel

License

The repository-building code in this package is released under the GPL (>= 2).

All CRAN and BioConductor packages are released under their respective licenses.

Acknowledgment

This was made possible by the generous support of endless coffee thanks to my GitHub Sponsors.