Unable to install any Bioconductor package with new R 4.4.1 - path nor writable - PLEASE HELP
1
0
Entering edit mode
gabry.scata ▴ 10
@372e99bd
Last seen 28 days ago
Australia

Hi everyone, I just installed the new R (4.4.1) and now I get the error message "paths not writable" when I try to install any Bioconductor package. See below

    BiocManager::install("LEA")
    getOption("repos") replaces Bioconductor standard repositories, see 'help("repositories", package = "BiocManager") for details.
    Replacement repositories:
        CRAN: http://cran.rstudio.com/
    Bioconductor version 3.19 (BiocManager 1.30.25), R 4.4.1 (2024-06-14 ucrt)
    Installing package(s) BiocVersion, LEA
    trying URL https://bioconductor.org/packages/3.19/bioc/bin/windows/contrib/4.4/BiocVersion_3.19.1.zip
    Content type application/zip length 8382 bytes
    downloaded 8382 bytes

    trying URL https://bioconductor.org/packages/3.19/bioc/bin/windows/contrib/4.4/LEA_3.16.0.zip
    Content type application/zip length 978685 bytes (955 KB)
    downloaded 955 KB

    package BiocVersion successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked
    package LEA successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked

    The downloaded binary packages are in
        C:\Users\scatag\AppData\Local\Temp\RtmpsbWNRe\downloaded_packages
    Installation paths not writeable, unable to update packages
      path: C:/Program Files/R/R-4.4.1/library
      packages:
        boot, foreign, MASS, nlme, survival

However, when I try to load the library with library(LEA) it loads it without problem or error message (I haven't tested if the function of this package work though).

I have the same problem with another Bioconductor package SeqArray. I also tried to install the package in another folder with BiocManager::install("LEA", lib.loc = "C:/path") but it doesn't work. It says it cant' re-write the package:

The downloaded binary packages are in
    C:\Users\scatag\AppData\Local\Temp\RtmpsbWNRe\downloaded_packages
Warning message:
In file.copy(savedcopy, lib, recursive = TRUE) :
  problem copying C:\Users\scatag\AppData\Local\R\win-library\4.4\00LOCK\LEA\libs\x64\LEA.dll to C:\Users\scatag\AppData\Local\R\win-library\4.4\LEA\libs\x64\LEA.dll: Permission denied

What is happening? Why I have this problem with all Bioconductor packages?? I can install CRAN packages without any problem...

Would really appreciate some help! Thanks! Best, Gabry

sessionInfo( )
R version 4.4.1 (2024-06-14 ucrt)
Platform: x86_64-w64-mingw32/x64
Running under: Windows 10 x64 (build 19045)

Matrix products: default


locale:
[1] LC_COLLATE=English_Australia.utf8  LC_CTYPE=English_Australia.utf8    LC_MONETARY=English_Australia.utf8 LC_NUMERIC=C                       LC_TIME=English_Australia.utf8    

time zone: Australia/Brisbane
tzcode source: internal

attached base packages:
[1] stats     graphics  grDevices utils     datasets  methods   base     

other attached packages:
[1] devtools_2.4.5 usethis_3.0.0 

loaded via a namespace (and not attached):
 [1] vctrs_0.6.5         cli_3.6.3           rlang_1.1.4         purrr_1.0.2         pkgload_1.4.0       promises_1.3.0      shiny_1.9.1         xtable_1.8-4        glue_1.8.0         
[10] htmltools_0.5.8.1   httpuv_1.6.15       pkgbuild_1.4.4      ellipsis_0.3.2      fastmap_1.2.0       lifecycle_1.0.4     memoise_2.0.1       BiocManager_1.30.25 compiler_4.4.1     
[19] miniUI_0.1.1.1      fs_1.6.4            sessioninfo_1.2.2   LEA_3.16.0          htmlwidgets_1.6.4   Rcpp_1.0.13         rstudioapi_0.16.0   urlchecker_1.0.1    later_1.3.2        
[28] digest_0.6.37       R6_2.5.1            parallel_4.4.1      magrittr_2.0.3      tools_4.4.1         mime_0.12           profvis_0.4.0       cachem_1.1.0        remotes_2.5.0
pathnotwritable BiocManager LEA • 810 views
ADD COMMENT
1
Entering edit mode
@james-w-macdonald-5106
Last seen 3 hours ago
United States

You have installed the packages you wanted:

package BiocVersion successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked
    package LEA successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked

But there are some packages (the recommended packages) that are installed in a different location that you don't have write privileges, and that are not updated:

Installation paths not writeable, unable to update packages
      path: C:/Program Files/R/R-4.4.1/library
      packages:
        boot, foreign, MASS, nlme, survival

As a general rule that's not a problem, but if you want to update the recommended packages you have to run R as an administrator and then use BiocManager::install. But I would caution against doing anything else with R as administrator. After installing the recommended packages, close R and restart with your regular privileges.

0
Entering edit mode

Hi James, and thank you so much for your quick reply! That's great to know that I have installed successfully the packages i wanted. What I don't understand is how the dependencies those packages need (i.e. boot, foreign, MASS) are not already the most up to date since I have just updated R and so all the packages too...and have installed these Bioconductor packages after this process... It is quite puzzling to me. Would you foresee any problem if I try to update those packages as you suggested by running R as Administrator? I guess running BiocManager::install("MASS") as usual then? Thank you! Best, Gabriella

ADD REPLY
0
Entering edit mode

The recommended packages aren't dependencies for LEA or BiocVersion. They are called recommended because while they are not part of base R, they come automatically with R. So 'recommended' isn't a good term - it should be 'required' or 'forced upon you by the R Core overlords' ;-D

All joking aside, it's up to you if you want to update those packages. I have been doing this for <gulp> 25 years now and have never felt the need to update the recommended packages (except when upgrading R because, well overlords).

ADD REPLY

Login before adding your answer.

Traffic: 630 users visited in the last hour
Help About
FAQ
Access RSS
API
Stats

Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy.

Powered by the version 2.3.6