Last week I upgraded from Ubuntu 14.04 to 14.10. The first time I've tried to use ggplot in RStudio since the update, I'm getting dependancy errors with my ggplot package and its no longer registered as installed (was working fine before). When I try to reinstal ggplot2:
install.packages("ggplot2",dep=TRUE)
The installation fails while trying to install the dependencies. Here's what the tail of the output looks like:
* installing *source* package ‘stringr’ ...
** package ‘stringr’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked
** R
** inst
** preparing package for lazy loading
Error in library.dynam(lib, package, package.lib) :
shared object ‘stringi.so’ not found
ERROR: lazy loading failed for package ‘stringr’
* removing ‘/home/james/R/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu-library/3.1/stringr’
Warning in install.packages :
installation of package ‘stringr’ had non-zero exit status
ERROR: dependency ‘stringr’ is not available for package ‘reshape2’
* removing ‘/home/james/R/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu-library/3.1/reshape2’
Warning in install.packages :
installation of package ‘reshape2’ had non-zero exit status
ERROR: dependency ‘reshape2’ is not available for package ‘ggplot2’
* removing ‘/home/james/R/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu-library/3.1/ggplot2’
Warning in install.packages :
installation of package ‘ggplot2’ had non-zero exit status
The downloaded source packages are in
‘/tmp/RtmpWNyAha/downloaded_packages’
I have a feeling this is the line (below) I should be looking at, but I'm not sure how to interprete this error, anyone have any suggestions for me? I really have no idea where to go from here, as I couldent find any other people experiencing the same error as me.
Error in library.dynam(lib, package, package.lib) :
shared object ‘stringi.so’ not found
Not sure if the Ubuntu upgrade I did relates to this... but I thought'd I'd mention it just in case.
install.packages("ggplot2", dependencies = TRUE)
.stringi
withinstall.packages("stringi")
dependencies = TRUE
is failing withggplot2
. So, you need toinstall.packages("stringr", dep=TRUE)
, theninstall.packages("ggplot2", dep=TRUE)
.stringr
. Even when runninginstall.packages("stringi")
, the error still comes up. @Nick Kennedy: Awesome! That was it! I didn't realize thatstringi
was a package. There was an error in the installation of that dependant package. I've added an answer below to show the final steps I had to take to resolve it.