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R binaries for Fedora 17.

7 messages · Rolf Turner, Johannes Lips, Marc Schwartz +2 more

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I am currently (still) running Fedora 17 --- having not managed to screw 
my courage to the sticking place and upgrade.
Even though we are now up to Fedora 20, I think. The traffic on the 
Fedora mailing list on the upgrading issue is a bit terrifying.

I would just like to confirm that:

     It is ***NOT*** possible to download a binary of R for  Fedora 17.

Is this correct?

My efforts to obtain a binary using yum install resulted in a binary for 
version 2.15.2.  (Whereas of course the source version available from 
CRAN is 3.0.1.

I just wanted to check that I am not doing something stupid (like maybe 
using an incorrect repository).

I presume that the latest version of R is available as a binary only for 
the last version (or last few versions) of Fedora.

Can anyone confirm my presumption?

No biggie.  I can build from source, and indeed have done so.   But 
downloading a binary is quicker and I'd just like to get straight what 
the true state of play is.

     cheers,

         Rolf Turner
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On Aug 2, 2013, at 5:01 AM, Rolf Turner <rolf.turner at xtra.co.nz> wrote:

            
Hi Rolf,

Fedora 19, just released last month, is the current stable version. 20 is not scheduled for release until mid-November at the earliest.

The problem is that Fedora 17 will be EOL'd "shortly", since the Fedora life cycle is to maintain a given version until one month after the +2 version release, which for 17 is 19. Each version has a lifecycle of roughly 13 months, since new releases comes out roughly every 6 months. As a result, no further updates for R, much less anything else (eg. bug fixes, kernel updates, security updates, etc.), for 17 should be expected at this point. 18 will similarly go EOL in December if 20 is released in November.

R 3.0.1 is available via the Fedora repos for 18 and 19. So you should really give strong consideration for updating your Fedora version, whether that be 'in place' or via a clean install. I used to do the latter, making sure that my /home was a separate partition, so that I could cleanly install a new version of the OS without losing my user folder tree. I have not used Fedora in several years now, so have not followed the current state of the upgrade process, other than having a general awareness of 'fedup', which is the new upgrade tool and I believe started with 17. 

Regards,

Marc Schwartz
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On 08/02/2013 06:01 AM, Rolf Turner wrote:
Nope, this is right. F17 just end-of-lifed, so I never did a 3.0.1 build
for it (because it would also mean I had to rebuild every other R
package in the Fedora 17 tree).

Apologies for the inconvenience,

~tom

==
Fedora Project
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Thanks to everyone who responded and confirmed my hope that I am not such
a complete idiot as I probably am! :-)

Looks like I'm going to have to bite the bullet and upgrade soon, but.  
Psigh!!!

     cheers,

         Rolf Turner
On Fri, Aug 2, 2013 at 12:01 PM, Rolf Turner <rolf.turner at xtra.co.nz> wrote:

            
4 days later
4 days later