Hi, all, I'm a newbie to R. I came across a problem when I tried to install R on an SGI machine which is running IRIX64 6.5. I have successfully run configure, but when I tried to run "make"(or "gmake"), errors came out. Following is the error message. Does someone has experiences in the R's installation on IRIX ? Any hints will be greatly appreciated ! Thanks in advance! Error Message: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ cc -I../../src/extra/zlib -I../../src/extra/bzip2 -I../../src/extra/pcre -I. -I../../src/include -I../../src/include -I/user_data2/jfxiao/local/include -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -OPT:IEEE_NaN_inf=ON -g -c character.c -o character.o cc-1185 cc: WARNING File = character.c, Line = 714 An enumerated type is mixed with another type. warn = warn | !utf8strIsASCII(CHAR(STRING_ELT(CAR(args), i))); ^ cc-1552 cc: WARNING File = character.c, Line = 698 The variable "uclass" is set but never used. int i, len, minlen, uclass; ^ cc-1020 cc: ERROR File = character.c, Line = 1300 The identifier "wctrans_t" is undefined. wctrans_t tr = wctrans(ul ? "toupper" : "tolower"); ^ cc-1185 cc: WARNING File = character.c, Line = 1733 An enumerated type is mixed with another type. Rboolean warn = !utf8strIsASCII(CHAR(STRING_ELT(pat, 0))); ^ cc-1185 cc: WARNING File = character.c, Line = 1926 An enumerated type is mixed with another type. useRaw = strcmp(CHAR(STRING_ELT(stype, 0)), "integer"); ^ 1 error detected in the compilation of "character.c". gmake[3]: *** [character.o] Error 2 gmake[3]: Leaving directory `/user_data2/jfxiao/local/source/R/R-2.1.1/src/main' gmake[2]: *** [R] Error 2 gmake[2]: Leaving directory `/user_data2/jfxiao/local/source/R/R-2.1.1/src/main' gmake[1]: *** [R] Error 1 gmake[1]: Leaving directory `/user_data2/jfxiao/local/source/R/R-2.1.1/src' gmake: *** [R] Error 1
fdu.xiaojf at gamil.com wrote:> Hi, all, > > I'm a newbie to R. I came across a problem when I tried to install R on > an SGI machine which is running IRIX64 6.5. > > I have successfully run configure, but when I tried to run "make"(or > "gmake"), errors came out. Following is the error message. > > Does someone has experiences in the R's installation on IRIX ? Any hints > will be greatly appreciated ! > > Thanks in advance! > > > Error Message: > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > cc -I../../src/extra/zlib -I../../src/extra/bzip2 -I../../src/extra/pcre > -I. -I../../src/include -I../../src/include > -I/user_data2/jfxiao/local/include -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -OPT:IEEE_NaN_inf=ON > -g -c character.c -o character.o > cc-1185 cc: WARNING File = character.c, Line = 714 > An enumerated type is mixed with another type. > > warn = warn | !utf8strIsASCII(CHAR(STRING_ELT(CAR(args), > i))); > ^ > > cc-1552 cc: WARNING File = character.c, Line = 698 > The variable "uclass" is set but never used. > > int i, len, minlen, uclass; > ^ > > cc-1020 cc: ERROR File = character.c, Line = 1300 > The identifier "wctrans_t" is undefined. > > wctrans_t tr = wctrans(ul ? "toupper" : "tolower"); > ^I think the problem is here. In the GNU C Library, "wctrans_t" is defined in "wctype.h", but on my system, "wctrans_t" is not defined in /usr/include/wctype.h Does anybody has successfully installed R 2.1.1 on IRIX 6.5 ? I have spent all day surfing on the net but find no helpful information. Thanks again !> > > > 1 error detected in the compilation of "character.c". > gmake[3]: *** [character.o] Error 2 > gmake[3]: Leaving directory > `/user_data2/jfxiao/local/source/R/R-2.1.1/src/main' > gmake[2]: *** [R] Error 2 > gmake[2]: Leaving directory > `/user_data2/jfxiao/local/source/R/R-2.1.1/src/main' > gmake[1]: *** [R] Error 1 > gmake[1]: Leaving directory > `/user_data2/jfxiao/local/source/R/R-2.1.1/src' > gmake: *** [R] Error 1 > >------------------------------------------------------------------------ > >______________________________________________ >R-help at stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list >https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help >PLEASE do read the posting guide! http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html >