Package Error Failed
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E: Some Index Files Failed To Download. They Have Been Ignored, Or Old Ones Used Instead.
and answer site for Ubuntu users and developers. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up Here's how it works: Anybody can ask a question Anybody can answer The best answers are voted r change library path up and rise to the top How do I fix a “Failed to download package files” error? up vote 37 down vote favorite 11 After I installed Ubuntu , I cannot update any software with the error message "failed to download package files". After having googled, I have tried: sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get upgrade changed to another sources But I still got the same error message. And there apt-get update failed to fetch is no problem with internet connection as i can connect to internet using Firefox in Ubuntu. Any ideas? updates update-manager share|improve this question edited Jul 2 '12 at 21:55 Jorge Castro 24.6k91387589 asked Oct 31 '11 at 8:01 wang.xueqiang 296139 I had the same problem after upgradin from 13.10 to 14.04. It was fixed by running: sudo rm /var/lib/apt/lists/* -vf & sudo apt-get update See ubuntuforums.org/… –parvus May 11 '14 at 9:26 add a comment| 3 Answers 3 active oldest votes up vote 49 down vote +50 Press Alt+F2 and type software-properties-gtk. Change the download location to Main Server or another server close to the country you live in and try to sudo apt-get update again. share|improve this answer edited Aug 8 '13 at 9:39 Gediminas Jeremiah Gudelis 560520 answered Nov 26 '11 at 9:00 Bruno Pereira 48.9k19149183 It fixed the problem. Thank you! :) –Pale Blue Dot Jul 14 '15 at 15:51 add a comment| up vote 9 down vote Run the following commands (saves a backup of the old lists and creates a new lists folder) and the BADSIG error does not occur: cd /var/lib/apt sudo mv lists lists.old sudo mkdir -p lists/partial sudo apt-get update share
Posted on February 12, 2013 by Jonathan Callahan This entry is part 5 of 20 in the series Using RThe post titled Installing Packages described the basics of package installation with
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R. The process is wonderfully simple when everything goes well. But it can be install.packages r maddening when it does not. Error messages give a hint as to what went wrong but do not necessarily tell you how
R Install Package From Source
to resolve the problem. This post will collect some of the error messages we've encountered while installing R packages and describe the reasons for the error and the workarounds we've found. 1) Older version of http://askubuntu.com/questions/73997/how-do-i-fix-a-failed-to-download-package-files-error R Warning message:
In install.packages(c("sp")) : package ‘sp’ is not available This is the message that you get when the CRAN package you're interested in requires a more recent version of R than you have. Remember, the default behavior of install.packages() is to grab the latest version of a package. In this case you have to poke around in the "Old sources" link on the CRAN page for that package http://mazamascience.com/WorkingWithData/?p=1185 and use trial-and-error to find an older version of the package that will work with your version of R. You should start by determining what version of R you have: R --version R version 2.8.1 (2008-12-22) 12 R --versionR version 2.8.1 (2008-12-22) This version of R was released at the end of 2008 and any version of the "sp" package released in 2008 should work. At least some of the 2009 releases should also work. Perusing the sp archive, we might try installing version 0.9-37, the last of the 0.9-3x series which was released in May of 2009: wget http://cran.r-project.org/src/contrib/Archive/sp/sp_0.9-37.tar.gz sudo CMD INSTALL sp_0.9-37.tar.gz ... # Success! 1234 wget http://cran.r-project.org/src/contrib/Archive/sp/sp_0.9-37.tar.gzsudo CMD INSTALL sp_0.9-37.tar.gz...# Success! 2) Unable to execute files in /tmp directory ERROR: 'configure' exists but is not executable -- see the 'R Installation and Administration Manual' By default, R uses the /tmp directory to install packages. On security conscious machines, the /tmp directory is often marked as "noexec" in the /etc/fstab file. This means that no file under /tmp can ever be executed. Packages that require compilation or that have self-inflating data will fail with the error above. One such package is RJSONIO. The solution is to set the TMPDIR environment variable which R will use as the compilation directory. Fo
Sign in Pricing Blog Support Search GitHub This repository Watch 1,839 Star 31,788 Fork 5,500 atom/atom Code Issues 1,760 Pull requests 102 Projects 0 Pulse Graphs https://github.com/atom/atom/issues/11464 Failed to delete [package]: Does not exist #11464 Closed UziTech opened this Issue Apr 14, 2016 · 44 comments Projects None yet Labels atom bug Milestone No milestone Assignees No one assigned 28 participants and others UziTech commented Apr 14, 2016 Description When uninstalling a package I get the error "Failed to delete [package]: Does not exist" Steps to Reproduce failed to Click Uninstall on a package Expected behavior: Package gets uninstalled and the install button appears Actual behavior: Error shows up and package gets removed from the computer but Atom still thinks it is installed until Atom is restarted Versions atom --version Atom : 1.7.0 Electron: 0.36.8 Chrome : 47.0.2526.110 Node : 5.1.1 apm --version apm 1.9.2 npm 2.13.3 node 0.10.40 python 2.7.10 failed to download git 2.7.0.windows.2 visual studio 2013 OS version: Windows 10 Build 14316.rs1_release.160402-2217 👍 18 50Wliu added the bug label Apr 14, 2016 Atom member 50Wliu commented Apr 14, 2016 I can confirm this, though not with an exact Atom version because it happened around a week ago. 50Wliu added the windows label Apr 14, 2016 Arcanemagus referenced this issue Apr 14, 2016 Closed Uninstalling a package displays following message #11476 50Wliu removed the windows label Apr 15, 2016 Atom member 50Wliu commented Apr 15, 2016 From #11476 (comment): Both Mac and Windows. Select a package to uninstall and following message [does not exist] displays. After restarting Atom, the message and the corresponding package is removed. edwinksl commented Apr 15, 2016 • edited I can confirm this happens on Atom Beta 1.8.0 in Ubuntu 16.04. $ atom-beta --version Atom : 1.8.0-beta2 Electron: 0.36.8 Chrome : 47.0.2526.110 Node : 5.1.1 $ apm-beta --version apm 1.9.2 npm 2.13.3 node 0.10.40 python 2.7.11+ git 2.8.1 $ lsb_release -d Description: Ubuntu 16.04 LTS 👍 1 Nikki1993 commented Apr 15, 2016 • edited Can confirm similar behaviour with latest 1.9.0-dev ver