%global __brp_check_rpaths %{nil} %global __requires_exclude ^libmpi %global packname colors3d %global packver 1.0.1 %global rlibdir /usr/local/lib/R/library Name: R-CRAN-%{packname} Version: 1.0.1 Release: 1%{?dist}%{?buildtag} Summary: Generate 2D and 3D Color Palettes License: MIT + file LICENSE URL: https://cran.r-project.org/package=%{packname} Source0: %{url}&version=%{packver}#/%{packname}_%{packver}.tar.gz BuildRequires: R-devel >= 3.2.2 Requires: R-core >= 3.2.2 BuildArch: noarch BuildRequires: R-CRAN-combinat BuildRequires: R-CRAN-FNN BuildRequires: R-grDevices BuildRequires: R-CRAN-plyr BuildRequires: R-CRAN-scales BuildRequires: R-stats Requires: R-CRAN-combinat Requires: R-CRAN-FNN Requires: R-grDevices Requires: R-CRAN-plyr Requires: R-CRAN-scales Requires: R-stats %description Generate multivariate color palettes to represent two-dimensional or three-dimensional data in graphics (in contrast to standard color palettes that represent just one variable). You tell 'colors3d' how to map color space onto your data, and it gives you a color for each data point. You can then use these colors to make plots in base 'R', 'ggplot2', or other graphics frameworks. %prep %setup -q -c -n %{packname} # fix end of executable files find -type f -executable -exec grep -Iq . {} \; -exec sed -i -e '$a\' {} \; # prevent binary stripping [ -d %{packname}/src ] && find %{packname}/src -type f -exec \ sed -i 's@/usr/bin/strip@/usr/bin/true@g' {} \; || true [ -d %{packname}/src ] && find %{packname}/src/Make* -type f -exec \ sed -i 's@-g0@@g' {} \; || true # don't allow local prefix in executable scripts find -type f -executable -exec sed -Ei 's@#!( )*/usr/local/bin@#!/usr/bin@g' {} \; %build %install mkdir -p %{buildroot}%{rlibdir} %{_bindir}/R CMD INSTALL -l %{buildroot}%{rlibdir} %{packname} test -d %{packname}/src && (cd %{packname}/src; rm -f *.o *.so) rm -f %{buildroot}%{rlibdir}/R.css # remove buildroot from installed files find %{buildroot}%{rlibdir} -type f -exec sed -i "s@%{buildroot}@@g" {} \; %files %{rlibdir}/%{packname}