Although the package name miniCRAN
seems to indicate you can only use CRAN as a repository, you can in fact use any CRAN-like repository.
This vignette contains some examples of how to refer to different package repositories, including CRAN, alternative mirrors of CRAN, R-Forge as well as BioConductor.
To make simplify the code to show the salient features, we use a little helper function, index()
that is a simple wrapper around available.packages()
:
# Wrapper around available.packages ---------------------------------------
index <- function(url, type="source", filters=NULL, head=5, cols=c("Package", "Version")){
contribUrl <- contrib.url(url, type=type)
p <- available.packages(contribUrl, type=type, filters=filters)
p[1:head, cols]
}
The URL for the master mirror in Austria:
CRAN <- "http://cran.r-project.org"
index(CRAN)
You can also point to any other mirror, for example the stable version hosted by Revolution Analytics:
revoStable <- "http://packages.revolutionanalytics.com/cran/3.1/stable"
index(revoStable)
revoMirror <- "http://cran.revolutionanalytics.com"
index(revoMirror)
R-forge has CRAN-like structure:
rforge <- "http://r-forge.r-project.org"
index(rforge)
Although BioConductor has a different preferred install mechanism, the underlying repository structure is also CRAN-like:
bioc <- local({
env <- new.env()
on.exit(rm(env))
evalq(source("http://bioconductor.org/biocLite.R", local=TRUE), env)
biocinstallRepos()
})
bioc
bioc[grep("BioC", names(bioc))]
index(bioc["BioCsoft"])