Hi Ulrich,

Also if supporting your package on Windows turns out to be too much of a burden we can always mark it as unsupported on this platform. Still better than giving up on the package.

Cheers,
H.


On 8/11/20 08:21, Ulrich Bodenhofer wrote:
Hi Martin,

Thanks for your open words! We understand the situation and accept your / the core team's decision. Yes, we will ask the community for help. Even if nobody volunteers, we will not give up our package too easily. Currently, there is only one error in an example on the Windows platform. I expect this problem to be fixable, so the package will most probably make it into the 3.12 release - which gives us another six months to search for a solution. We will not be able to deal with compiler/configure errors on less common platforms (as reported by some users or as occurring on some more exotic CRAN servers), but I hope this is acceptable as long as the package runs fine on the Bioc servers and (hopefully) on the systems of most users.

Best regards,
Ulrich


Am 8/10/2020 um 16:49 schrieb Martin Morgan:
Hi Ulrich --

Certainly msa provides very useful functionality not present in other Bioconductor packages.

It's not possible for the Bioconductor core team to take on additional maintenance responsibilities; the best bet is to find someone else in the community willing and able to maintain the package.

If that person does not step forward, then we can proceed with the deprecation process.

Martin

On 7/28/20, 6:02 AM, "Bioc-devel on behalf of Ulrich Bodenhofer" <bioc-devel-boun...@r-project.org on behalf of bodenho...@bioinf.jku.at> wrote:

     Dear Lori, dear Martin, dear Hervé,
     [I am mentioning you personally, since you are the Core Team members I
     had personal contact with in the past]
     dear Bioconductor Core Team,

     This is an open letter to you and the Bioconductor community ... my
     letter concerns the 'msa' package of which I am the maintainer. You are
     probably aware that this package wraps three major multiple sequence
     alignment algorithms in one Bioconductor/R package. This standard
     functionality had not been available in that way in a Bioconductor
     package prior to its release. It is, therefore, frequently used (rank
     135 of 1879 packages; currently ~2,000 downloads per month) and the
     corresponding application note in 'Bioinformatics'
(https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__dx.doi.org_10.1093_bioinformatics_btv494&d=DwIDaQ&c=eRAMFD45gAfqt84VtBcfhQ&r=wYD6AeRFq_AWqJYrR2yTLQ&m=ltX8frDE6n47-tywLeYGT6r9gnh9DGw8pO0yPOEcQNU&s=e4GyQvM9coiTaCMKmaUiS5Duttw58hdAKq5zYdcPL3U&e= ) has gained quite a few
     citations on Google Scholar so far (tendency still increasing).

     I do not want to bother you with details too much, but just a few words
     about what this package is internally: it is a wrapper around three
     commonly used algorithms. All of these have been published as research
     prototypes, as (crude!) source code for user self-compilation under
     Linux/Unix. It was quite an effort to make these three complex libraries      run on all three major platforms (and to get rid of their memory leaks).      While the package has worked smoothly for several years now, due to the
     progression of R (and also gcc), some issues with Makefiles and
     configure scripts have come up that overwhelm me and my competencies. I
     should also mention that I am no longer active in the bioinformatics
     field and my students who did most of the implementation work are long
     gone. The fact remains that 'msa' currently produces check and build
     errors on the Windows platform (both release and devel; further issues      have been brought up by Brian Ripley concerning build errors with gcc 10
     on Fedora), and I feel unable to fix them.

     Now my question: would the Bioconductor Core Team be willing to take
     over the 'msa' package? I am sure there are members who are much more
     proficient in dealing with compiler flags, configure scripts and all
     that stuff than me. I am also convinced (1) that it makes good sense if      such a crucial functionality like sequence alignment is in the hands of
     the Core Team, (2) that it would be a great loss to the Bioconductor
     project if the package died, and (3) that the Core Team will have great
     ideas for further improvements of the package.

     What I can offer:

       * That you will have full control over the package and its future. I
         will not intervene in any way.
       * My long-term support if you have questions regarding the details of
         the current version.

     What I am asking from you:

       * Take good care of the package.
       * Otherwise: nothing special, but I would be grateful if the paper
         (see link above) would remain to be cited in the package (e.g. in
         the vignette and in the CITATION file).

     I am eager to hear/read your response, thank you very much in advance!

     Best regards,
     Ulrich

     _______________________________________________
     Bioc-devel@r-project.org mailing list
https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__stat.ethz.ch_mailman_listinfo_bioc-2Ddevel&d=DwIDaQ&c=eRAMFD45gAfqt84VtBcfhQ&r=wYD6AeRFq_AWqJYrR2yTLQ&m=ltX8frDE6n47-tywLeYGT6r9gnh9DGw8pO0yPOEcQNU&s=6oK3h-46Hallx4AJJ4luNvOxPhwXZ3bmqY4Eavj9M_0&e=


--
Hervé Pagès

Program in Computational Biology
Division of Public Health Sciences
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
1100 Fairview Ave. N, M1-B514
P.O. Box 19024
Seattle, WA 98109-1024

E-mail: hpa...@fredhutch.org
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