Prerequisites: - Linux system with X GB disk space - cdebootstrap, schroot installed - GPG key for signing packages 1. Setting up the chroot environment for backporting The filesystem where you create the chroot needs to be mounted with exec and dev options, and you have to be root to do this: cdebootstrap -a i386 -f build etch etch32 http://debian.tu-bs.de/debian This will create a i386 chroot with essential software for building packages in the newly created directory "etch32". Of course, if you are backporting for a different release, substitute its name for etch, also in the following. 2. Configuring your chroot for comfortable use with schroot Put an entry like this into your /etc/schroot/schroot.conf (mine is located on my external drive mounted on /exthd) [etch32] description=Debian etch i386 (etch32) location=/exthd/etch32 personality=linux32 priority=3 users=ranke groups=ranke,root root-groups=root aliases=etch-ia32 run-setup-scripts=true run-exec-scripts=true You can then login into your chroot (as root) with schroot -c etch32 install the editor of your choice, add security and sid sources to your /etc/apt/sources.list (in order to be able to backport from sid), add a user, install and configure console-data for the keymap, install and configure locales, install subversion, devscripts (for editing changelogs with dch) and patchutils (for interdiff). In order to build packages as a normal user, use su username to change to the user account you want to use, then svn co http://kriemhild.uft.uni-bremen.de/svn/r-backports which will set up a couple of scripts and directories that I use for backporting. If you want to backport R, you can try apt-get build-dep r-base which would pull in everything you need for building r-base, if all build dependencies could be satisfied. This is unlikely, however, because then we would not have to backport... Last time I just put in an etch source entry in my sources.list, and grabbed the build deps from there as a start. You also need you gpg key in your build environment. I achieved this by the following bind mount in /etc/fstab /home/ranke/.gnupg /exthd/etch32/home/ranke/.gnupg noauto bind 0 0 because I don't want my secret key on the USB drive. 3. Backporting R Then go to directory r-base, edit the backporting script and try it with fakeroot sh backport_r-base.sh You will have to install some more build dependencies that have been introduced in newer R versions. 4. Backporting (compiling) recommended packages This is done in the parent directory, using the script backport_recommended.sh. You don't need fakeroot for this, because fakeroot is called in it where needed. You need to install an R backport in order to ensure compatibility and to satisfy build dependencies of recommended packages, which sometimes include other recommended packages that you will need to have installed from another source.