X-Git-Url: http://git.chise.org/gitweb/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=man%2Fxemacs%2Fstartup.texi;h=dde0945b050680d4d73a8a15d2801b3f738d1806;hb=fd51ae2c1ee354801b32baa3f8e1c07561f19f38;hp=72e126085ef279175e0c8719506f7d4e46ca27a4;hpb=6883ee56ec887c2c48abe5b06b5e66aa74031910;p=chise%2Fxemacs-chise.git diff --git a/man/xemacs/startup.texi b/man/xemacs/startup.texi index 72e1260..dde0945 100644 --- a/man/xemacs/startup.texi +++ b/man/xemacs/startup.texi @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -@node Startup Paths, Basic, Command Switches, Top +@node Startup Paths, Packages, Command Switches, Top @comment node-name, next, previous, up @section How XEmacs finds Directories and Files @@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ XEmacs deals with a multitude of files during operation. These files are spread over many directories, and XEmacs determines the location of most of these directories at startup and organizes them into various -paths. (A @emph{path}, +paths. (A @dfn{path}, @cindex path for the purposes of this section, is simply a list of directories which XEmacs searches successively in order to locate a file.) @@ -22,24 +22,24 @@ installation itself. However, there are several views of what actually constitutes the "XEmacs installation": XEmacs may be run from the compilation directory, it may be installed into arbitrary directories, spread over several directories unrelated to each other. Moreover, it -may subsequently moved to a different place. (This last case is not as -uncommon as it sounds. Binary kits work this way.) Consequently, +may subsequently be moved to a different place. (This last case is not +as uncommon as it sounds. Binary kits work this way.) Consequently, XEmacs has quite complex procedures in place to find directories, no matter where they may be hidden. XEmacs will always respect directory options passed to @code{configure}. However, if it cannot locate a directory at the configured place, it will initiate a search for the directory in any of a number of -@emph{hierachies} rooted under a directory which XEmacs assumes contain +@dfn{hierarchies} rooted under a directory which XEmacs assumes contain parts of the XEmacs installation; it may locate several such hierarchies and search across them. (Typically, there are just one or two hierarchies: the hierarchy where XEmacs was or will be installed, and the one where it is being built.) Such a directory containing a -hierarchy is called a @emph{root}. +hierarchy is called a @dfn{root}. @cindex root of a hierarchy Whenever this section refers to a directory using the shorthand @code{}, it means that XEmacs searches for it under all -hierarchies under all hierarchies XEmacs was able to scrounge up. In a +hierarchies XEmacs was able to scrounge up. In a running XEmacs, the hierarchy roots are stored in the variable @code{emacs-roots}. @vindex emacs-roots @@ -53,8 +53,8 @@ usually installed on top of an XEmacs installation. (@xref{Packages}.) Hence, they play a prominent role in the various paths XEmacs sets up. XEmacs locates packages in any of a number of package hierarchies. -Package hierarchies fall into three groups: @emph{early}, @emph{late}, -and @emph{last}, +Package hierarchies fall into three groups: @dfn{early}, @dfn{late}, +and @dfn{last}, @cindex early package hierarchies @cindex late package hierarchies @cindex last package hierarchies @@ -63,33 +63,34 @@ up in the various XEmacs paths. Early package hierarchies are at the very front, late ones somewhere in the middle, and last hierarchies are (you guessed it) last. -By default, XEmacs expects an early package hierarchy in the a -subdirectory @file{.xemacs} of the user's home directory. +By default, XEmacs expects an early package hierarchy in the +subdirectory @file{.xemacs/xemacs-packages} of the user's home +directory. Moreover, XEmacs expects late hierarchies in the subdirectories @file{site-packages}, @file{mule-packages}, and @file{xemacs-packages} (in that order) of the @file{/lib/xemacs} subdirectory of one of -the installation hierarchies. (If you run in-place, these are directr +the installation hierarchies. (If you run in-place, these are direct subdirectories of the build directory.) Furthermore, XEmacs will also search these subdirectories in the @file{/lib/xemacs-} subdirectory and prefer directories found there. By default, XEmacs does not have a pre-configured last package -hierarchy. Last hierarchies are primarily for using package -hierarchies of outdated versions of XEmacs as a fallback option. For -example, it is possible to run XEmacs with the 20.4 package hierarchy -as a last hierarchy. +hierarchy. Last hierarchies are primarily for using package hierarchies +of outdated versions of XEmacs as a fallback option. For example, it is +possible to run XEmacs 21 with the 20.4 package hierarchy as a last +hierarchy. It is possible to specify at configure-time the location of the various package hierarchies with the @code{--package-path} option to configure. @cindex package path The early, late, and last components of the package path are separated -by double instead of single colons. If three components are present, -they are locate the early, late, and last package hierarchies +by double instead of single colons. If all three components are +present, they locate the early, late, and last package hierarchies respectively. If two components are present, they locate the early and -late hierarchies. If only one component is present, it locates the late -hierarchy. At run time, the package path may also be specified via the -@code{PACKAGEPATH} environment variable. +late hierarchies. If only one component is present, it locates the +late hierarchy. At run time, the package path may also be specified via +the @code{EMACSPACKAGEPATH} environment variable. An XEmacs package is laid out just like a normal installed XEmacs lisp directory. It may have @file{lisp}, @file{etc}, @file{info}, and @@ -103,17 +104,20 @@ There may be any number of package hierarchy directories. Here is a list of the various directories and paths XEmacs tries to locate during startup. XEmacs distinguishes between directories and -paths specific to @emph{version}, @emph{site}, and @emph{architecture} +paths specific to @dfn{version}, @dfn{site}, and @dfn{architecture} when looking for them. @table @code @item version-specific +@cindex version-specific directories directories are specific to the version of XEmacs they belong to and typically reside under @file{/lib/xemacs-}. @item site-specific +@cindex site-specific directories directories are independent of the version of XEmacs they belong to and typically reside under @file{/lib/xemacs} @item architecture-specific +@cindex architecture-specific directories directories are specific both to the version of XEmacs and the architecture it runs on and typically reside under @file{/lib/xemacs-/}. @@ -122,7 +126,7 @@ architecture it runs on and typically reside under During installation, all of these directories may also reside directly under @file{}, because that is where they are in the XEmacs tarball. -If XEmacs runs with the @code{-debug-paths} option (@xref{Command +If XEmacs runs with the @code{-debug-paths} option (@pxref{Command Switches}), it will print the values of these variables, hopefully aiding in debugging any problems which come up. @@ -155,16 +159,6 @@ variable @code{INFOPATH} @vindex INFOPATH to @code{Info-directory-list}. -@item lock-directory -@itemx superlock-file -@vindex lock-directory -@vindex superlock-file -Are the site-specific locations of the lock directory and the superlock -file, respectively. The @code{lock-directory} variable may also be -initialized from the @code{EMACSLOCKDIR} -@vindex EMACSLOCKDIR -environment variable. - @item exec-directory @vindex exec-directory Is the directory of architecture-dependent files that come with XEmacs, @@ -177,7 +171,7 @@ the package executable paths as well as @code{exec-directory}, and the directories of the environment variables @code{PATH} @vindex PATH and @code{EMACSPATH}. -@vindex EMCSPATH +@vindex EMACSPATH @item doc-directory @vindex doc-directory