Frequently Asked Question List for TeX
In almost all cases, new material that you install should go into the “local” tree of your (La)TeX installation. (A discussion of reasons not to use the local tree appears below.)
On a Unix(-alike) system, using TeX Live or teTeX, the root
directory will be named something like /usr/share/texmf-local/
or /usr/local/share/texmf/
You can ask such a system where it believes a local tree should be:
kpsewhich -var-value TEXMFLOCAL
the output being the actual path, for example (on the workstation this author is using today):
/usr/local/share/texmf
In a MiKTeX installation, the location will in fact typically be
something you specified yourself when you installed MiKTeX in the
first place, but you may find you need to create one. The MiKTeX
“Settings” window (
Start
→
Programs
→
MiKTeX
→
Settings
)
has a tab Roots
; that tab gives a list of current
TDS roots (they’re typically not called
texmf
-anything). If there’s not one there with
local
in its name, create an appropriate one (see below),
and register it using the window’s
Add
button.
The
MiKTeX FAQ
suggests that you should create
C: Local TeX Files
, which is good if you
manage your own machine, but often not even possible in corporate, or
similar, environments — in such situations, the user may have no
control over the hard disc of the computer, at all.
So the real criterion is that your local tree should be somewhere that you, rather than the system, control. Restrictive systems often provide a “home directory” for each user, mounted as a network drive; this is a natural home for the user’s local tree. Other (often academic) environments assume the user is going to provide a memory stick, and will assign it a defined drive letter — another good candidate location. Note that the semantics of such a tree are indistinguishable from those of a “home” TEXMF tree.
You might not wish to use the ‘local’ tree:
If the system is upgraded (or otherwise re-installed), a copy made in the TEXMF tree will probably be overwritten or deleted. This may be what you want, but otherwise it’s a powerful incentive to use a tree that is not “part of the installed system”.
The reason one might place upgrades the distribution’s main tree is to avoid confusion. Suppose you were to place the file on the local tree, and then install a new version of the distribution — you might have an effect like:
In such a situation, you could find yourself using version n+1 (from the local tree) after the new distribution has been installed.
If you install in the local tree, the only way to avoid such problems is to carefully purge the local tree when installing a new distribution. This is tedious, if you’re maintaining a large installation.
FAQ ID: Q-what-TDS