Next: Introduction [Contents][Index]
This manual describes GNU Stow 2.3.1 (28 July 2019), a symlink farm manager which takes distinct sets of software and/or data located in separate directories on the filesystem, and makes them appear to be installed in a single directory tree.
• Introduction | Description of Stow. | |
• Terminology | Terms used by this manual. | |
• Invoking Stow | Option summary. | |
• Ignore Lists | Controlling what gets stowed. | |
• Installing Packages | Using Stow to install. | |
• Deleting Packages | Using Stow to uninstall. | |
• Conflicts | When Stow can’t stow. | |
• Mixing Operations | Multiple actions per invocation. | |
• Multiple Stow Directories | Further segregating software. | |
• Target Maintenance | Cleaning up mistakes. | |
• Resource Files | Setting default command line options. | |
• Compile-time vs Install-time | Faking out ‘make install’. | |
• Bootstrapping | When stow and perl are not yet stowed. | |
• Reporting Bugs | How, what, where, and when to report. | |
• Known Bugs | Don’t report any of these. | |
• GNU General Public License | Copying terms. | |
• Index | Index of concepts. | |
— The Detailed Node Listing — Ignore Lists | ||
---|---|---|
• Motivation For Ignore Lists | ||
• Types And Syntax Of Ignore Lists | ||
• Justification For Yet Another Set Of Ignore Files | ||
Advice on changing compilation and installation parameters | ||
• GNU Emacs | ||
• Other FSF Software | ||
• Cygnus Software | ||
• Perl and Perl 5 Modules | ||
Next: Introduction [Contents][Index]