Provided by: texlive-base_2013.20140215-1ubuntu0.1_all bug

NAME

       texconfig - configures teTeX or TeX Live

       texconfig-sys - configures teTeX or TeX Live system-wide

SYNOPSIS

       texconfig

       texconfig [ commands ...]

       texconfig-sys

DESCRIPTION

       texconfig  allows  one  to  configure  and  maintain TeX in an easy and convenient manner,
       offering a series of dialog boxes to the user.

       The tlmgr program has subsumed  this  function  for  TeX  Live.   This  program  is  still
       supported, but the tlmgr interface is much more actively developed and tested.

       After  choosing  settings  or options, the appropriate files are changed automatically and
       the new settings are applied for the user.  If needed, copies of  files  in  TEXMFDIST  or
       TEXMFMAIN will be made in the user's TEXMFCONFIG tree.

       texconfig  uses  either the whiptail(1) or dialog(1) program to communicate with the user,
       so must be run in a terminal.

       For making system-wide changes, which will apply to all users of TeX (for example, default
       paper  size  and  so  on),  run texconfig-sys instead.  Changed or generated files will be
       placed in TEXMFSYSCONFIG.  (You may need to be root to do this.)

       Note that on a Debian system, changes to formats, font setup,  hyphenation  for  different
       languages,  etc. should not be done with texconfig, because fmtutil.cnf(5), updmap.cfg(5),
       texmf.cnf and language.dat are generated files in Debian.  See TeX-on-Debian.pdf,  TeX-on-
       Debian.txt.gz   or   TeX-on-Debian.html/index.html   in   /usr/share/doc/tex-common/   for
       alternatives.

       texconfig also offers a  non-interactive  batch  mode  which  can  be  accessed  with  the
       following commands

COMMANDS

       Commands  that  accept further options usually display available options if called without
       them.  For example, texconfig dvipdfm paper will inform about valid paper settings.

       conf   Display the system configuration.

       dvipdfm paper [letter|legal|ledger|tabloid|a4|a3]
              Set up dvipdfm to use papersize PAPER by default.

       dvips add PRINTERNAME
              Create         a          new          (empty)          configuration          file
              TEXMFCONFIG/dvips/config/config.PRINTERNAME.   This  file  can later be filled with
              the mode, offset or printcmd options

       dvips del PRINTERNAME
              Remove config.PRINTERNAME

       dvips mode
              List available MetaFont modes.

       dvips [-P PRINTER] mode MODE
              Change the MetaFont mode to MODE for PRINTER or for all output  files  (config.ps),
              if no -P option is given.

       dvips [-P PRINTER] offset x-OFFSET,y-OFFSET
              Set printer offset for PRINTER or for all output files (config.ps), if no -P option
              is  given.   Offsets  must  be  given  with  units,  e.g.   0pt,10pt  You  can  use
              testpage.tex from the LaTeX distribution to find these numbers.

       dvips [-P PRINTER] printcmd CMD
              Set  the printing command for PRINTER or for all output files (config.ps), if no -P
              option is given.  Commands might be lp or lpr.  See the description of the o option
              in info dvips or the -O option in dvips(1).

       faq    Display the list of Frequently Asked Questions about teTeX (and their answers).

       font vardir DIR, font ro, font rw
              These options should not be used on a Debian system unless you really know what you
              are doing.  For details, look at the output of texconfig  fonts  and  read  section
              2.5,  font  caching,  in  the  TeX-on-Debian  documentation  in /usr/share/doc/tex-
              common/.

       formats
              This command allows to edit fmtutil.cnf(5)  and  (re)creates  any  new  or  changed
              formats  afterwards.   It  should not be used on Debian systems, unless you want to
              temporarily create  and  test  a  specific  format,  because  fmtutil.cnf(5)  is  a
              generated  file in Debian, and changes will be overwritten.  See update-fmtutil for
              details.

       hyphen FORMAT
              This command allows to edit the hyphenation configuration  file  for  formats  that
              support  this,  and  recreates  the formats afterwards to enable the new languages.
              Available formats are shown when no FORMAT is given.

              Note that for formats that use LaTeX's language.dat,
               e.g.  (pdf)jadetex and latex itself, this change is  not  persistent,  since  this
              file  is  a  generated  file.  You should not use this command in these cases, read
              update-language(1) for alternatives.

       init [format]
              Recreate format or all formats if none is given, and the font information.  This is
              the same as calling fmtutil --byfmt format or fmtutil --all, respectively, followed
              by updmap.

       mode-list
              List available printer modes, together with the printers they were  developed  for,
              and their DPI resolution

       mode MODE
              Set  the  default printer mode in /etc/texmf/web2c/mktex.cnf or the respective user
              file in $TEXMFCONFIG/web2c to MODE.

       paper [a4|letter]
              Set the default papersize  for  dvips,  dvipdfm,  pdftex  and  xdvi.   The  set  is
              restricted because not all programs understand all sizes.

       pdftex paper [a4|letter]
              Set the default paper size for pdftex.

       rehash Call mktexlsr.

       xdvi paper PAPER
              Set  the  default paper size for xdvi.  The (long) list is available with texconfig
              xdvi paper.

ENVIRONMENT

       To let you change files, texconfig will open the editor specified in the VISUAL or  EDITOR
       variables, or sensible-editor if both are unset.

SEE ALSO

       whiptail(1), dialog(1), tlmgr(1), tex(1), mf(1), vi(1), EDITOR environment variable.

AUTHOR

       Thomas Esser