Provided by: ocaml-findlib_1.7.3-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       findlib.conf - [Configuration of findlib/ocamlfind]

GENERAL

       There are three possibilities to configure the findlib library:

         Build time:

              Before  findlib  is  compiled,  a  "configure" script is invoked to figure  out the
              settings that are most likely to work on the system.  Most    settings  are  simply
              entered  into  text  files  and  can  easily  be  changed   after installation. The
              following properties cannot be changed later  because they are  compiled  into  the
              resulting binaries:

                  •  The  default  location of the configuration file findlib.conf. However,  you
                     can set a different location by the environment variable  OCAMLFIND_CONF.

                  •  Whether the installed O'Caml version supports autolinking or not.

         Configuration file findlib.conf:

              An initial version of this file is generated by the configure script,  but you  are
              free to modify it later. Most important, this file  contains the system-wide search
              path used to look up packages, and the   default  location  where  to  install  new
              packages.

              All  files  with the suffix ".conf" found in the directory  findlib.conf.d are also
              scanned for parameters.

         Environment variables:

              The settings of findlib.conf can be overridden by environment variables.

       Last but not least, several settings can also be passed as  command-line  options,  or  by
       invoking the function Findlib.init.

findlib.conf

       The  directory  containing  findlib.conf  is  determined  at  build  time  (by running the
       configure script), the fallback  default  is  /usr/local/etc.  You  can  set  a  different
       location  by  changing  the  environment  variable  OCAMLFIND_CONF  which must contain the
       absolute path of findlib.conf.

       The file has the same syntax as META, i.e. it consists of  a  number  of  lines  with  the
       format

       variable = "value"

       Here is the list of allowed variables:

         path

              The  search  path  for  META  files/package  directories.  The variable  enumerates
              directories which are  separated  by  colons  (Windows:    semicolons),  and  these
              directories  are  tried  in  turn to find a certain  package. More exactly, if d is
              such a directory and p the searched  package, the search algorithm will first check
              whether  d/p/META    exists.  In this case, this META file is taken, and d/p is the
              package  directory.  Second,  the  algorithm  tries  d/META.p,  but  the  package
              directory must be specified in this META.p file by a  directory directive.

              Note  that  the first found META file is taken, so the order of the  directories in
              the search path counts.

              This variable is required.

              Example:

              path = "/usr/local/lib/ocaml/site-lib:/usr/lib/ocaml/site-lib"

         destdir

              This variable determines the location where ocamlfind  install puts the packages by
              default:  If d is this  directory, and p the package to install, a new subdirectory
              d/p will  be created containing all the files of the package.

              Example:

              destdir = "/usr/local/lib/ocaml/site-lib"

              This variable is required.

         metadir

              If set, the command ocamlfind install will put the  META  files  of  packages  into
              this  directory  (files are named META.p  where p=package name); otherwise the META
              files are put into the  package directories like any other file.

              Example:

              metadir = "/var/lib/findlib/metaregistry"

              This variable is optional. It is not used by default.

         ocamlc,  ocamlopt,  ocamlcp,  ocamlmktop,  ocamldoc,  ocamldep,  ocamlbrowser

              If you want to call  other  executables  than  "ocamlc",  "ocamlopt",    "ocamlcp",
              "ocamlmktop",  "ocamldoc",  "ocamldep", and  "ocamlbrowser", you can  set the names
              of  the executables here. The command ocamlfind looks  into these four variables to
              determine the names of the compilers to  call.

              Example:

              ocamlc     = "ocamlc.opt"
              ocamlopt   = "ocamlopt.opt"
              ocamlcp    = "ocamlcp.opt"
              ocamlmktop = "ocamlmktop.opt"

              This variable is optional. It is not used by default.

         stdlib

              This  variable  determines  the location of the standard library. This must  be the
              same directory for which the O'Caml compilers are configured.

              This variable is optional. It is not recommend to set this  variable    unless  you
              know what you are doing!

         ldconf

              This  variable  determines the location of the ld.conf file. This must  be the same
              file the O'Caml compilers read in; it is updated by   ocamlfind when installing and
              removing  packages.  You  can  set  this  variable to the special value "ignore" to
              disable  the automatic modification of the ld.conf file.

              If not set, the ld.conf file is assumed to reside in the O'Caml   standard  library
              directory.

              This  variable  is optional. It is not recommended to set this variable  unless you
              know what you are doing!

       Toolchains: It is possible to have variants of the original configuration. These  variants
       are  called  "toolchains"  because  they  are intended to select different compilers, e.g.
       patched compilers. In order to set a variable for a certain toolchain, use the syntax

       variable(toolchain) = "value"
         For example:

       ocamlc(mypatch) = "ocamlc-mypatch"
         When the toolchain "mypatch" is selected, this compiler will  be  used  instead  of  the
       standard one.

       In order to switch to a certain toolchain, use the -toolchain option of ocamlfind.

Environment

       A number of environment variables modifies the behaviour of findlib/ocamlfind:

         OCAMLFIND_CONF

              This  variable  overrides  the location of the configuration file  findlib.conf. It
              must contain the absolute path name of this file.

         OCAMLFIND_TOOLCHAIN

              This variable sets the currently selected toolchain when  a  -toolchain  option  is
              not passed  on the command line.

         OCAMLPATH

              This variable may contain an additional search path for package  directories. It is
              treated as if the directories were prepended to  the configuration variable path.

         OCAMLFIND_DESTDIR

              This variable overrides the configuration variable  destdir.

         OCAMLFIND_METADIR

              This variable overrides the configuration variable  metadir.

         OCAMLFIND_COMMANDS

              This variable overrides the configuration variables  ocamlc,  ocamlopt,    ocamlcp,
              ocamlmktop,  ocamldoc, ocamldep, and/or  ocamlbrowser.    Its value must conform to
              the syntax

              ocamlc=name ocamlopt=name ocamlcp=name ocamlmktop=name ocamldoc=name ocamldep=name ocamlbrowser=name

              Example:

              ocamlc=ocamlc-3.00 ocamlopt=ocamlopt-3.00 ocamlcp=ocamlcp-3.00 ocamlmktop=ocamlmktop-3.00

         CAMLLIB or OCAMLLIB

              This variable overrides the configuration variable  stdlib.

         OCAMLFIND_LDCONF

              This variable overrides the configuration variable  ldconf.

         OCAMLFIND_IGNORE_DUPS_IN

              This variable instructs findlib not to emit warnings that packages  or module occur
              several times. The variable must be set to the  directory where the packages reside
              that are to be ignored for this  warning.