Provided by: stow_2.3.1-1_all bug

NAME

       stow - manage farms of symbolic links

SYNOPSIS

       stow [ options ] package ...

DESCRIPTION

       This manual page describes GNU Stow 2.3.1.  This is not the definitive documentation for
       Stow; for that, see the accompanying info manual, e.g. by typing "info stow".

       Stow is a symlink farm manager which takes distinct sets of software and/or data located
       in separate directories on the filesystem, and makes them all appear to be installed in a
       single directory tree.

       Originally Stow was born to address the need to administer, upgrade, install, and remove
       files in independent software packages without confusing them with other files sharing the
       same file system space.  For instance, many years ago it used to be common to compile
       programs such as Perl and Emacs from source.  By using Stow, /usr/local/bin could contain
       symlinks to files within /usr/local/stow/emacs/bin, /usr/local/stow/perl/bin etc., and
       likewise recursively for any other subdirectories such as .../share, .../man, and so on.

       While this is useful for keeping track of system-wide and per-user installations of
       software built from source, in more recent times software packages are often managed by
       more sophisticated package management software such as rpm, dpkg, and Nix / GNU Guix, or
       language-native package managers such as Ruby's gem, Python's pip, Javascript's npm, and
       so on.

       However Stow is still used not only for software package management, but also for other
       purposes, such as facilitating a more controlled approach to management of configuration
       files in the user's home directory, especially when coupled with version control systems.

       Stow was inspired by Carnegie Mellon's Depot program, but is substantially simpler and
       safer. Whereas Depot required database files to keep things in sync, Stow stores no extra
       state between runs, so there's no danger (as there was in Depot) of mangling directories
       when file hierarchies don't match the database. Also unlike Depot, Stow will never delete
       any files, directories, or links that appear in a Stow directory (e.g.,
       /usr/local/stow/emacs), so it's always possible to rebuild the target tree (e.g.,
       /usr/local).

       Stow is implemented as a combination of a Perl script providing a CLI interface, and a
       backend Perl module which does most of the work.

TERMINOLOGY

       A "package" is a related collection of files and directories that you wish to administer
       as a unit -- e.g., Perl or Emacs -- and that needs to be installed in a particular
       directory structure -- e.g., with bin, lib, and man subdirectories.

       A "target directory" is the root of a tree in which one or more packages wish to appear to
       be installed. A common, but by no means the only such location is /usr/local.  The
       examples in this manual page will use /usr/local as the target directory.

       A "stow directory" is the root of a tree containing separate packages in private subtrees.
       When Stow runs, it uses the current directory as the default stow directory. The examples
       in this manual page will use /usr/local/stow as the stow directory, so that individual
       packages will be, for example, /usr/local/stow/perl and /usr/local/stow/emacs.

       An "installation image" is the layout of files and directories required by a package,
       relative to the target directory. Thus, the installation image for Perl includes: a bin
       directory containing perl and a2p (among others); an info directory containing Texinfo
       documentation; a lib/perl directory containing Perl libraries; and a man/man1 directory
       containing man pages.

       A "package directory" is the root of a tree containing the installation image for a
       particular package. Each package directory must reside in a stow directory -- e.g., the
       package directory /usr/local/stow/perl must reside in the stow directory /usr/local/stow.
       The "name" of a package is the name of its directory within the stow directory -- e.g.,
       perl.

       Thus, the Perl executable might reside in /usr/local/stow/perl/bin/perl, where /usr/local
       is the target directory, /usr/local/stow is the stow directory, /usr/local/stow/perl is
       the package directory, and bin/perl within is part of the installation image.

       A "symlink" is a symbolic link. A symlink can be "relative" or "absolute". An absolute
       symlink names a full path; that is, one starting from /.  A relative symlink names a
       relative path; that is, one not starting from /.  The target of a relative symlink is
       computed starting from the symlink's own directory.  Stow only creates relative symlinks.

OPTIONS

       The stow directory is assumed to be the value of the "STOW_DIR" environment variable or if
       unset the current directory, and the target directory is assumed to be the parent of the
       current directory (so it is typical to execute stow from the directory /usr/local/stow).
       Each package given on the command line is the name of a package in the stow directory
       (e.g., perl).  By default, they are installed into the target directory (but they can be
       deleted instead using "-D").

       -n
       --no
           Do not perform any operations that modify the filesystem; merely show what would
           happen.

       -d DIR
       --dir=DIR
           Set the stow directory to "DIR" instead of the current directory.  This also has the
           effect of making the default target directory be the parent of "DIR".

       -t DIR
       --target=DIR
           Set the target directory to "DIR" instead of the parent of the stow directory.

       -v
       --verbose[=N]
           Send verbose output to standard error describing what Stow is doing. Verbosity levels
           are from 0 to 5; 0 is the default.  Using "-v" or "--verbose" increases the verbosity
           by one; using `--verbose=N' sets it to N.

       -S
       --stow
           Stow the packages that follow this option into the target directory.  This is the
           default action and so can be omitted if you are only stowing packages rather than
           performing a mixture of stow/delete/restow actions.

       -D
       --delete
           Unstow the packages that follow this option from the target directory rather than
           installing them.

       -R
       --restow
           Restow packages (first unstow, then stow again). This is useful for pruning obsolete
           symlinks from the target tree after updating the software in a package.

       --adopt
           Warning!  This behaviour is specifically intended to alter the contents of your stow
           directory.  If you do not want that, this option is not for you.

           When stowing, if a target is encountered which already exists but is a plain file (and
           hence not owned by any existing stow package), then normally Stow will register this
           as a conflict and refuse to proceed.  This option changes that behaviour so that the
           file is moved to the same relative place within the package's installation image
           within the stow directory, and then stowing proceeds as before.  So effectively, the
           file becomes adopted by the stow package, without its contents changing.

       --no-folding
           Disable folding of newly stowed directories when stowing, and refolding of newly
           foldable directories when unstowing.

       --ignore=REGEX
           Ignore files ending in this Perl regex.

       --defer=REGEX
           Don't stow files beginning with this Perl regex if the file is already stowed to
           another package.

       --override=REGEX
           Force stowing files beginning with this Perl regex if the file is already stowed to
           another package.

       --dotfiles
           Enable special handling for "dotfiles" (files or folders whose name begins with a
           period) in the package directory. If this option is enabled, Stow will add a
           preprocessing step for each file or folder whose name begins with "dot-", and replace
           the "dot-" prefix in the name by a period (.). This is useful when Stow is used to
           manage collections of dotfiles, to avoid having a package directory full of hidden
           files.

           For example, suppose we have a package containing two files, stow/dot-bashrc and
           stow/dot-emacs.d/init.el. With this option, Stow will create symlinks from .bashrc to
           stow/dot-bashrc and from .emacs.d/init.el to stow/dot-emacs.d/init.el. Any other
           files, whose name does not begin with "dot-", will be processed as usual.

       -V
       --version
           Show Stow version number, and exit.

       -h
       --help
           Show Stow command syntax, and exit.

INSTALLING PACKAGES

       The default action of Stow is to install a package. This means creating symlinks in the
       target tree that point into the package tree.  Stow attempts to do this with as few
       symlinks as possible; in other words, if Stow can create a single symlink that points to
       an entire subtree within the package tree, it will choose to do that rather than create a
       directory in the target tree and populate it with symlinks.

       For example, suppose that no packages have yet been installed in /usr/local; it's
       completely empty (except for the stow subdirectory, of course). Now suppose the Perl
       package is installed.  Recall that it includes the following directories in its
       installation image: bin; info; lib/perl; man/man1.  Rather than creating the directory
       /usr/local/bin and populating it with symlinks to ../stow/perl/bin/perl and
       ../stow/perl/bin/a2p (and so on), Stow will create a single symlink, /usr/local/bin, which
       points to stow/perl/bin.  In this way, it still works to refer to /usr/local/bin/perl and
       /usr/local/bin/a2p, and fewer symlinks have been created. This is called "tree folding",
       since an entire subtree is "folded" into a single symlink.

       To complete this example, Stow will also create the symlink /usr/local/info pointing to
       stow/perl/info; the symlink /usr/local/lib pointing to stow/perl/lib; and the symlink
       /usr/local/man pointing to stow/perl/man.

       Now suppose that instead of installing the Perl package into an empty target tree, the
       target tree is not empty to begin with. Instead, it contains several files and directories
       installed under a different system-administration philosophy. In particular,
       /usr/local/bin already exists and is a directory, as are /usr/local/lib and
       /usr/local/man/man1.  In this case, Stow will descend into /usr/local/bin and create
       symlinks to ../stow/perl/bin/perl and ../stow/perl/bin/a2p (etc.), and it will descend
       into /usr/local/lib and create the tree-folding symlink perl pointing to
       ../stow/perl/lib/perl, and so on. As a rule, Stow only descends as far as necessary into
       the target tree when it can create a tree-folding symlink.

       The time often comes when a tree-folding symlink has to be undone because another package
       uses one or more of the folded subdirectories in its installation image. This operation is
       called "splitting open" a folded tree. It involves removing the original symlink from the
       target tree, creating a true directory in its place, and then populating the new directory
       with symlinks to the newly-installed package and to the old package that used the old
       symlink. For example, suppose that after installing Perl into an empty /usr/local, we wish
       to install Emacs.  Emacs's installation image includes a bin directory containing the
       emacs and etags executables, among others. Stow must make these files appear to be
       installed in /usr/local/bin, but presently /usr/local/bin is a symlink to stow/perl/bin.
       Stow therefore takes the following steps: the symlink /usr/local/bin is deleted; the
       directory /usr/local/bin is created; links are made from /usr/local/bin to
       ../stow/emacs/bin/emacs and ../stow/emacs/bin/etags; and links are made from
       /usr/local/bin to ../stow/perl/bin/perl and ../stow/perl/bin/a2p.

       When splitting open a folded tree, Stow makes sure that the symlink it is about to remove
       points inside a valid package in the current stow directory.

   Stow will never delete anything that it doesn't own.
       Stow "owns" everything living in the target tree that points into a package in the stow
       directory. Anything Stow owns, it can recompute if lost. Note that by this definition,
       Stow doesn't "own" anything in the stow directory or in any of the packages.

       If Stow needs to create a directory or a symlink in the target tree and it cannot because
       that name is already in use and is not owned by Stow, then a conflict has arisen. See the
       "Conflicts" section in the info manual.

DELETING PACKAGES

       When the "-D" option is given, the action of Stow is to delete a package from the target
       tree. Note that Stow will not delete anything it doesn't "own". Deleting a package does
       not mean removing it from the stow directory or discarding the package tree.

       To delete a package, Stow recursively scans the target tree, skipping over the stow
       directory (since that is usually a subdirectory of the target tree) and any other stow
       directories it encounters (see "Multiple stow directories" in the info manual). Any
       symlink it finds that points into the package being deleted is removed. Any directory that
       contained only symlinks to the package being deleted is removed. Any directory that, after
       removing symlinks and empty subdirectories, contains only symlinks to a single other
       package, is considered to be a previously "folded" tree that was "split open."  Stow will
       re-fold the tree by removing the symlinks to the surviving package, removing the
       directory, then linking the directory back to the surviving package.

RESOURCE FILES

       Stow searches for default command line options at .stowrc (current directory) and
       ~/.stowrc (home directory) in that order. If both locations are present, the files are
       effectively appended together.

       The effect of options in the resource file is similar to simply prepending the options to
       the command line. For options that provide a single value, such as --target or --dir, the
       command line option will overwrite any options in the resource file. For options that can
       be given more than once, --ignore for example, command line options and resource options
       are appended together.

       Environment variables and the tilde character (~) will be expanded for options that take a
       file path.

       The options -D, -R, -S, and any packages listed in the resource file are ignored.

       See the info manual for more information on how stow handles resource file.

SEE ALSO

       The full documentation for stow is maintained as a Texinfo manual.  If the info and stow
       programs are properly installed at your site, the command

           info stow

       should give you access to the complete manual.

BUGS

       Please report bugs in Stow using the Debian bug tracking system.

       Currently known bugs include:

       •   The empty-directory problem.

           If package foo includes an empty directory -- say, foo/bar -- then if no other package
           has a bar subdirectory, everything's fine.  If another stowed package quux, has a bar
           subdirectory, then when stowing, targetdir/bar will be "split open" and the contents
           of quux/bar will be individually stowed.  So far, so good. But when unstowing quux,
           targetdir/bar will be removed, even though foo/bar needs it to remain.  A workaround
           for this problem is to create a file in foo/bar as a placeholder. If you name that
           file .placeholder, it will be easy to find and remove such files when this bug is
           fixed.

       •   When using multiple stow directories (see "Multiple stow directories" in the info
           manual), Stow fails to "split open" tree-folding symlinks (see "Installing packages"
           in the info manual) that point into a stow directory which is not the one in use by
           the current Stow command. Before failing, it should search the target of the link to
           see whether any element of the path contains a .stow file. If it finds one, it can
           "learn" about the cooperating stow directory to short-circuit the .stow search the
           next time it encounters a tree-folding symlink.

AUTHOR

       This man page was originally constructed by Charles Briscoe-Smith from parts of Stow's
       info manual, and then converted to POD format by Adam Spiers.  The info manual contains
       the following notice, which, as it says, applies to this manual page, too.  The text of
       the section entitled "GNU General Public License" can be found in the file
       /usr/share/common-licenses/GPL-3 on any Debian GNU/Linux system.  If you don't have access
       to a Debian system, or the GPL is not there, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
       59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA, 02111-1307, USA.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (C) 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996 by Bob Glickstein <bobg+stow@zanshin.com>; 2000, 2001
       by Guillaume Morin; 2007 by Kahlil Hodgson; 2011 by Adam Spiers; and others.

       Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the
       copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies.

       Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the
       conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that the section entitled "GNU General
       Public License" is included with the modified manual, and provided that the entire
       resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to
       this one.

       Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual into another
       language, under the above conditions for modified versions, except that this permission
       notice may be stated in a translation approved by the Free Software Foundation.