I use (as root: sudo) the following shell script to install the
latest pdfetex. For me it works. It might be of use to you.
#!/bin/sh
echo "Installing Pdftex..."
umask 022
unzip pdftex-1.30.4.zip
cd pdftex-1.30.4
sh ./Build
cp -f build/texk/web2c/pdftex `which pdftex`
cp -f build/texk/web2c/pdftex.pool `kpsewhich pdftex.pool`
cp -f build/texk/web2c/pdfetex `which pdfetex`
cp -f build/texk/web2c/pdfetex.pool `kpsewhich pdfetex.pool`
chown -R root:wheel /usr/local/teTeX
chmod -R u+w /usr/local/teTeX
chmod -R a+r /usr/local/teTeX
umask 027
cd ..
echo "Installing Pdftex done."
exit
yours sincerely,
dr. H. van der Meer
On Nov 28, 2005, at 21:51, Thomas A. Schmitz wrote:
I have once tried to set up TeX on gentoo, and found this to be the
most complicated and least user-friendly distribution I have ever
seen. There's a bunch of texmf-trees in all kinds of bizarre
locations, and a symlink farm in /etc like you wouldn't believe,
and there's not a shred of documentation to be seen anywhere. So
they make everything as complex as possible, but the TeX binaries
are simply dumped into /usr/bin, so the only way to update is via
the emerge system. But enough of this rant: be careful to figure
out what cnf file is a symlink and which one is "real." They have
an entire web2c tree in /etc/conf.d/texmf, if memory serves right,
and the cnf files are regenerated from texmf.d/00texmf.cnf or
somesuch, so this is the file you need to modify. But in the end,
you may find it's not worth the trouble: just unmerge tetex and
install a vanilla teTeX system.
Best
Thomas
On Nov 28, 2005, at 9:05 PM, Nikolai Weibull wrote:
Taco Hoekwater wrote:
Nikolai Weibull wrote:
I've followed the instructions listed at
http://wiki.contextgarden.net/TeTeX_3.0_installation, but it won't
quite give. The problem is that I use the Gentoo installation
setup
as a base and have the latest ConTeXt installed in /usr/local/
share.
Does anyone know what options to pass to pdftex's configure-script
to match the setup on a Gentoo system (where stuff is stored in
/etc/texmf and /var/lib/texmf)?
It would be simplest (and definately justified) to ask this to the
Gentoo maintainer, because (s)he has apparently succeeded in setting
that up (Gentoo's trees seem to bear only a passing resemblance to
teTeX and would be more accurately called Gentoo-TeX).
Sadly, there's no separate pdfetex ebuild for Gentoo. If there
was, I
wouldn't have to mess with this :-).
My best guess: find the non-etc version of texmf.cnf (I'm fairly
certain there is one), and attempt to pass the root of texmf tree
that contains it as --datadir to the configure script.
Yes, there's one in /var/lib/texmf/web2c. The reason for this
layout is
to separate architecture-dependent files and non-architecture-
dependent
files. I can't say that the added complexity justify this
separation.
nikolai
--
Nikolai Weibull: now available free of charge at http://bitwi.se/!
Born in Chicago, IL USA; currently residing in Gothenburg, Sweden.
main(){printf(&linux["\021%six\012\0"],(linux)["have"]+"fun"-97);}
_______________________________________________
ntg-context mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.ntg.nl/mailman/listinfo/ntg-context
_______________________________________________
ntg-context mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.ntg.nl/mailman/listinfo/ntg-context
_______________________________________________
ntg-context mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.ntg.nl/mailman/listinfo/ntg-context