Scroll to navigation

fmtutil.cnf(5) File Formats Manual fmtutil.cnf(5)

NAME

fmtutil.cnf - configuration file for fmtutil

DESCRIPTION

The fmtutil.cnf file contains the configuration information for fmtutil(8). Each line contains the name of the format (e.g., ``tex´´, ``latex´´, ``omega´´), the name of the engine that is used by that format (e.g., ``tex´´, ``etex´´, ``omega´´), the pattern file (e.g., language.dat, language.def), and any arguments (name of an .ini file).

Fields are separated by whitespace and complete lines can be commented out with ``#´´. The ``pattern file´´ field cannot be used to define a file that is used while building the format. It tells fmtutil which files (separated by commas) the format creation procedure reads and it has an effect to the options --showhyphen and --byhyphen. If the format has no way to customize hyphenation, a ``-´´ can be used to indicate this.

NOTES

The tex(1) and amstex(1) formats always load hyphen.tex. No customization by a pattern file is available for these formats. Therefore, the pattern-file field for the tex and amstex is usually indicated to be empty (``-´´).

You can, however, build customized formats on top of plain tex(1) or amstex(1) by using bplain.tex instead of plain.tex (b for the Babel system). See, for example, the bplain.ini file for the bplain format).

etex(1) loads language.def, not language.dat.

Symbolic links to the correct engines (e.g., bplain -> tex) are generated by the texlinks(8) script. Remember to run texlinks(8) if you run fmtutil(8) yourself, rather than using the FORMATS option in texconfig(8).

FILES

default configuration file
hyphenation pattern file
hyphenation pattern file
hyphenation pattern file

SEE ALSO

amstex(1), etex(1), fmtutil(8), tex(1), texconfig(8), texlinks(8).

<https://tug.org/texlive/scripts-sys-user.html>

BUGS

Email bug reports to <https://lists.tug.org/tex-k> (public mailing list).

AUTHOR

fmtutil and fmtutil.cnf was originally written by Thomas Esser.

This manual page was written by C.M. Connelly for the Debian GNU/Linux system. It is now maintained as part of TeX Live.

8 March 2022 TeX Live