@c This is part of the Emacs manual. @c Copyright (C) 1985-1987, 1993-1995, 1997, 2000-2018 Free Software @c Foundation, Inc. @c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions. @node Packages @chapter Emacs Lisp Packages @cindex Package @cindex Emacs Lisp package archive @cindex Package archive Emacs includes a facility that lets you easily download and install @dfn{packages} that implement additional features. Each package is a separate Emacs Lisp program, sometimes including other components such as an Info manual. @kbd{M-x list-packages} brings up a buffer named @file{*Packages*} with a list of all packages. You can install or uninstall packages via this buffer. @xref{Package Menu}. The command @kbd{C-h P} (@code{describe-package}) prompts for the name of a package, and displays a help buffer describing the attributes of the package and the features that it implements. By default, Emacs downloads packages from a @dfn{package archive} maintained by the Emacs developers and hosted by the GNU project. Optionally, you can also download packages from archives maintained by third parties. @xref{Package Installation}. For information about turning an Emacs Lisp program into an installable package, @xref{Packaging,,,elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}. @menu * Package Menu:: Buffer for viewing and managing packages. * Package Installation:: Options for package installation. * Package Files:: Where packages are installed. @end menu @node Package Menu @section The Package Menu Buffer @cindex package menu @cindex built-in package @findex list-packages The command @kbd{M-x list-packages} brings up the @dfn{package menu}. This is a buffer listing all the packages that Emacs knows about, one on each line, with the following information: @itemize @bullet @item The package name (e.g., @samp{auctex}). @item The package's version number (e.g., @samp{11.86}). @item The package's status---normally one of @samp{available} (can be downloaded from the package archive), @samp{installed}, @c @samp{unsigned} (installed, but not signed; @pxref{Package Signing}), or @samp{built-in} (included in Emacs by default). The status @samp{external} means the package is not built-in and not from the directory specified by @code{package-user-dir} (@pxref{Package Files}). External packages are treated much like built-in: they cannot be deleted through the package menu, and are not considered for upgrading. The status can also be @samp{new}. This is equivalent to @samp{available}, except that it means the package became newly available on the package archive after your last invocation of @kbd{M-x list-packages}. In other instances, a package may have the status @samp{held}, @samp{disabled}, or @samp{obsolete}. @xref{Package Installation}. @item A short description of the package. @end itemize @noindent The @code{list-packages} command accesses the network, to retrieve the list of available packages from package archive servers. If the network is unavailable, it falls back on the most recently retrieved list. The following commands are available in the package menu: @table @kbd @item h Print a short message summarizing how to use the package menu (@code{package-menu-quick-help}). @item ? @itemx @key{RET} Display a help buffer for the package on the current line (@code{package-menu-describe-package}), similar to the help window displayed by the @kbd{C-h P} command (@pxref{Packages}). @item i Mark the package on the current line for installation (@code{package-menu-mark-install}). If the package status is @samp{available}, this adds an @samp{I} character to the start of the line; typing @kbd{x} (see below) will download and install the package. @item d Mark the package on the current line for deletion (@code{package-menu-mark-delete}). If the package status is @samp{installed}, this adds a @samp{D} character to the start of the line; typing @kbd{x} (see below) will delete the package. @xref{Package Files}, for information about what package deletion entails. @item ~ Mark all obsolete packages for deletion (@code{package-menu-mark-obsolete-for-deletion}). This marks for deletion all the packages whose status is @samp{obsolete}. @item u @itemx @key{DEL} Remove any installation or deletion mark previously added to the current line by an @kbd{i} or @kbd{d} command. @item U Mark all package with a newer available version for upgrading (@code{package-menu-mark-upgrades}). This places an installation mark on the new available versions, and a deletion mark on the old installed versions. @item x @vindex package-menu-async Download and install all packages marked with @kbd{i}, and their dependencies; also, delete all packages marked with @kbd{d} (@code{package-menu-execute}). This also removes the marks. @item r Refresh the package list (@code{package-menu-refresh}). This fetches the list of available packages from the package archive again, and recomputes the package list. @item f Filter the package list (@code{package-menu-filter}). This prompts for a keyword (e.g., @samp{games}), then shows only the packages that relate to that keyword. To restore the full package list, type @kbd{q}. @item H Permanently hide packages that match a regexp (@code{package-menu-hide-package}). @item ( Toggle visibility of old versions of packages and also of versions from lower-priority archives (@code{package-menu-toggle-hiding}). @end table @noindent For example, you can install a package by typing @kbd{i} on the line listing that package, followed by @kbd{x}. @node Package Installation @section Package Installation @findex package-install Packages are most conveniently installed using the package menu (@pxref{Package Menu}), but you can also use the command @kbd{M-x package-install}. This prompts for the name of a package with the @samp{available} status, then downloads and installs it. @cindex package requirements A package may @dfn{require} certain other packages to be installed, because it relies on functionality provided by them. When Emacs installs such a package, it also automatically downloads and installs any required package that is not already installed. (If a required package is somehow unavailable, Emacs signals an error and stops installation.) A package's requirements list is shown in its help buffer. @vindex package-archives By default, packages are downloaded from a single package archive maintained by the Emacs developers. This is controlled by the variable @code{package-archives}, whose value is a list of package archives known to Emacs. Each list element must have the form @code{(@var{id} . @var{location})}, where @var{id} is the name of a package archive and @var{location} is the @acronym{HTTP} address or name of the package archive directory. You can alter this list if you wish to use third party package archives---but do so at your own risk, and use only third parties that you think you can trust! @anchor{Package Signing} @cindex package security @cindex package signing The maintainers of package archives can increase the trust that you can have in their packages by @dfn{signing} them. They generate a private/public pair of cryptographic keys, and use the private key to create a @dfn{signature file} for each package. With the public key, you can use the signature files to verify the package creator and make sure the package has not been tampered with. Signature verification uses @uref{https://www.gnupg.org/, the GnuPG package} via the EasyPG interface (@pxref{Top,, EasyPG, epa, Emacs EasyPG Assistant Manual}). A valid signature is not a cast-iron guarantee that a package is not malicious, so you should still exercise caution. Package archives should provide instructions on how you can obtain their public key. One way is to download the key from a server such as @url{https://pgp.mit.edu/}. Use @kbd{M-x package-import-keyring} to import the key into Emacs. Emacs stores package keys in the directory specified by the variable @code{package-gnupghome-dir}, by default in the @file{gnupg} subdirectory of @code{package-user-dir}, which causes Emacs to invoke GnuPG with the option @samp{--homedir} when verifying signatures. If @code{package-gnupghome-dir} is @code{nil}, GnuPG's option @samp{--homedir} is omitted. The public key for the GNU package archive is distributed with Emacs, in the @file{etc/package-keyring.gpg}. Emacs uses it automatically. @vindex package-check-signature @vindex package-unsigned-archives If the user option @code{package-check-signature} is non-@code{nil}, Emacs attempts to verify signatures when you install packages. If the option has the value @code{allow-unsigned}, you can still install a package that is not signed. If you use some archives that do not sign their packages, you can add them to the list @code{package-unsigned-archives}. For more information on cryptographic keys and signing, @pxref{Top,, GnuPG, gnupg, The GNU Privacy Guard Manual}. Emacs comes with an interface to GNU Privacy Guard, @pxref{Top,, EasyPG, epa, Emacs EasyPG Assistant Manual}. @vindex package-pinned-packages If you have more than one package archive enabled, and some of them offer different versions of the same package, you may find the option @code{package-pinned-packages} useful. You can add package/archive pairs to this list, to ensure that the specified package is only ever downloaded from the specified archive. @vindex package-archive-priorities @vindex package-menu-hide-low-priority Another option that is useful when you have several package archives enabled is @code{package-archive-priorities}. It specifies the priority of each archive (higher numbers specify higher priority archives). By default, archives have the priority of zero, unless specified otherwise by this option's value. Packages from lower-priority archives will not be shown in the menu, if the same package is available from a higher-priority archive. (This is controlled by the value of @code{package-menu-hide-low-priority}.) Once a package is downloaded and installed, it is made available to the current Emacs session. Making a package available adds its directory to @code{load-path} and loads its autoloads. The effect of a package's autoloads varies from package to package. Most packages just make some new commands available, while others have more wide-ranging effects on the Emacs session. For such information, consult the package's help buffer. After a package is installed, it is automatically made available by Emacs in all subsequent sessions. This happens at startup, before processing the init file but after processing the early init file (@pxref{Early Init File,,, elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}). As an exception, Emacs does not make packages available at startup if invoked with the @samp{-q} or @samp{--no-init-file} options (@xref{Initial Options}). @vindex package-enable-at-startup To keep Emacs from automatically making packages available at startup, change the variable @code{package-enable-at-startup} to @code{nil}. You must do this in the early init file (@pxref{Early Init File,,, elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}), as the variable is read before loading the regular init file. Currently this variable cannot be set via Customize. @findex package-initialize If you have set @code{package-enable-at-startup} to @code{nil}, you can still make packages available either during or after startup. To make installed packages available during startup, call the function @code{package-initialize} in your init file. To make installed packages available after startup, invoke the command @kbd{M-x package-initialize}. @vindex package-load-list For finer control over which packages are made available at startup, you can use the variable @code{package-load-list}. Its value should be a list. A list element of the form @code{(@var{name} @var{version})} tells Emacs to make available version @var{version} of the package named @var{name}. Here, @var{version} should be a version string (corresponding to a specific version of the package), or @code{t} (which means to make available any installed version), or @code{nil} (which means no version; this disables the package, preventing it from being made available). A list element can also be the symbol @code{all}, which means to make available the latest installed version of any package not named by the other list elements. The default value is just @code{'(all)}. For example, if you set @code{package-load-list} to @code{'((muse "3.20") all)}, then Emacs only makes available version 3.20 of the @samp{muse} package, plus any installed version of packages other than @samp{muse}. Any other version of @samp{muse} that happens to be installed will be ignored. The @samp{muse} package will be listed in the package menu with the @samp{held} status. @node Package Files @section Package Files and Directory Layout @cindex package directory @cindex package file @findex package-install-file Each package is downloaded from the package archive in the form of a single @dfn{package file}---either an Emacs Lisp source file, or a tar file containing multiple Emacs Lisp source and other files. Package files are automatically retrieved, processed, and disposed of by the Emacs commands that install packages. Normally, you will not need to deal directly with them, unless you are making a package (@pxref{Packaging,,,elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}). Should you ever need to install a package directly from a package file, use the command @kbd{M-x package-install-file}. @vindex package-user-dir Once installed, the contents of a package are placed in a subdirectory of @file{~/.emacs.d/elpa/} (you can change the name of that directory by changing the variable @code{package-user-dir}). The package subdirectory is named @file{@var{name}-@var{version}}, where @var{name} is the package name and @var{version} is its version string. @cindex system-wide packages @vindex package-directory-list In addition to @code{package-user-dir}, Emacs looks for installed packages in the directories listed in @code{package-directory-list}. These directories are meant for system administrators to make Emacs packages available system-wide; Emacs itself never installs packages there. The package subdirectories for @code{package-directory-list} are laid out in the same way as in @code{package-user-dir}. Deleting a package (@pxref{Package Menu}) involves deleting the corresponding package subdirectory. This only works for packages installed in @code{package-user-dir}; if told to act on a package in a system-wide package directory, the deletion command signals an error.