Node:Site-wide Init, Next:defcustom, Previous:Default Configuration, Up:Emacs Initialization
In addition to your personal initialization file, Emacs automatically
loads various site-wide initialization files, if they exist. These
have the same form as your .emacs
file, but are loaded by
everyone.
Two site-wide initialization files, site-load.el
and
site-init.el
, are loaded into Emacs and then `dumped' if a
`dumped' version of Emacs is created, as is most common. (Dumped
copies of Emacs load more quickly. However, once a file is loaded and
dumped, a change to it does not lead to a change in Emacs unless you
load it yourself or re-dump Emacs. See Building Emacs, and the
INSTALL
file.)
Three other site-wide initialization files are loaded automatically
each time you start Emacs, if they exist. These are
site-start.el
, which is loaded before your .emacs
file, and default.el
, and the terminal type file, which are both
loaded after your .emacs
file.
Settings and definitions in your .emacs
file will overwrite
conflicting settings and definitions in a site-start.el
file,
if it exists; but the settings and definitions in a default.el
or terminal type file will overwrite those in your .emacs
file.
(You can prevent interference from a terminal type file by setting
term-file-prefix
to nil
. See A Simple Extension.)
The INSTALL
file that comes in the distribution contains
descriptions of the site-init.el
and site-load.el
files.
The loadup.el
, startup.el
, and loaddefs.el
files
control loading. These files are in the lisp
directory of the
Emacs distribution and are worth perusing.
The loaddefs.el
file contains a good many suggestions as to
what to put into your own .emacs
file, or into a site-wide
initialization file.