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Home/ Questions/Q 789781
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T21:34:39+00:00 2026-05-14T21:34:39+00:00

So after writing a large .tex file and using many packages I want to

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So after writing a large .tex file and using many packages I want to archive everything, not just the .tex .jpg files, but also the .sty files.

This is because sometimes some options in the sty files are changed, and then I can’t compile the file.

The “problem” is that in using Ubuntu, I already installed all the packages in my system.
I don’t want to have to copy them manually.
Is there a program that can do this automatically?

Thanks.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T21:34:40+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 9:34 pm

    See https://texfaq.org/FAQ-filesused, quote:

    All the files used by this document When you’re sharing a document
    with someone else (perhaps as part of a co-development cycle) it’s as
    well to arrange that both correspondents have the same set of
    auxiliary files, as well as the document in question. Your
    correspondent obviously needs the same set of files (if you use the
    url package, she has to have url too, for example). But
    suppose you have a bug-free version of the shinynew package but her
    copy is still the unstable original; until you both realise what is
    happening, such a situation can be very confusing.

    The simplest solution is the LaTeX \listfiles command. This places a
    list of the files used and their version numbers in the log file. If
    you extract that list and transmit it with your file, it can be used
    as a check-list in case that problems arise.

    Note that \listfiles only registers things that are input by the
    “standard” LaTeX mechanisms (\documentclass, \usepackage,
    \include, \includegraphics and so on). The \input command, as
    modified by LaTeX and used, with LaTeX syntax, as:

    \input{mymacros}
    

    records file details for mymacros.tex, but if you use TeX primitive
    syntax for \input, as:

    \input mymacros
    

    mymacros.tex won’t be recorded, and so won’t listed by \listfiles
    — you’ve bypassed the mechanism that records its use.

    The snapshot package helps the owner of a LaTeX document obtain
    a list of the external dependencies of the document, in a form that
    can be embedded at the top of the document. The intended use of the
    package is the creation of archival copies of documents, but it has
    application in document exchange situations too.

    The bundledoc system uses the snapshot to produce an archive
    (e.g., tar.gz or zip) of the files needed by your document; it
    comes with configuration files for use with TeX Live-Unix and MiKTeX.
    It’s plainly useful when you’re sending the first copy of a document.

    The mkjobtexmf finds which files are used in a “job”, either via the
    -recorder option of TeX, or by using the (Unix) command strace to
    keep an eye on what TeX is doing. The files thus found are copied (or
    linked) to a directory which may then be saved for transmission or
    archiving.

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