manual/include/files-and-directories-ardour-knows-about.html
2019-05-19 09:49:46 -05:00

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<h2>Configuration Directory</h2>
<p>
Ardour stores configuration files in two places. The system configuration
directory and the user configuration directory. The system configuration
directory is used for stock configuration files at install time.
The user configuration directory is used by Ardour to store
configuration changes made in the GUI as well as being a place the user
can add control surface device files, scripts etc.
</p>
<p>
Ardour tries to use standard places for these directories for the platform
it is running on.
</p>
<h3>Linux</h3>
<p>
The user configuration directory will be somewhere inside the user's
home directory. The home directory on a linux system is normally
<code>/home/$USER/</code>, but should also be returned by <code>$HOME</code>
or <code>~</code>.
A normal place to find this is <code>$HOME/.config/ardour*/</code> where
<code>*</code> is the major version. However this can be set by the system with the
<code>$XDG_CONFIG_HOME</code> environment variable to something else. If you cannot
find <code>$HOME/.config/</code> on your system try <code>echo ${XDG_CONFIG_HOME}</code>
to see if your distro is using something else. In any case Ardour
appends the <code>ardour*</code>
directory to the result where <code>*</code> is the major version number.
For example, <code>ardour5</code> where the Ardour version is 5.6.
</p>
<p class="note">
In Linux, all path names are lowercase and case-sensitive.
</p>
<h3>macOS</h3>
<p>
The user configuration directory on macOS is
<code>$HOME/Library/Preferences/Ardour*/</code> where <code>*</code>
is the major version number.
For example, <code>Ardour5</code> where the Ardour version is 5.6.
</p>
<h3>Windows</h3>
<p>
Windows users are not expected to hand edit configuration files at all.
It is expected configuration options are changed with some sort of GUI
tool. For the most part all of Ardour's configuration is taken care of
by the GUI in preferences. However, there are devices that may need a
custom file and that would be in the users configuration directory.
</p>
<p>
Ardour asks the system for this directory and then appends
<code>Ardour*</code>
to the path where <code>*</code> is the major version number.
For example, <code>Ardour5</code> where the Ardour version is 5.6.
The official path would look like:
<code>%localappdata%\Ardour5\</code> Windows expands
<code>%localappdata%</code> to
a real path.
</p>
<p>
An example of a configuration path in Window 10 would be:
<code>C:\&lt;User&gt;\AppData\Local\Ardour5\</code>
The user in the path would be the user's account name.
</p>
<p class="note">
The above is only an example and may not even be true for all installations
of Windows 10.
</p>
<h2>Plugins</h2>
<p>
Plugins will be installed in various places, some by standard and some
by developer whim. Some are installed incorrectly by distro policy.
</p>
<h3>Linux</h3>
<p>
In linux there are 3 kinds of plugins Ardour can use. LADSPA, LV2 (LADSPA version 2)
or lxvst (VSTs compiled as native linux binaries). While it is possible
with some strange magic to run <a href="@@using-windows-vst-plugins-on-linux">Windows VSTs</a>
on linux, their whereabouts would follow the Windows info below.
</p>
<h4>LADSPA</h4>
<p>
LADSPA plugins should be found in <code>/usr/lib/ladspa/</code>,
<code>/usr/local/lib/ladspa/</code>
or in a directory mentioned in your LADSPA_PATH environment variable.
The most common mistake made by distro packagers, is to use a path
like <code>/usr/lib/$ARCH/ladspa/</code> and find that Ardour will not find that by
default. The user can either add a link from this actual directory to
the standard directory or add this path to LADSPA_PATH.
</p>
<h4>LV2</h4>
<p>
LADSPA plugins should be found in <code>/usr/lib/lv2/</code>,
<code>/usr/local/lib/lv2/</code>
or in a directory mentioned in your LV2_PATH environment variable.
The most common mistake made by distro packagers, is to use a path
like <code>/usr/lib/$ARCH/lv2/</code> and find that Ardour will not find that by
default. The user can either add a link from this actual directory to
the standard directory or add this path to LV2_PATH.
</p>
<h4>Linux VST or lxvst</h4>
<p>
They are typically installed in <code>/usr/lib/lxvst</code>,
<code>/usr/local/lib/lxvst</code> or
a directory mentioned in your LXVST_PATH environment variable. However,
this is not a standard and the VST plugin developer may install the plugin
just about anywhere. Therefore Ardour allows the user to set extra VST
paths in the preferences GUI under Plugins&gt;VST.
</p>
<h3>macOS</h3>
<p>
On the Mac, plugins are expected to be installed correctly Ardour uses
the system tool to scan for AU style plugins and LV2s should be in the right
place. LV2 should be in <code>$HOME/Library/Audio/Plug-Ins/LV2/</code>
<code>/Library/Audio/Plug-Ins/LV2/</code>
<code>/usr/local/lib/lv2/</code>
<code>/usr/lib/lv2/</code>
If an AU or LV2 plugin does not show up on a Mac it is probably
a development fault with the plugin and the plugin will not work with anything.
Ardour in Ardour 5.6 has support for native VST plugins. That is VST
plugins built for OSX. I am not sure if these have a standard place to
be, but as with other VSTs the search path can be edited at Plugins&gt;VST.
</p>
<h3>Windows</h3>
<p>
The most common plugins on Windows are VSTs. However, LADSPA and LV2
plugins are available for windows as well. In fact Ardour's built in
plugins are LV2s. The biggest advantage of LV2 plugins is that they are
the most likely to be cross platform and therefore allow the same Ardour
project to be worked on in Windows, OSX and Linux.
</p>
<h4>VST</h4>
<p>
As with other platforms, VSTs on Windows do not have a standard place
to reside. Ardour Preferences&gt;Plugins&gt;VST allows setting the VST path
from the GUI.
</p>
<h4>LV2</h4>
<p>
The LV2 standard for Windows is <code>%APPDATA%/LV2/</code> (On Windows 10: <code>C:\&lt;User&gt;\AppData\Roaming\LV2\</code>)<or
<code>%COMMONPROGRAMFILES%/LV2/</code> (On Windows 10: <code>C:\Program Files\LV2\</code>).
</p>
<h2>Project Directory</h2>
<p>
Ardour places a project directory where the user tells it to. This
directory is chosen when creating a project. In most cases the user
does not need to know about the files inside of the project directory.
However there are a few sub-directories worth noting.
</p>
<h3>export</h3>
<p>
This is the sub-directory where exported files end up.
</p>