# How do I install a package to a custom path for my framework? Each framework may have one or many different required package installation paths. Composer can be configured to install packages to a folder other than the default `vendor` folder by using [composer/installers](https://github.com/composer/installers). If you are a **package author** and want your package installed to a custom directory, require `composer/installers` and set the appropriate `type`. Specifying the package type, will override the default installer path. This is common if your package is intended for a specific framework such as CakePHP, Drupal or WordPress. Here is an example composer.json file for a WordPress theme: ```json { "name": "you/themename", "type": "wordpress-theme", "require": { "composer/installers": "~1.0" } } ``` Now when your theme is installed with Composer it will be placed into `wp-content/themes/themename/` folder. Check the [current supported types](https://github.com/composer/installers#current-supported-package-types) for your package. As a **package consumer** you can set or override the install path for a package that requires composer/installers by configuring the `installer-paths` extra. A useful example would be for a Drupal multisite setup where the package should be installed into your sites subdirectory. Here we are overriding the install path for a module that uses composer/installers, as well as putting all packages of type `drupal-theme` into a themes folder: ```json { "extra": { "installer-paths": { "sites/example.com/modules/{$name}": ["vendor/package"], "sites/example.com/themes/{$name}": ["type:drupal-theme"] } } } ``` Now the package would be installed to your folder location, rather than the default composer/installers determined location. In addition, `installer-paths` is order-dependent, which means moving a package by name should come before the installer path of a `type:*` that matches the same package. > **Note:** You cannot use this to change the path of any package. This is only > applicable to packages that require `composer/installers` and use a custom type > that it handles.