pax_global_header00006660000000000000000000000064147256541430014525gustar00rootroot0000000000000052 comment=15e19732af088d9ae0f32648e150992de162d2e6 rubber-1.6.7/000077500000000000000000000000001472565414300130215ustar00rootroot00000000000000rubber-1.6.7/.git-blame-ignore-revs000066400000000000000000000002411472565414300171160ustar00rootroot00000000000000# Yapf format the codebase, add .style.yapf 31f54a8ae2ba9864cc866b35c940c6d6ea13c53e # Replace tabulations with 4-spaces 31cfa58ec58237b0ea94642de36a638d0c9517f8rubber-1.6.7/.gitlab-ci.yml000066400000000000000000000020321472565414300154520ustar00rootroot00000000000000image: "flowdalic/debian-testing-dev:1.12" before_script: - | readarray TOOLS < Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. Preamble The GNU General Public License is a free, copyleft license for software and other kinds of works. 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If the disclaimer of warranty and limitation of liability provided above cannot be given local legal effect according to their terms, reviewing courts shall apply local law that most closely approximates an absolute waiver of all civil liability in connection with the Program, unless a warranty or assumption of liability accompanies a copy of the Program in return for a fee. END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms. To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively state the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found. Copyright (C) This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see . Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail. If the program does terminal interaction, make it output a short notice like this when it starts in an interactive mode: Copyright (C) This program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'. This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it under certain conditions; type `show c' for details. The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate parts of the General Public License. Of course, your program's commands might be different; for a GUI interface, you would use an "about box". You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or school, if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if necessary. For more information on this, and how to apply and follow the GNU GPL, see . The GNU General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this License. But first, please read . rubber-1.6.7/Makefile000066400000000000000000000013211472565414300144560ustar00rootroot00000000000000.PHONY: build build-wheel check check-license format lint pyflakes pylint test yapf MODULES_AND_PACKAGES := hatch_build.py rubber bin build-wheel: # Cleanup dist by running `rm -rf dist/` python3 -m build publish-wheel: python3 -m twine upload dist/latex-rubber-* check: lint test check-license: ./tools/check-license format: yapf --in-place --recursive --parallel . lint: pyflakes pylint yapf check-license pyflakes: pyflakes $(MODULES_AND_PACKAGES) pylint: pylint --errors-only $(MODULES_AND_PACKAGES) yapf: yapf --diff --recursive --parallel $(MODULES_AND_PACKAGES) test: (cd tests && ./run.sh *) .PHONY: gitlab-runner gitlab-runner: gitlab-runner exec docker test gitlab-runner exec docker lint rubber-1.6.7/NEWS000066400000000000000000000371521472565414300135300ustar00rootroot00000000000000Upcoming Version Nothing so far… Version 1.6.7 (2024-12-09) - graphics: add suffixes for engine=lualatex (by Florian Schmaus) - support glossaries nomain package option (by Florian Fischer) - support glossaries acronym package option (by Florian Fischer) Version 1.6.6 (2024-04-25) - Replace much of dynamic CustomBuildHook code by static `tool.hatch.build.targets.wheel.shared-data` and `tool.hatch.build.targets.sdist` (!36 by Sebastian Pipping) Version 1.6.5 (2024-04-11) - Add missing runner-pipe man pages to both sdist and wheel (#12, !32 by Sebastian Pipping) - Make `NEWS` and `*.in` files be included with sdist archive again (#11, !34 by Sebastian Pipping) - Make `tests/` folder be included with sdist archive (#13, !33 by Sebastian Pipping) - Use locations `/usr/share/doc/rubber` and `/usr/share/man/{,fr/}man1` for documentation in wheel archive (!32 by Sebastian Pipping) Version 1.6.4 (2024-04-09) - Bring back missing ZSH completion file (!31 by Sebastian Pipping) - Fix empty project description on PyPI (!31 by Sebastian Pipping) - Fix support for gpep517 (!31 by Sebastian Pipping) - Add command "clean" to hatch_build.py (!31 by Sebastian Pipping) - Other misc improvements to hatch_build.py (!31 by Sebastian Pipping) - Migrate README to Markdown (!31 by Sebastian Pipping) Version 1.6.3 (2024-04-06) - Migrate from Setuptools to PEP 517 pyproject.toml and Hatchling (!30 by Sebastian Pipping) Version 1.6.2 (2024-03-30) - Require Python >=3.8 (!29 by Sebastian Pipping) - Fix crash with source path that uses special characters (#10, !25 by Pietro Battiston) - Announce "--into DIR" at runtime more consistently (!27 by Florian Fischer) - setup.py: Fix version going into call setup(..) and file rubber/version.py (!29 by Sebastian Pipping) - setup.py: Migrate off of distutils (!29 by Sebastian Pipping) - setup.py: Hide virtualenvs from command "clean" (!29 by Sebastian Pipping) Version 1.6.1 (2022-06-08) - Available on PyPI as `latex-rubber` Version 1.6.0 (2021-06-16) - Add support for LuaTeX via the lualatex module - Introduce rubbercache for faster compilations Version 1.5.1 (2018-09-12) Fix two severe regressions in the python3 port. Bugfixes: - Restore support for 8-bits encoded .tex sources (Debian: #907937, #907988). - Fix many crashing log/warning/error messages. Version 1.5 (2018-08-06) This version requires Python3. It assumes that all files are encoded in utf-8. This should not cause new problems, previous versions were silently assuming ASCII. Features: - Remove support for selection of paper size and orientation. - Prohibit onchange directive unless --unsafe mode. Bugfixes: - Fix stacktrace when parsing BibTeX errors (LP: #1533723). - Use open mode r+ for /dev/null instead of rw (LP: #1543622) - Always give a relative source path to fig2dev (Debian: #345954). - Detect "Missing character" messages in log files (Debian: #384155). - Update hooks for all parsers (Debian: #813855, LP: #1470988). - Accept uppercase image extensions (LP: #1583475). Patch from Matthias Goldhoorn . Version 1.4 (2015-12-11) This version of Rubber officially requires Python 2.6 and up. Note that the code has not been tested with Python 3, so if you run it under Python 3, you're on your own. Bug reports are welcome! Starting with 1.4, the primary repository at Launchpad is a Git tree. Features: - New distutils-based build & install scripts by Nicolas. - Report BibTeX / Biber errors more reliably. - We have support for embedding R code via knitr. http://yihui.name/knitr/ Closes: https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/1422759 Note that since R can run arbitrary external code, --unsafe must be given at the command line: rubber -d --unsafe paper.Rtex creates beautifully typeset PDF from your R script. - Support for PythonTeX package. Also requires --unsafe if you want Rubber to invoke pythontex. - Rubber will no longer attempt to use jpeg2ps on its own, which has been superseded by sam2p. (You can add it back by providing your own rules.ini.) Bugfixes: - Refuse to read logfiles which exceed 1 MB. This avoids out-of-memory situations. The limit may be raised with % rubber: set logfile_limit 1000000 https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/628150 - The command-line parsing of rubber and rubber-info has been merged. Thus, the --inplace and --into options are not only accepted by Rubber (as they were previously), they also take effect. Closes: https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/975376 - Rubber complains properly now for nonexisting directives, and doesn't just print a stacktrace. Closes: https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/1090115 - More refactoring, reducing the number of code paths to test and maintain. Version 1.3 (2015-10-11) This version of rubber has changes in the dependency management. As a result, it may call LaTeX more often than it used to. On the other hand, there are less corner cases when LaTeX or BibTeX should have been called, but wasn't. Thanks to Nicolas Boulenguez for helping with lots of patches. Features: - Rewriting dependency management code with the aims of simplicity, correctness and reduced lines of code. - Support for SyncTeX. You can enable SyncTeX support by calling rubber --synctex, or by having a magic line % rubber: synctex in your document's preamble. https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/414431 - Support for ltxtable, glossaries and biblatex, contributed by Sebastian Reichel. Please test and report any problems! https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/860661 - Support for asymptote, contributed by Nicolas Boulenguez. - Support for bibtopic, contributed by Nicolas Boulenguez. https://bugs.debian.org/460670 - The BibTeX support can now use a different version of BibTeX. The external command for Rubber to run goes into the .tool variable: For example: % rubber: bibtex.tool bibtex8 tells Rubber to use BibTeX8. https://bugs.debian.org/471185 - New directive: "produce" which implies that a file is being generated during LaTeXing and must be cleaned up afterwards. Example: % rubber: produce doc.toc Indicates that during LaTeXing, .toc will be written (produce). Example 2: % rubber: produce doc.toc % rubber: watch doc.toc Indicates that doc.toc will be read (watch) and updated (produce). This also tells rubber to recompile the LaTeX document until doc.toc no longer changes. "produce" implies "clean", i.e. the file will be disposed of when rubber is invoked with --clean. - Beginnings of a test suite. The current code does not pass all the tests (neither did previous Rubbers). Bugfixes: - Fix handling of absolute pathnames by not having absolute pathnames for the most part. https://bugs.debian.org/682892 https://bugs.debian.org/798829 https://bugs.debian.org/798991 - Fix bibtex.path directive. https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/686187 https://bugs.debian.org/694265 - Fix ntheorem support. https://bugs.debian.org/328107 - Fix TeX parser to handle spaces and comments between the macro and its arguments. More radical fix than Debian (https://bugs.debian.org/725355) https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/1049883 - Fix read directive. Patch by Lionel Vaux. https://bugs.debian.org/701898 - Fix dvipdfm, backref and hyperref support. - Fix \includegraphics* https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/1478034 - Fix elatex being called when etex.sty is use'd. https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/856449 - Typos and clarifications in the docs, lots of cleanup and minor fixes in the code. Version 1.2 (2015-06-25) Features: - shell_escape feature to enable -shell-escape in LaTeX. BEWARE: granting shell-escape (write18) to a document permits it to run arbitrary external commands. Use only on trusted (your own) documents! Usage: to mark a document as requiring shell-escape, add the line % rubber: shell_escape near the header. To grant shell-escape to a document, run rubber as rubber --unsafe document.tex There are several older hacks documented on the internet which continue to work, but are deprecated from now on. The 'arguments' variable will be removed in the future. https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/878629 - XeLaTeX support. https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/660426 https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=579757 - Support for gnuplottex (requires --unsafe) - Experimental PythonTeX support contributed by Ferdinand Schwenk (requires --unsafe). Bugfixes: - Fix handling of set{,list} arguments. - Fix BibTeX called with absolute path and refusing to write. https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/1287593 - Fix LaTeX parsing with optional whitespace https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/195258 - Fix behavior when .aux is not generated https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/1208464 https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=402150 - Catch broken working directory and print error https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/529198 - Fix LoadClassWithOptions https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/1266912 https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=718932 - Fix \pdfoutput=1 https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/921444 https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=691305 - Update homepage https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/1169485 - Fix crash on nonexisting directory https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/529198 - Fix CWEB and lhs2tex support which was broken. - Fix stdin being leaked to subprocesses, including LaTeX https://bugs.launchpad.net/rubber/+bug/802169 And many others... Version 1.1 (2006-03-17) Features: - Support for user-defined conversion rules. - Support for xindy and sam2p. - Improved fig2dev support. - Experimental cache system. Bugfixes: - Better parsing of log files. - Improved error reporting (including for BibTeX and Metapost). - Better handling of verbatim environments. - Many other fixes. Version 1.0 (2005-07-11) Features: - More intelligent graphics conversion rules. - New command-line options "--inplace" and "--into". - New command-line option "-W" to report warnings. - New command-line option "--only" for partial compilation. - A completion function for Zsh. Bugfixes: - Modules "index" and "verbatim" fixed. - Fixed path searching in Metapost. - Fixed paper size handling (in dvips, dvipdfm, ps2pdf). - Better handling of aux files from \include'd sources. Version 0.99.8 (2004-08-27) Features: - Support for e-TeX and Omega. - Support for package "index". - New directive "onchange". - Support for \includeonly. - Option --maxerr to display only the first errors. Bugfixes: - Portability improvement (for Cygwin and hopefully others). - Improved the semantics of directives. Version 0.99.7 (2004-02-20) Features: - Support for VTeX. - Directives "watch" and "clean" for tables of contents and such. - Support for graphics conversion using ImageMagick (lots of new formats). - Support for packages "moreverb", "verbatim", "hyperref", "beamer". - Support for post-processing through dvipdfm. - New frontend "rubber-pipe" with the behaviour of a filter. - New module "expand" to expand inputs and bibliographies. - Support for Literate Haskell code (with lhs2TeX). - Error messages are now issued in the style of GNU compilers. - Compilation by pdfTeX into DVI. - Gzipping of the final document, command-line option "-z". Bugfixes: - Error-like messages from pdfTeX are now correctly handled. - Modules are handled correctly when compiling several documents at once. - Better dependency analysis for MetaPost. - Macro arguments can now contain line breaks. Packaging: - Introduced Texinfo documentation. Version 0.99.6 (2003-04-09) Features: - Handling of \graphicspath. - Conversion of XFig figures to combined EPS/LaTeX. - Parsing of MetaPost log files for errors. - Automatic JPEG to EPS conversion (with jpeg2ps). - Support for packages "epsfig" and "natbib". - Rubber directives in source comments. - Directives for specifying paths for LaTeX and BibTeX. - Directives to control the operation of Makeindex. - Paper size specification (for dvips). Bugfixes: - The action "--deps" in rubber-info now lists each dependency only once. - Kpathsea messages are now reported also during compilation. - Avoided some crashes due to file name tracking in rubber-info. - Fixed and improved CWEB support. Version 0.99.5 (2002-12-04) Features: - New format in error and information display. - The command line now provides a meaningful return code. - New "--short" command-line switch for compact error reports. - New (default) action "--check" in rubber-info. - Parsing of BibTeX log files for errors. Bugfixes: - Made the calls to LaTeX and others more portable. - Better date computations (this caused useless compilations). - Avoid crash whith documents with cyclic file inclusion. - The action "--deps" now lists all files the document depends on. Version 0.99.4 (2002-11-06) Features: - Handle correctly multiple .aux files produced by \include. - Support for package "minitoc". - Extraction of bounding boxes from gzipped figures (eps.bb from eps.gz). - Watch for changes in .aux files to avoid useless recompilations. Bugfixes: - Behaves better when the execution of external programs fails. - Made the call to epstopdf(1) more portable. Miscellaneous: - Introduction of the RPM package. - External program execution now requires Unix-specific features. Version 0.99.3 (2002-10-12) Features: - New actions "--refs" and "--warnings" in rubber-info. - Support for XFig figures (with conversion to EPS, PDF and PNG). Bugfixes: - Display problem fixed in Metapost support. - Better parsing of \includegraphics (now handles keyval options). Version 0.99.2 (2002-09-06) Features: - Dependency analysis for Metapost. - New command-line switch "--force" to force recompiling. Bugfixes: - Parsing of starred macros. - Support for compilation of a document from a different directory. - Improved source file name tracking in log files. Packaging: - Included the man page for rubber-info. - Better dependencies for Debian. - Introduction of TODO and ChangeLog. Version 0.99.1 (2002-06-21) Features: - Initial support for "graphics" and "graphicx" (dependency analysis). - Allowed the processing of several documents with one command line. - Handling of the keyboard interrupt (control-C). - Source file name tracking for error reports. - Page number tracking in rubber-info. - Introduction of the modular support for graphics. Bugfixes: - Better error extraction from log files. - Allowed empty suffix for all graphics file names. - Better source searching algorithm. Packaging: - Introduced the Debian package. - Added the description of the modules in the man pages. Version 0.99 (2002-05-31) This was actually the first version of Rubber. It was a rewrite in Python of the now-deceased Eel (that was written in shell script). rubber-1.6.7/README.md000066400000000000000000000151121472565414300143000ustar00rootroot00000000000000# This is Rubber. Rubber is a building system for LaTeX documents. It is based on a routine that runs just as many compilations as necessary and runs companion programs like BibTeX and Makeindex when needed. The module system provides a great flexibility that virtually allows support for any package with no user intervention, as well as pre- and post-processing of the document. A good number of standard packages are supported, including graphics/graphicx with automatic conversion between various graphics formats and Metapost compilation. The associated tool "rubber-info" extracts information, such as dependency relations or post-compilation diagnostics. # Installation Running Rubber just requires Python 3.8. Of course it won't be of much use without a working LaTeX environment (Rubber is known to work on TeXLive and VTeX on various flavors of Unix including Darwin and Cygwin, any feedback is welcome about other systems). For compilation, you will need the Python Distutils, which are usually included in development packages (in Debian, this is the python3-dev package). To build the documentation, you need texinfo (Debian package: texinfo). Note that all the documentation formats are disabled by default. To compile and install Rubber, just follow the usual procedure: ```console # python3 setup.py --help # python3 setup.py install # python3 setup.py clean --all ``` Some useful options to setup.py include: Disabling info docs: ``` # python3 setup.py build --info=False install ``` and similar for `--html`, `--man`, `--pdf`. Changing the installation path for manpages: ```console # python3 setup.py install --mandir=/path/to/man/pages ``` Installing to a staging directory instead of the root/prefix: ```console # python3 setup.py install --root=/staging/directory ``` Note that if you need build and install to be two different steps (for example when building packages for distribution purposes), Python's distutils will forget about any "build" options, and re-build with default options during the "install" stage. This is worrysome if you'd like not to build some of the documentation. It is then best to make options permanent by putting them info a setup.cfg file. For example: ``` [build] man = 1 html = 0 pdf = 0 info = 0 txt = 0 [install] prefix = /usr ``` Finally, invoke ```console # python3 setup.py build # python3 setup.py install --root=/staging/directory ``` # PEP 517 Build The newfangled build process for Python processes is specified in PEP 517. There's initial support for this, but the packages will not include the documentation. The development flow is as follows: ## Setup a virtual environment, using a Python version of your choice: ```console # python3 -m venv .venv ``` ## Activate the virtual environment, and install the requirements: ```console # source .venv/bin/activate (.venv) # pip install -U pip setuptools wheel (.venv) # pip install -r requirements-dev.txt ``` This is the virtual environment setup, it only needs to be done once. If the requirements change, rerun this latest step. To create a PEP 571-compatible sdist and wheel, run: ```console # make build-wheel ``` This uses the "build" module to create the files in the "dist" folder. These are the files to be uploaded to PyPI. # PyPI Release To publish the PEP 517 See https://twine.readthedocs.io for how to setup twine regarding credentials. After building the sdist and wheel, upload them to PyPI by using: ```console # make publish-wheel ``` # Usage As civility requires, saying `rubber --help` and `rubber-info --help` provides a short description of the command line's syntax. The included manual pages (available in English and French) and Texinfo documentation contain more precise usage information. # Known Bugs Rubber is generally working fine, though there are some known issues. 1) Rubber tries to do too much. Rubber attempts to provide a one-stop solution to compiling a TeX document, and run a lot of related software as needed. This approach is fragile for three reasons: a) It does so by parsing the .tex file itself, and all included files, and discovering any related input files. TeX is a hard language to parse correctly without embedding a full TeX interpreter, which rubber does not do. b) To do its work, Rubber needs to be taught about every version of every package in the TeX ecosystem in order to gauge its impact on the compilation of a TeX document. It needs to know the preferences of any TeX compiler with regards to image formats, search paths etc. All this information is hard to keep up to date. c) In some cases (like image conversion), it needs to outright guess what the user intends to do, and may in fact guess incorrectly. In a future release, some of these features may be taken out in favor of more modern ways to accomplish the same thing, with to goal to render Rubber simpler and more robust. One might want to make use of the -recorder feature (.fls) for example instead of attempting to read the same information from the human-readable log file. 2) The codebase has been cleaned up considerably, has been converted to Python3 and is generally in a sane state. Nevertheless, it has been written over a number of years, and some features would be implemented differently or skipped altogether if a rewrite were attempted (e.g. the onchange mechanism, modules, ...). 3) In some cases, Rubber will trigger a recompile that is arguably unnecessary. Rubber tries to err on the side of caution here. # Author Rubber was originally written by Emmanuel Beffara . It is currently maintained by Florian Schmaus , Sebastian Kapfer and Nicolas Boulenguez . Its homepage can be found at https://gitlab.com/latex-rubber/rubber Thanks to all those who provided testing, comments and suggestions, and re-thanks to those who wrote patches and bugfixes. Any kind of feedback is appreciated, in order to make this program as useful and robust as possible. # License Rubber is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see . ``` SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-3.0-or-later ``` rubber-1.6.7/bin/000077500000000000000000000000001472565414300135715ustar00rootroot00000000000000rubber-1.6.7/bin/rubber000077500000000000000000000013661472565414300150060ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/usr/bin/env python3 # SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-3.0-or-later # (c) Sebastian Kapfer, 2015 # vim: et:ts=4 from pathlib import Path RUBBER_BIN_DIR = Path(__file__).parent.absolute() POTENTIAL_RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH = RUBBER_BIN_DIR.parent POTENTIAL_RUBBER_MODULE_DIR = POTENTIAL_RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH / 'rubber' if Path(POTENTIAL_RUBBER_MODULE_DIR / '__init__.py').is_file(): RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH = str(POTENTIAL_RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH) print(f"Rubber invoked from VCS, prepending {RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH} to sys.path") import sys if RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH not in sys.path: sys.path.insert(0, RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH) import rubber.cmdline rubber.cmdline.main_rubber_plain() rubber-1.6.7/bin/rubber-info000077500000000000000000000013651472565414300157360ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/usr/bin/env python3 # SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-3.0-or-later # (c) Sebastian Kapfer, 2015 # vim: et:ts=4 from pathlib import Path RUBBER_BIN_DIR = Path(__file__).parent.absolute() POTENTIAL_RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH = RUBBER_BIN_DIR.parent POTENTIAL_RUBBER_MODULE_DIR = POTENTIAL_RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH / 'rubber' if Path(POTENTIAL_RUBBER_MODULE_DIR / '__init__.py').is_file(): RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH = str(POTENTIAL_RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH) print(f"Rubber invoked from VCS, prepending {RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH} to sys.path") import sys if RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH not in sys.path: sys.path.insert(0, RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH) import rubber.cmdline rubber.cmdline.main_rubber_info() rubber-1.6.7/bin/rubber-lsmod000077500000000000000000000013121472565414300161110ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/usr/bin/env python3 # SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-3.0-or-later from pathlib import Path RUBBER_BIN_DIR = Path(__file__).parent.absolute() POTENTIAL_RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH = RUBBER_BIN_DIR.parent POTENTIAL_RUBBER_MODULE_DIR = POTENTIAL_RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH / 'rubber' if Path(POTENTIAL_RUBBER_MODULE_DIR / '__init__.py').is_file(): RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH = str(POTENTIAL_RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH) print(f"Rubber invoked from VCS, prepending {RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH} to sys.path") import sys if RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH not in sys.path: sys.path.insert(0, RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH) import rubber.cmdline rubber.cmdline.main_rubber_lsmod() rubber-1.6.7/bin/rubber-pipe000077500000000000000000000013651472565414300157400ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/usr/bin/env python3 # SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-3.0-or-later # (c) Sebastian Kapfer, 2015 # vim: et:ts=4 from pathlib import Path RUBBER_BIN_DIR = Path(__file__).parent.absolute() POTENTIAL_RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH = RUBBER_BIN_DIR.parent POTENTIAL_RUBBER_MODULE_DIR = POTENTIAL_RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH / 'rubber' if Path(POTENTIAL_RUBBER_MODULE_DIR / '__init__.py').is_file(): RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH = str(POTENTIAL_RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH) print(f"Rubber invoked from VCS, prepending {RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH} to sys.path") import sys if RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH not in sys.path: sys.path.insert(0, RUBBER_SOURCE_TREE_PYTHONPATH) import rubber.cmdline rubber.cmdline.main_rubber_pipe() rubber-1.6.7/doc/000077500000000000000000000000001472565414300135665ustar00rootroot00000000000000rubber-1.6.7/doc/rubber/000077500000000000000000000000001472565414300150475ustar00rootroot00000000000000rubber-1.6.7/doc/rubber/rubber.texi.in000066400000000000000000001221071472565414300176330ustar00rootroot00000000000000\input texinfo @c %**start of header @setfilename rubber.info @settitle Rubber Manual @version@ @c %**end of header @copying Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies. Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that the sections entitled ``Copying'' and ``GNU General Public License'' are included exactly as in the original, and provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one. Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions, except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved by the Free Software Foundation. Copyright @copyright{} 2002--2006 Emmanuel Beffara. Copyright @copyright{} 2006--2015 Sebastian Kapfer. @end copying @titlepage @title Rubber @subtitle Documentation for version @version@ @author @author@ @page @vskip 0pt plus 1fill @insertcopying @end titlepage @iftex @contents @end iftex @c --- Introduction --- @dircategory TeX @direntry * Rubber: (rubber). A building system for LaTeX documents. @end direntry @ifnottex @node Top, Introduction @top Rubber Rubber is a wrapper for LaTeX and companion programs. Its purpose is, given a LaTeX source to process, to compile it enough times to resolve all references, possibly running satellite programs such as BibTeX, makeindex, Metapost, etc. to produce appropriate data files. @end ifnottex @menu * Introduction:: Introduction. * Invoking:: Syntax of the command lines. * Directives:: Directives in LaTeX comments. * Modules:: List of standard modules. * Graphics:: Support for graphics conversion. * Encoding:: Encoding issues. * Index:: Directive and modules index. @end menu @node Introduction, Invoking, Top, Top @chapter Introduction The purpose of Rubber is to make the building of a document automated, from the source files to the final document file, replacing the work of a Makefile. The basis is a routine that compiles a LaTeX source the right number of times to resolve all references and make all tables of contents, list of figures, and so on. On top of that, Rubber provides a modular system to handle various tasks needed apart from compilations. This, for instance, includes processing bibliographic references or indices, as well as compilation or conversion of figures. Additionally, modules can perform a post-processing of the document (for instance to convert a DVI to PostScript or PDF) or even a preprocessing (useful when the LaTeX source is generated by another program, like cweave). Dependency analysis is performed by parsing the source files, so that modifying any source, user package, graphics file or other dependency leads to appropriate compilations. Modules are triggered either explicitly using command line options, or implicitly when the sources are parsed. For instance, BibTeX support is activated whenever the source contains commands that generate a bibliography, graphics support is activated by @code{\usepackage@{graphics@}} and similar commands, and so on. The modular approach allows any additional feature to be supported by simply writing a module to support it. Some information cannot be extracted from the LaTeX sources. This is the case, for instance, with the search paths (which can be specified in environment variables like @env{TEXINPUTS}), or the style to be used with Makeindex. To address this problem, one can add information for Rubber in the comments of the LaTeX sources, see @ref{Directives}. The package comes with three different command line programs: @table @command @item rubber Builds the specified documents completely. The source files may be either LaTeX sources or documents in a format Rubber knows how to translate into LaTeX. @item rubber-pipe Does the same for one document but it reads the LaTeX source from standard input and dumps the compiled document on standard output. @item rubber-info This is a utility for extracting various kinds of information from a LaTeX document, either from the source or from the compilation log files. @end table @c --- Command-line syntax --- @node Invoking, rubber command line, Introduction, Top @chapter Command lines The command line of each program is read using the GNU Getopt conventions. @command{rubber} and @command{rubber-pipe} mostly have the same syntax. @menu * rubber command line:: Syntax for @command{rubber} and @command{rubber-pipe}. * rubber-info command line:: Syntax for @command{rubber-info}. @end menu @node rubber command line, rubber-info command line, Invoking, Invoking @section Syntax for @command{rubber} and @command{rubber-pipe} The syntax of the command lines for @command{rubber} and @command{rubber-pipe} are: @example rubber [options] files rubber-pipe [options] @end example @noindent The source files may be either LaTeX sources (in which case the suffix @file{.tex} may be omitted) or documents in a format Rubber knows how to translate into LaTeX. This currently includes CWEB documents (filename extension @file{.w}, via @command{cweave}), Literate Haskell (@file{.lhs} via @command{lhs2tex}) and Knitr (@file{.Rtex}). If any compilation fails, the whole process stops, including the compilation of the next documents on the command line, and the program returns a non-zero exit code. The options are the following: @table @command @item -b @itemx --bzip2 Compress the final document (in @command{bzip2} format). This option is equivalent to saying @option{-o bzip2} after all other options. It is incompatible with the option @command{--gzip}. @item --clean Remove all files produced by the compilation, instead of building the document. This option is present in rubber only. It applies to the compilation as it would be done with the other options of the command line, i.e. saying @example rubber --clean foo @end example will not delete foo.ps, while saying @example rubber --ps --clean foo @end example will. @item -c @itemx --command Execute the specified command (or directive) @emph{before} parsing the source files. @xref{Directives}. @item -e @itemx --epilogue Execute the specified command (or directive) @emph{after} parsing the source fiels. @xref{Directives}. @item -f @itemx --force Force at least one compilation of the source. This may be useful, for instance, if some unusual dependency was modified (e.g. a package in a system directory). This option is irrelevant in rubber-pipe. @item -z @itemx --gzip Compress the final document (in @command{gzip} format). This option is equivalent to saying @option{-o gz} after all other options. It is incompatible with the option @command{--bzip2}. @item -h @itemx --help Display the list of all available options and exit nicely. @item --inplace Go to the directory of the source files before compiling, so that compilation results are in the same place as their sources. @item --into Go to the specified directory before compiling, so that all files are produced there and not in the current directory. @item --jobname Specify a job name different from the base file name. This changes the name of output files and only applies to the first target. @item -k @itemx --keep This option is for @command{rubber-pipe} only. With this option, the temporary files will not be removed after compiling the document and dumping the results on standard output. The temporary document is named @file{rubtmpX.tex}, where @file{X} is a number such that no file of that name exists initially. @item -n @itemx --maxerr Set the maximum number of displayed errors. By default, up to 10 errors are reported, saying @option{-n -1} displays all errors. @item -m [:] @itemx --module [:] Use the specified module in addition to the document's packages. Arguments can be passed to the package by adding them after a colon, they correspond to the package options in LaTeX. The module is loaded @emph{before} parsing the document's sources. @item --only Compile the document partially, including only the specified sources. This works by inserting a call to @command{\includeonly} on the command line. The argument is a comma-separated list of file names. @item -o [:] @itemx --post [:] Used the specified module as a post-processor. This is similar to the @option{-m} options except that the module is loaded @emph{after} parsing the document. @item -d @itemx --pdf Produce PDF output. When this option comes after @option{--ps} (for instance in the form @option{-pd}) it is a synonym for @option{-o ps2pdf}, otherwise it acts as @option{-m pdftex}, in order to use pdfLaTeX instead of LaTeX. @item -p @itemx --ps Process the DVI produced by the process through @command{dvips} to produce a PostScript document. This option is a synonym for @option{-e module dvips}, it cannot come after @option{--pdf}. @item -q @itemx --quiet Suppress all messages during the process. @item -r @itemx --read Read additional directives form the specified file (see also the directive @command{read}). @item -S @itemx --src-specials Enable generation of source @command{\special}s if the compiler supports it. This is equivalent to setting the variable @command{src-specials} to @samp{yes}. @item -s @itemx --short Display LaTeX's error messages in a compact form (one error per line). @item --synctex Enable SyncTeX support in the LaTeX run. @item -I @itemx --texpath Add the specified directory to the search path of TeX files. @item --unsafe Permit the document to invoke arbitrary external programs. This is potentially dangerous, only use this option for documents coming from a trusted source. @item -v @itemx --verbose Increase the verbosity level. The default level is 0, levels up to 3 exist. Beware, saying @option{-vvv} makes Rubber speak a lot. @item --version Print the version number and exit nicely. @item -W @itemx --warn Report warnings of the given type, if there was no compilation error. The available types are: @table @option @item boxes overfull and underfull boxes, @item refs undefined or multiply defined references, @item misc other warnings, @item all all of the above. @end table @end table @node rubber-info command line, Directives, rubber command line, Invoking @section Syntax for @command{rubber-info} The command-line syntax for @command{rubber-info} is the following: @example rubber-info [options] [action] source @end example The options are all those accepted by @command{rubber} and @command{rubber-pipe}, as described in @ref{rubber command line}. The @option{action} specified what kind of information has to be extracted. At most one such argument must be present on the command line, @option{--check} is assumed if none is present. The possible actions are: @table @command @item --boxes Extracts from the log file the places in the source where bad boxes appeared (these are the famous overfull and underfull @code{\hbox} and @code{\vbox}). @item --check Report errors if there are any, otherwise report undefined references if there are any, otherwise list warnings and bad boxes. This is the default action. @item --deps Analyse the source files and produce a space-separated list of all the files that the document depends on and that Rubber cannot rebuild. @item --errors Extract from the log file the list of errors that occured during the last compilation. @item -h @itemx --help Display the list of all available options and exit nicely. @item --refs Report the list of undefined or multiply defined references (i.e. the @code{\ref}'s that are not defined by one @code{\label}). @item --rules Analyse the source files and produce a list of dependency rules. One rule is produced for each intermediate target that would be made when running @command{rubber}. Rules are formatted in the style of Makefiles. @item --version Print the version number and exit nicely. @item --warnings Stupidly enumerate all LaTeX warnings, i.e. all the lines in the log file that contain the string "Warning". @end table @c --- Directives --- @node Directives, General directives, rubber-info command line, Top @chapter Directives Some information cannot be extracted from the LaTeX sources. To address this problem, one can add information for Rubber in the comments of the LaTeX sources, in the form of directives. A directive is a line like @example % rubber: cmd args @end example @noindent The line must begin with a @samp{%}, then any sequence of @samp{%} signs and spaces, then the text @samp{rubber:} followed by zero or more spaces and a directive name, possibly followed by spaces and arguments. The argument in the directive line are separated by spaces, single and double quotes allow escaping of spaces (and quotes). The directive can contain variable references with the syntax @samp{$VAR} or @samp{$@{VAR@}}. For details on the use of variables, see @ref{Variables}. If a directive name has the form @samp{foo.bar}, it is considered a command @command{bar} for the module @command{foo}. If this module is not registered when the directive is found, then the directive is silently ignored. See the individual documentation for modules for module-specific directives. @menu * General directives:: * Variables:: @end menu @node General directives, Variables, Directives, Directives @section General directives @ftable @command @item alias Pretend that the LaTeX macro @samp{name1} is equivalent to @samp{name2}. This can be useful when defining wrappers around supported macros, like: @example % rubber: alias ig includegraphics \newcommand\ig[1]@{\includegraphics[scale=.5]@{#1@}@} @end example @item clean Indicates that the specified file should be removed when cleaning using @option{--clean}. @item depend Consider the specified file as a dependency, so that its modification time will be checked. @item make [] Declare that the specified file has to be generated. Options can specify the way it should be produced, the available options are @command{from } to specify the source and @command{with } to specify the conversion rule. For instance, saying @example % rubber: make foo.pdf from foo.eps @end example indicates that @file{foo.pdf} should be produced from @file{foo.eps}, with any conversion rule that can do it. @item module [] Loads the specified module, possibly with options. This is equivalent to the command-line option @command{--module}. @item onchange Execute the specified shell command after compiling if the contents of the specified file have changed. In case the file or command contains spaces, they must be enclosed within double or single quotes. @item path Adds the specified directory to the search path for TeX (and Rubber). The name of the directory is everything that follows the spaces after @samp{path}. @item produce Declares that the LaTeX run will create or update the specified file(s). This implies that Rubber will check if the file contents changed and re-make other files derived from it; it also implies that rubber --clean will remove the indicated file. @command{produce} may be combined with @command{watch}. For example, Rubber's built-in behavior of recompiling the main LaTeX source until the auxiliary file's contents no longer changes may be achieved using @example produce document.aux watch document.aux @end example @item read Read the specified file of directives. The file must contain one directive per line. Empty lines and lines that begin with @samp{%} are ignored. @item rules Read extra conversion rules from the specified file. The format of this file is the same as that of @file{rules.ini}, see @ref{rules.ini}. @item set Set the value of a variable as a string. For details on the existing variables and their meaning, see @ref{Variables}. @item setlist Set the value of a variable as a list of strings. The list is space-separated, possibly empty. For details on the existing variables and their meaning, see @ref{Variables}. @item shell_escape Mark the document as requiring external programs (shell-escape or write18). Rubber does not actually enable this unless called with the option @option{--unsafe}. @item synctex Enable SyncTeX support in the LaTeX run. @item watch Watch the specified file for changes. If the contents of this file has changed after a compilation, then another compilation is triggered. This is useful in the case of tables of contents, for instance. @end ftable @node Variables, Modules, General directives, Directives @section Variables The following variables are defined by Rubber (or its modules) and used by various modules to influence compilation. All variables are strings that should be defined by the @code{set} directive, unless explicitly specified. @table @command @item arguments (list) Extra command-line arguments that are passed to the compiler. Note that this is potentially dangerous and has no reason to be portable across different compilers. This variable contains a list of strings, it should be set using the @code{setlist} directive. @item engine Deprecated. Please use a module to change the compiler, as described in @ref{Compiler choice}. @item file Deprecated. The name of the current file (this is set during parsing). @item job The job name of the document, with no path indication. Note that changing the value of this variable does not affect compilation; in order to actually change the job name, use the command line option @option{--jobname}. @item logfile_limit Specify how much of the LaTeX logfile Rubber reads. The default is 1 MB, which should be ample for any real document. @item line Deprecated. The current line number in the current file (this is set during parsing). @item src-specials The kind of source @command{\special}s that should be generated. When empty (which is the case by default), no @command{\special}s are generated. When set to @samp{yes}, the default set is generated, otherwise the variable is passed as the argument of the @command{-src-specials} switch of the compiler. @end table @c --- Modules --- @node Modules, Packages, Variables, Top @chapter Modules @menu * Packages:: Supported LaTeX packages. * Post-processing:: Post-processing the compiler's output. * Compiler choice:: Choosing which LaTeX compiler to use. @end menu @node Packages, BibLaTeX, Modules, Modules @section Supported Packages For every package that a document uses, Rubber looks for a module of the same name to perform the tasks that this package my require apart from the compilation by LaTeX. Modules can be added to the ones provided by default to include new features (this is the point of the module system). The standard modules are the following: @vtable @command @item asymptote Process the @code{.asy} files generated by the LaTeX package, then triggers a recompilation. @item beamer This module handles Beamer's extra files the same way as other tables of contents. @item biblatex Takes care of processing the document's bibliographies with Biber or BibTeX when needed. For details, see @ref{BibLaTeX}. @item bibtex @itemx bibtopic @itemx multibib Takes care of processing the document's bibliographies with BibTeX when needed. The @command{bibtex} module is automatically loaded if the document contains the macro @code{\bibliography}. For details, see @ref{BibTeX}. @item combine The combine package is used to gather several LaTeX documents into a single one, and this module handles the dependencies in this case. @item epsfig This modules handles graphics inclusion for the documents that use the old style @code{\psfig} macro. It is actually an interface for the graphics system, for details see @ref{Graphics}. @item glossaries Run @code{makeglossaries} and recompiles when the @code{.glo} file changes. @item graphics @itemx graphicx These modules identify the graphics included in the document and consider them as dependencies for compilation. They also use standard rules to build these files with external programs. For more details, see @ref{Graphics}. @item hyperref Handle the extra files that this package produces in some cases. @item index @itemx makeidx @itemx nomencl Process the document's indexes with @command{makeindex} when needed. For details, see @ref{Indexing}. @item minitoc @itemx minitoc-hyper On cleaning, remove additional files that produced to make partial tables of contents. @item moreverb @itemx verbatim Adds the files included with @code{\verbatiminput} and similar macros to the list of dependencies. @item ltxtable Add dependencies for files inserted via the @code{ltxtable} LaTeX package. @item xr Add additional @file{.aux} files used for external references to the list of dependencies, so recompiling is automatic when refer- enced document are changed. @end vtable @menu * BibLaTeX:: Details on BibLaTeX support. * BibTeX:: Details on BibTeX support. * Indexing:: Details on Makeindex support. @end menu @node BibLaTeX, BibTeX, Packages, Packages @subsection BibLaTeX support If the document loads the package @code{biblatex}, Rubber enables BibLaTeX support. Rubber will extract the appropriate external bibliography tool such as @command{biber} or @command{bibtex} from the @code{backend} option to the @code{biblatex} package and invoke it as needed. @ftable @command @item biblatex.path Add the specified directory to the seach path for BibTeX database files (@file{.bib} files). The directory will be passed down to the bibliography tool in the environment variable @command{BIBINPUTS}. @end ftable @node BibTeX, Indexing, BibLaTeX, Packages @subsection BibTeX support If the document contains a call to @code{\bibliography} or @code{\bibliographystyle}, then the BibTeX module is used. This triggers the execution of BibTeX between compilations when new references are made, bibliographies are changed, and in other appropriate cases. The following directives may be used to control BibTeX's behaviour: @ftable @command @item bibtex.crossrefs Set the minimum number of @command{crossref} required for automatic inclusion of the referenced entry in the citation list. This sets the option @command{-min-crossrefs} when calling @command{bibtex}. @item bibtex.path Add the specified directory to the seach path for BibTeX database files (@file{.bib} files). The directory will be passed down to the bibliography tool in the environment variable @command{BIBINPUTS}. @item bibtex.stylepath Add the specified directory to the search path for BibTeX style files (@file{.bst} files). @item bibtex.tool Call the specified command instead of @command{bibtex} to process the .aux file, for example @command{bibtex8}. @end ftable Multiple bibliographies can be handled by the @command{multibib} package. The directives provided by the @command{multibib} module are the same as those of the @command{bibtex} module, and they may be used with an optional first arument of the form @samp{(foo,bar,quux)} in order to specify that the directive only applies to the bibliographies named @samp{foo}, @samp{bar} and @samp{quux}. By default, directives are applied to all bibliographies. @node Indexing, Post-processing, BibTeX, Packages @subsection Index generation The use of the packages @command{index}, @command{makeidx} and @command{nomencl} triggers the generation of an index (or several of them). Currently Rubber can use either the standard Makeindex or the more sophisticated Xindy. The following directives may be used to control how indices are generated: @ftable @command @item index.tool Specifies which tool is to be used to process the index. The currently supported tools are @command{makeindex} (the default choice) and @command{xindy}. @item index.language Selects the language used for sorting the index. This only applies when using @command{xindy} as the indexing tool. @item index.modules ... Specify which modules to use when processing an index with @command{xindy}. @item index.order Modifies the sorting options for the index. The argument must be a space-separated list of words among @samp{standard}, @samp{german} and @samp{letter}. his only applies when using @command{makeindex}. @item index.path Adds the specified directory to the search path for index style files (@file{.ist} files). @item index.style