#!/bin/bash version=3.05 myname=$(basename $0) <<'DOC' = mk - a TeX and LaTeX maker = Synopsis mk [options] [file] mk-specific options: -C, --Clean Remove all unnecessary files generated by latex and bibtex -c, --clean Same, except for the pdf or postscript files --ps Generate postscript version of document (default: pdf) -e, --edit=STRING use STRING as the file to be edited vpp-related options: -b, --batch=STRING run in batch using STRING for print command -p, --printer=STRING print to printer named STRING -d, --doublesided printer is double sided --[no]view do [not] view the document --[no]print do [not] offer printing interaction General options: -r, --rc=STRING use STRING as an rc file, instead of |~/.mkrc|. --norc don't read the |~/.mkrc| file -V, --version print version and exit -v, --[no]verbose be [not] verbose (quiet is the default) -h, --help print this help and exit -H, --Help print full documentation via less and exit Defaults: --print --view --noverbose main Required other programs: - /bash/ >=4.00 - /vpp/ >=3.00 (CTAN) - /texi2dvi/ >= 1.152 (CTAN or /texinfo/ package) - /tex/ and friends (CTAN or /texlive/ package) = Description mk is a Bash script that, in close collaboration with vpp (short for View and Print PDF/PostScript), is helpful in the cyclic process of editing, compiling, viewing, and printing a latex, xelatex, or plain tex document. Essentially, mk uses texi2dvi for compilation, vpp for viewing and printing. Having an existing LaTeX document, say |main.tex| (see the section /Locating the source/ for the creation of new documents and for other extensions than |.tex|), you run mk by typing: $ mk main or, since /main/ happens to be mk's default filename: $ mk Now, if |main.tex| is a valid LaTeX source, mk compiles it, including any table of contents, indices, bibliography references, included files, and so on, and /vpp/ takes over and displays the resulting /PDF/ or, with the |--ps| option, /PostScript/ output. When you leave the viewer you will see a prompt: vpp command (h for help): If you are satisfied with the displayed output, you can now decide to print all or part of your document (see the section /Page selection/), or you can simply quit by typing 'q'. On the other hand, if you decide that you want to change the source and have another try, you can edit the source by typing 'e' to get back to mk and (re)edit your source. After saving your work and leaving your editor, another compilation and display cycle will be performed, based on the new source. Essentially, mk uses /texi2dvi/ for compilation. /texi2dvi/ always runs TeX at least once, even though this may be unnecessary. Therefore, TeX will be run with the |--recorder| option, which reports all the target's dependencies in a .fls file. In every cycle, mk analyzes the .fls and the tex and bibtex .log files to see if a compilation is needed. When errors have occurred, mk uses the log files to find out which file has to be edited, and at which line. This can also be an |\input|ed file, a style file, or any other file on which the target depend. However, files in the TEXMFMAIN tree are excluded. = Editor vpp uses the contents of environment variable EDITOR to find your editer. If that variable is empty, /vim/ is used. Note that your editor should not fork off your shell, so if you specify /gvim/, for example, specify it with the option |--force|. = Page selection As said in the introduction, after a successful compilation and display of the resulting /PDF/ or /PostScript/ output, the user is prompted with: vpp command (h for help): on typing 'h' /vpp/ displays examples of possible commands: Examples of print commands: 5 to print page 5 5- to print pages 5 through the end 5-7 to print pages 5, 6 and 7 -7 to print the first 7 pages 5-7,19- to print pages 5, 6, 7 and 19 through the end a to print the whole document - to print the whole document a x3 to print 3 copies of the document x3 the same 5 x3 to print 3 copies of page 5 t print the whole document two sided t 2- print two sided starting at page 2 b to print the whole document as an a5 size booklet b -12 to print the first 12 pages as an a5 size booklet Other commands: e (if called by mk) edit the tex source and rerun mk c (if called by mk) rerun mk v (re)view the ps/pdf file oxyz send pdf output to file xyz.pdf instead of printer pxyz print to printer xyz dx tell vpp printer is doublesided (x=t) or singlesided (x=f) h display this help ? display this help q quit With these examples, no further explanation should be necessary, except that, when twosided (|t|) or booklet (|b|) printing is selected for a single-sided printer, printing will be performed in two shifts, one for the front side and one for the backside. Between the shifts, another prompt appears: printer ready? then turn stack and type return You will have to arrange your printer such that, with the printed sides up, the first page printed will be at the bottom of the stack, and the last page printed will be on top. Normally you will then have your output come out the back of your printer. 'Turn the stack' then means: rotate it over the long side of the paper and feed it back into the printer for the other side to be printed. For further information on /vpp/, look in its manpage by typing $ vpp --help or read the /vpp/ documentation. = Locating the source mk locates the LaTeX source in several steps: (here the source extension |.tex| is supposed, but |.ltx|, |.drv| and |.dtx| will also be tried) - If you supply no arguments, the file |main.tex| in the current directory is assumed. - If you supply an argument (say /myfile/), mk adds a |.tex| extension if it isn't there and looks for |myfile.tex| in the current directory. - If |myfile.tex| is not found in the current directory, mk looks in the 'alternate directory' (say |/Documents|) if you have defined one (see the section 'RC files'). - If the source was not found in |/Documents|, mk thinks that you may have a subdirectory /myfile/ in |/Documents| where the source may live under the name |main.tex| - If that file is not there, mk now concludes that the source does not yet exist and reports this, telling at the same time which files have been tried. - Finally, if all the above did not lead to a source file, mk dies. = The TeX format to be used mk will try to find out what TeX format is is needed to compile the source. The most straightforward way to tell mk what format to use is to insert a starting comment line which starts with |%!|, followed by the name of the tex engine to use; for example: %!xelatex If no such line is found, mk looks for a |\usepackage{fontspec}| or |\RequirePackage{fontspec}| and, if found, uses /xelatex/. The |\usepackage| may have options, but they must be on the same line. If still no decision could be made, mk looks for |\documentclass| and chooses /pdflatex/ or, with the |--ps| option, /latex/ Finally, if no match was found, /pdftex/ is assumed or, with the |--ps| option, |tex|. = Options mk comes with several options. Before evaluating any options, mk will try to read a system rc file, a user rc file, and, finally an rc file in the current directory. The default values for most options can be set in these files. See the section 'RC files' for more information. You can also set option defaults in an alias. For example: $ alias mk='mk -noverbose' --help Prints help information and lets you type 'm' to display the complete man page or anything else to quit. --version Prints name and version and then quits. --quiet Suppresses messages about the progress mk is making. This is the default. --rc=file execute the specified /file/ before processing. The contents of the /file/ may override options specified before the |--rc| option, therefore it is a good idea to have the habit of specifying the |--rc| option first. --norc do not read the |~/.mkrc| file, even if it exists. --batch=string Prevents the |--print| option to interrogate the user about pages to be printed. Instead the document is printed according to the mandatory /string/. Also sets viewing off. Thus the command mk --batch '2-3 x3' test prints 3 copies of pages 2 and 3 of |test.tex|, without viewing. --clean Clean up (remove) all unnecessary files generated by /latex/ and /bibtex/ except for the /PDF/ or /PostScript/ files. --Clean Clean up (remove) all unnecessary files generated by LaTeX and /bibtex/ including the /PDF/ or /PostScript/ files. --print Present the print prompt. This is the default. This option is normally used to suppress the print prompt, for example when using mk from other scripts that generate LaTeX documents that have only to be displayed or stored without even being displayed. --ps Generate /PostScript/ version of document. The default is to generate a /PDF/ document. --view Run the file viewer. This is the default. This option is normally used to suppress starting the viewer, for example when using mk from other scripts that generate LaTeX documents that have only to be printed. --edit=file Normally, mk lets you edit the main source file, but here you can specify another file to be edited instead. This is useful, for example, if you are are fixing a style file or another input file. = RC file and customization Unless the option |--norc| has been used, the file |~/.mkrc| will be sourced, if it exists, before reading the command line options. You can use this rc file to set the default values for the options, by setting the global shell variable named after the long version of the options. For example: verbose=true # run in verbose mode So if you usually like mk to work in verbose mode, you can indicate so in your rc file and change your mind in some cases by using the |--noverbose| option. Other variables, not having a corresponding command line option, that can be set in the rc files, and their default values, are: extraoptions= adds one or more extra options to the /tex/ (/latex, xelatex/ et cetera) command. Example: |extraoptions='-shell-escape -quiet'| othercleans= can be set to a file regular expression; in the cleaning operation, caused by the |--clean| option, this variable wil be eval'ed, and the resulting files will be removed. This is useful, for example, when the |gnuplottex| package is used; this package generates intermediate files named |$base-gnuplottex-fig*|, where the variable |$base| contains the basename (without extension) of your tex source file. So after adding: othercleans='${base}-gnuplottex-fig*' to your |./mkrc| file, the cleaning operation will get rid of these files, too. texi2dviquiet=false Normally, in verbose mode, you also see the complete tex log output, because texi2dvi will be verbose, too. This obscures most other output. You can keep texi2dvi quiet in verbose mode by setting this variable to true: texi2dviquiet=true skip_pattern= can be set to a file wild card pattern. Files matching this pattern on which the /(la)tex/ source file may depend will not be checked for changes. For example, if you use a write-protected TeX-tree in the directory mytextree it makes sense to set |skip_pattern=mytextree| unless you set |skip_pattern| explicitly, it will be set to match the TEXMFMAIN tree. altdir= If |altdir| is non-empty and a file to be compiled does not exist in the current directory, it will be given another try after prefixing it with the contents of |altdir|. So if you like to have your LaTeX file in |/Documents/myfile.tex| you can set |altdir| to |/Documents| and run mk from any directory with: $ mk myfile However, a directory like |/Documents| does not make much sense if many of your LaTeX documents do not consist of a single file, but are constituted of an ensemble of a main LaTeX source and one or more |\include|d and |\input|ed files such as graphics. You will then probably prefer to have a subdirectory in |/Documents| for every LaTeX document. Therefore, if mk does not find |myfile.tex| in the alternate directory, it will assume that /myfile/ is a subdirectory with a main LaTeX source in it, called |main.tex|. default=main This is the default for the base name of your LaTeX document. warnings_to_skip=() Warnings appearing in the log file will be reported after a successful run. Warnings matching any of the rexgexp's in this array will be skipped, however. For example, one could enter here: warnings_to_skip=( 'Package hyperref Warning: Token not allowed in a PDFDocEncoded string', 'Package array Warning: Column [XY] is already defined on ' ) The first message appears when the /hyperref/ package is used and section titles contain LaTeX-commands, the second message appears when the /ctable/ package is used, because it intentionally changes the X and Y column specifiers. = TeXWorks and mk mk can be used for one-click typesetting: - edit -> preferences -> Typesetting - add a new tool `mk' and give it three parameters: --noview --noprint $basename - Deselect "Auto-hide output panel unless errors occur" mk runs pdflatex with the |--synctex=1| option, so you will be able to jump betwee source and pdf-ouput. = Bugs Currently, mk is only available for Linux. It depends on /texi2dvi/. Spaces in the basename of TeX sources are not allowed (neither does the texi2dvi script on which mk is based.) = Changes Changes with respect to version 3.01: - let vpp save its output in the working directory - removed crappy version testing on texi2dvi - use texi2dvi from the /texinfo/ package = Author and copyright Author Wybo Dekker Email U{Wybo@dekkerdocumenten.nl}{wybo@dekkerdocumenten.nl} License Released under the U{www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html}{GNU General Public License} DOC die() { echo -e "$myname: $Err$@$Nor"; exit 1; } 1>&2 Warn() { echo -e "$myname: $War$@$Nor"; } 1>&2 warn() { $verbose && Warn "$@"; } help() { sed -n '/^= Synopsis/,/^= /p' $0|sed '1s/.*/Usage:/;/^= /d'; exit; } helpall() { sed -n '/^<<.DOC.$/,/^DOC$/p' $0|sed -n '1d;$d;p'|less; exit; } version() { echo $version; exit; } install() { which instscript>&/dev/null && instscript -zp $myname; exit; } Err='\e[31;1m' # light red ] Fil='\e[33m' # brown ] Com='\e[34;1m' # light blue ] Lin='\e[32;1m' # light green ] War='\e[35;1m' # light magenta ] Nor='\e[0m' # reset color ] test ${BASH_VERSINFO[0]} -ge 4 || die "Need bash version >= 4 (you have $BASH_VERSION)" <<'DOC' #------ function findsource -------------------------------------------- = findsource parameters the script's first and only argument, maybe nil description find the file to be compiled; if the argument is: nil: main.{tex,ltx,drv.dtx} xxx: {xxx,xxx/main,$altdir/xxx/main}.{tex,ltx,drv.dtx} xxx.ext: {.,$altdir}/xxx.ext globals set: base dir ext fullpath globals used: IFS PWD altdir default returns: 0 on succes, 1 otherwise DOC #------------------------------------------------------------------------------- findsource() { local arg=${1%.} # remove final . (may be there by auto completion) local file=${arg##*/} # remove path dir=${arg:0:${#arg}-${#file}} # get the directory's full path dir=${dir%/} # remove final / base=${file%.[^.]*} # remove (last) extension (a.b.c -> a.b) ext=${file:${#base} + 1} # check ext: local i ok=false for i in '' tex ltx drv dtx; do test "$ext" = "$i" && ok=true; done $ok || echo "unrecognized extension ($ext)" if [ -n "$base" -a -z "$dir" ]; then # if a basename was specified, but dir is empty, look for the source in # the current dir or, if absent there, in the alterative dir dir=("$PWD" "$altdir") # if there is no extension, we first look for $base.{tex,ltx,drv,dtx}, then # for $base/main.{tex,ltx,drv,dtx} test -z "$ext" && base=("$base" "$base/$default") fi : ${base:=$default} : ${dir:=$PWD} test -z $ext && ext=(tex ltx drv dtx) fullpath= local tried=() found=false for d in "${dir[@]}"; do for b in "${base[@]}"; do for e in tex ltx drv dtx; do fullpath="$d/$b.$e" test -e "$fullpath" && { found=true; break 3; } tried+=("$fullpath") done done done $found || { Warn "Not found; I tried:" for i in "${tried[@]}"; do echo "$i"; done die "Giving up!" } warn "source: $fullpath" dir="${fullpath%/*}" ext="${fullpath##*.}" base="${fullpath:${#dir}+1:${#fullpath}-${#ext}-${#dir}-2}" } <<'DOC' #------ function run -------------------------------------------- = run parameters: command to be run, with its parameters description: Run a command; show what's run if |$verbose|. If the command exits with 1, that's considered an error, other values have a special meaning and are supposed to be a success globals set: globals used: Com Err Lin Nor returns: the exit value of the command DOC #------------------------------------------------------------------------------- run() { eval "$@" local ev=$? test $ev -eq 1 && warn "$Nor${Fil}sys call: $Com$1$Err - failed" || warn "$Nor${Fil}sys call: $Com$1$Lin - succeeded$Nor, exit status=$Err$ev" return $ev } <<'DOC' #------ function settexdeps -------------------------------------------- = settexdeps parameters: - description: Scans |$base.fls| for tex dependencies and places those in the array texdeps. Any dependencies with future timestamps are touched in order to prevent mk from looping. globals set: texdeps globals used: base PWD skip_pattern returns: 0 DOC #------------------------------------------------------------------------------- settexdeps() { texdeps=() local fls="$base.fls" n=0 c f test -e "$fls" || { warn "no file $fls in $PWD" return } while IFS=' ' read c f; do let n++ [[ $n == 1 && $c != PWD ]] && die "$fls is not a TeX fls file" [[ $c == INPUT && ! $f =~ $skip_pattern ]] && texdeps+=($f) done <$fls texdeps=($(echo ${texdeps[@]}|xargs -n1|sed 's/^\.\///'|sort -u)) local tmp=$(tempfile) warn "tex dependencies:" for i in ${texdeps[@]}; do warn "\t$i" if [[ $i -nt $tmp ]]; then Warn "Touching file with future filestamp: $i" touch "$i" fi done rm $tmp } <<'DOC' #------ function setbibdeps -------------------------------------------- = setbibdeps parameters: - description: Scan aux file (|$base.aux|) for bib-files needed and places those in the array bibdeps. Any dependencies with future timestamps are touched in order to prevent mk from looping. globals set: bibdeps globals used: base returns: - DOC #------------------------------------------------------------------------------- setbibdeps() { local aux="$base.aux" i tmp=$(tempfile) test -e "$aux" || return bibdeps=($(sed -n ' /\\bibdata{.*}/{ s/.*\\bibdata{\(.*\)}.*/\1/ # a.bib,b,c.bib s/\.bib//g # a,b,c s/,/ /g # a b c p }' "$aux")) [[ ${#bibdeps[@]} > 0 ]] || return for i in ${!bibdeps[@]}; do local b=${bibdeps[i]}.bib # replace each bib with its full path found by kpsewhich bibdeps[i]=$(kpsewhich "$b") || die "bib file $b not found" done bibdeps=($(echo ${bibdeps[@]}|xargs -n1|sed 's/^\.\///'|sort -u)) local tmp=$(tempfile) warn "bib dependencies:" for i in ${bibdeps[@]}; do warn "\t$i" if [[ $i -nt $tmp ]]; then Warn "Touching file with future filestamp: $i" touch "$i" fi done rm $tmp } <<'DOC' #------ function compile -------------------------------------------- = compile parameters: - description: runs the command in |texcommand| globals set: - globals used: base bibdeps target texcommand texdeps returns: 0 on success, else 1 DOC #------------------------------------------------------------------------------- compile() { local exitvalue=1 i go success while true; do # If there is an .fls file, and the target is there, then compile only if # there are texdeps or bibdeps that are newer than target. # If there are bibdeps newer than target, remove .bbl, forcing texi2dvi to run bibtex # Returns true if a compilation was actually performed. go=false if [ -e "$base.fls" -a -e "$target" ]; then setbibdeps settexdeps for i in ${bibdeps[@]}; do if [ $i -nt "$target" ]; then rm -f $base.bbl warn "newer than target: $i" go=true break fi done if ! $go; then for i in ${texdeps[@]}; do if [ $i -nt "$target" ]; then warn "newer than target: $i" go=true break fi done fi else go=true fi $go || break rm -f "$target" # if compilation generates no output, we want to be able to detect that run "$texcommand" && success=true || success=false # texi2dvi claims to be successful if it produces no output: [[ -e "$target" ]] || success=false settexdeps setbibdeps $success || show_error_and_edit exitvalue=0 done return $exitvalue } <<'DOC' #------ function show_error_and_edit -------------------------------------------- = show_error_and_edit parameters: - description: Show compilation errors via texlog_extract and (unless edit is empty) edit the source file where the error is in, opening the editor at the line where the error is.. globals set: IFS globals used: Lin base bibdeps edit target warnings_to_skip returns: 0 DOC #------------------------------------------------------------------------------- show_error_and_edit() { local m n i errorfile linenum test -e $target -a -n "$edit" && rm -f $target warn ${Lin}warnings_to_skip: for i in "${warnings_to_skip[@]}"; do warn "\t$i"; done IFS=$'\n' m=($(texlog_extract $base)) n=true for i in ${m[@]}; do if $n; then IFS=$' ' read linenum errorfile <<< $i n=false else echo "$i" fi done test -z $edit && exit : ${errorfile:=$edit} errorfile="${errorfile%%[\{ ]*}" # remove {...} and spaces at the end if [[ $errorfile == *.bbl ]]; then rm -f "$errorfile" if [[ ${#bibdeps[@]} > 1 ]]; then Warn "Look in your bibliography file(s)" select i in ${bibdeps[@]}; do edit "$i" 1 true && exit; break; done else edit "${bibdeps[0]}" 1 true && exit fi else edit "'$errorfile'" $linenum true && exit fi } <<'DOC' #------ function edit -------------------------------------------- = edit parameters: 1 file to be edited; if empty: contents of edit variable is used 2 line number where edit should start; if empty, use 1 3 true if an error was detected in the file and user must decide if file shall be edited description: Start the user's editor to edit the file in argument 1; if the call was induced by the detection of an error in that file, the user will be asked if he want to edit the file, or to quit. globals set: - globals used: edit returns: 1 if the file was edited, else 0 DOC #------------------------------------------------------------------------------- edit() { # edfile,linenum,error local edfile="$1" linenum=$2 error=$3 if $error; then Warn "error in $edfile" test -t 1 || return 0 # return if stdout is not to a terminal while true; do echo -n "=====> e(dit) q(uit) " read x case "$x" in (q) return;; (e) break;; (*) echo you must type e or q esac done fi : ${linenum:=1} : ${edfile:=$edit} test -e $edfile || edfile=$edit # this happens when tex finds unexpected EOF eval "$EDITOR +$linenum $edfile" return 1 } <<'DOC' #------ function handle_options -------------------------------------------- = handle_options parameters: uses script's arguments description: Handles the options globals set: Clean batch clean doublesided dvips edit input norc print printer ps rc verbose view globals used: HOME verbose returns: 0 DOC #------------------------------------------------------------------------------- handle_options() { local options if ! options=$(getopt \ -n $myname \ -o Cce:b:p:dvr:hHVI \ -l Clean,clean,ps,edit:,batch:,printer:,doublesided,view,noview,print,noprint,verbose,noverbose,rc:,norc,help,Help,version -- "$@" ); then exit 1; fi eval set -- "$options" while [ $# -gt 0 ]; do case $1 in # mk specific options: (-C|--Clean) Clean=true; shift;; (-c|--clean) clean=true; shift;; ( --ps) ps=true; shift;; (-e|--edit) edit=${2/\~/$HOME}; shift 2;; # vpp-related options: (-b|--batch) batch=$2; shift 2;; (-p|--printer) printer=$2; shift 2;; (-d|--doublesided) doublesided=true; shift;; ( --view) view=true; shift;; ( --noview) view=false; shift;; ( --print) print=true; shift;; ( --noprint) print=false; shift;; # General options: (-v|--verbose) verbose=true; shift;; ( --noverbose) verbose=false; shift;; (-r|--rc) rc=$2; shift 2 test -e $rc || die "RC-file $rc, given with the --rc option, does not exist" ;; ( --norc) norc=true; shift;; (-h|--help) help;; (-H|--Help) helpall;; (-V|--version) version;; (-I) install;; (--) shift; break;; (*) break;; esac done # verbose is now set: $verbose || dvips='dvips -q' # remaining argument, if any, is the input file: input="$@" } # if --rc was used, source its argument # if not, execute ~/.${myname}rc if it exists <<'DOC' #------ function read_rc -------------------------------------------- = read_rc parameters: - description: If the |--norc| option was used, does nothing. Otherwise, sources the file in variable |rc|; if that is empty, use the ~/.mkrc if it exists. globals set: - globals used: HOME myname rc returns: 0 DOC #------------------------------------------------------------------------------- read_rc() { : ${rc:=$HOME/.${myname}rc} [[ -n $rc && -s $rc ]] && { warn "Sourcing $rc"; . $rc; } } # do we have all executables needed? <<'DOC' #------ function check_needs -------------------------------------------- = check_needs parameters: - description: Checks if all executables neede are available. globals set: EDITOR globals used: EDITOR print ps view returns: 1 if there are missing executables, else 0 DOC #------------------------------------------------------------------------------- check_needs() { local j i needed=(kpsewhich texi2dvi) $ps && needed+=(dvips latex) || needed+=(pdflatex) $print || $view && needed+=(vpp) for i in ${!needed[@]}; do which ${needed[$i]} >/dev/null && unset needed[$i] done [[ ${#needed[@]} > 0 ]] && die "missing executables: ${needed[@]}" # test texi2dvi's version: i="$(texi2dvi -v |grep ^texi2dvi|tr -dc '[\ 0-9]' | sed 's/.* //')" test "$i" -ge 1166 || die "Your texi2dvi is too old ($i);$Nor Get a new version with:\n$Com"\ " wget ftp.gnu.org/gnu/texinfo/texi2dvi && chmod 755 texi2dvi$Nor\n"\ " and move texi2dvi to a directory in your PATH." # make sure we have an editor : ${EDITOR:=vim} } altdir=. batch= Clean=false clean=false cleanext=(tui tuo chk dvi log ent fls aux bbl blg hd ilg toc lof lot idx ind out glo gls tmp synctex.gz) compileexit=98 default=main doublesided=false dvips=dvips edit= editexit=99 latex= norc=false pdflatex= print=true printer= ps=false rc= sep="\n" skip_pattern= texi2dviquiet=false verbose=false view=true warnings_to_skip=() [[ $@ =~ --norc ]] || read_rc handle_options "$@" check_needs vppoptions=--mk $verbose && vppoptions+=" --verbose" $doublesided && vppoptions+=" --doublesided" test "$printer" = "" || vppoptions+=" --printer=$printer" if [[ -n $batch ]]; then view=false j=($batch) for i in ${j[@]}; do echo $i # v--meer?--v [[ $i =~ ^(q|b|t|a|x[0-9]+|([0-9]+-?[0-9]*|[0-9]*-?[0-9]+),?)+$|^o[a-zA-Z0-9_-]+$ ]] || die "Illegal argument ($i) in --batch argument ($batch)\n"\ "use q if you want no printout" done vppoptions+=" --batch='$batch'" [[ $batch == *q ]] && print=false fi # default skip pattern: : ${skip_pattern:=^$(kpsewhich --expand-var '$TEXMFMAIN')} : ${clean:=$clean} $ps && targetext=dvi vpptargetext=ps || targetext=pdf vpptargetext=pdf $print && vppoptions+=" --print" || vppoptions+=" --noprint" $view && vppoptions+=" --view" || vppoptions+=" --noview" findsource "$input" target=$base.$targetext vpptarget=$base.$vpptargetext trap "rm -rf $base.t2d" 0 1 2 15 : ${edit:=$fullpath} if [ -n "$edit" ]; then # if '', then no editing test -e "$edit" || die "can't find source file ($edit)" test -r "$edit" || die "can't read source file ($edit)" test -w "$edit" || die "can't write source file ($edit)" fi pwd=$(pwd) cd "$dir" if $clean || $Clean; then for i in ${cleanext[@]}; do rm -f $base.$i done eval "othercleans=$othercleans" for i in $othercleans; do rm -f $i; done if $Clean; then # It may be useful to protect target, in order to prevent that they become # recompiled with changed style files: for i in $(echo $target $vpptarget | xargs -n1 |sort -u); do if [ -e $i -a ! -w $i ]; then echo "$i is write-protected, so I'll keep it!" 1>&2 else rm -f $i fi done fi exit fi # find out the tex format to use: format= i=$(head -1 "$base.$ext") if [[ $i =~ ^%!([[:alnum:]]+) ]]; then format=${BASH_REMATCH[1]} elif grep -E '\\(RequirePackage|usepackage)(\s*\[.*\])?\{(fontspec|polyglossia)\}' "$base.$ext" >/dev/null; then format=xelatex elif grep "\\documentclass" "$base.$ext" >/dev/null; then $ps && format=latex || format=pdflatex else $ps && format=tex || format=pdftex fi $ps && [[ $format =~ (pdf|xe) ]] && die "You can not use the --ps option on a $format source!" # texi2dviquiet, if set tot true in rc-file, keeps texi2dvi quiet, even in verbose mode # extraoptions can be set in rc file; could be, e.g., -shell-escape # We set TEXINDY to true, thus disabling texi2dvi's indexing facilities, # because those can't handle indexes created by the ltxdoc class $texi2dviquiet || ! $verbose && q=--quiet || q= texcommand="TEXINDY=true LATEX='$format -halt-on-error -recorder -synctex=1 $extraoptions' texi2dvi --no-line-error $q $base.$ext 2>/dev/null" while true; do if [[ "$target" =~ [[:space:]] ]]; then die "mk does not (yet) handle filenames with spaces!" # neither does texi2dvi ! elif [ -e $target -a ! -w $target ]; then warn "Target $target is write-protected, so I'll not re-compile it!" sleep 2 else compile && ready=true || ready=false if [ -s $target ]; then # target exists and is non-zero test "$targetext" = dvi && $dvips elif [ ! -e $target ]; then Warn "After compilation, an empty $target was found" ready=false else Warn "After compilation, no file $target was found" if [ "$targetext" = 'pdf' ]; then Warn "One possible cause is that your file pdftex.cfg" Warn "contains 'output_format 0' instead of 'output_format 1'" fi die "Quitting..." fi if $ready; then rerun=false # A glossary file, if it exists, is always rewritten in a compilation: if [ -e "$base.glo" ]; then makeindex -q -s gglo.ist -o "$base.gls" "$base.glo" rerun=true fi if [ -e "$base.idx" ]; then # don't know how to find out if a non-standard index style is used, # so just check for a dtx extension and then suppose gind style if [ "$ext" = 'dtx' ]; then makeindex -q -s gind.ist -o "$base.ind" "$base.idx" else makeindex -q "$base" fi rerun=true fi if $rerun; then run "$texcommand" || show_error_and_edit fi fi fi $view || $print && { ( cd $pwd run "vpp $vppoptions $dir/$vpptarget" ) case $? in ($editexit) edit $edit 1 false || continue ;; ($compileexit) rm -f $target; continue ;; (0) break ;; (*) edit $edit 1 true || continue ;; esac } break done edit= show_error_and_edit