The SCons Docbook toolDirk Baechle2010-12-30BasicsThis tool tries to make working with Docbook in SCons a little easier.
It provides several toolchains for creating different output formats,
like HTML or PDF. Contained in the package is
a distribution of the Docbook XSL stylesheets as of version 1.76.1.
As long as you don't specify your own stylesheets for customization (see Selecting stylesheet),
these official versions are picked as default...which should reduce
the inevitable setup hassles for you.
Implicit dependencies to images and XIncludes are detected automatically
if you meet the HTML requirements (see Requirements). The additional
stylesheet utils/xmldepend.xsl by Paul DuBois is used for this purpose.
Note, that there is no support for XML catalog resolving offered! This tool calls
the XSLT processors and PDF renderers with the stylesheets you specified, that's it.
The rest lies in your hands and you still have to know what you're doing when
resolving names via a catalog.
InstallInstalling it, requires you to copy (or, even better: checkout) the contents of the
package's docbook folder to
/path_to_your_project/site_scons/site_tools/docbook, if you need the Docbook Tool in one project only, or
~/.scons/site_scons/site_tools/docbook, for a system-wide installation under your current login.
For more infos about this, please refer to
the SCons User's Guide, chap. 19.7 "Where to put your custom Builders and Tools" and
the SCons Tools Wiki page at http://scons.org/wiki/ToolsIndex.
How to activateFor activating the tool "docbook", you have to add its name to the Environment constructor,
like this
env = Environment(tools=['docbook'])
On its startup, the Docbook tool tries to find a required xsltproc processor, and
a PDF renderer, e.g. fop. So make sure that these are added to your system's environment
PATH and can be called directly, without specifying their full path.
RequirementsFor the most basic processing of Docbook to HTML, you need to have installed
the Python lxml binding to libxml2, or
the direct Python bindings for libxml2/libxslt, or
a standalone XSLT processor, currently detected are xsltproc, saxon, saxon-xslt
and xalan.
Rendering to PDF requires you to have one of the applications fop, xep or jw
installed.
Processing documentsCreating a HTML or PDF document is very simple and straightforward. Say
env = Environment(tools=['docbook'])
env.DocbookHtml('manual.html', 'manual.xml')
env.DocbookPdf('manual.pdf', 'manual.xml')
to get both outputs from your XML source manual.xml. As a shortcut, you can
give the stem of the filenames alone, like this:
env = Environment(tools=['docbook'])
env.DocbookHtml('manual')
env.DocbookPdf('manual')
and get the same result. Target and source lists are also supported:
env = Environment(tools=['docbook'])
env.DocbookHtml(['manual.html','reference.html'], ['manual.xml','reference.xml'])
or even
env = Environment(tools=['docbook'])
env.DocbookHtml(['manual','reference'])
Whenever you leave out the list of sources, you may not specify a file extension! The
Tool uses the given names as file stems, and adds the suffixes for target and source files
accordingly.
The rules given above are valid for the Builders DocbookHtml, DocbookPdf,
DocbookSlidePdf and DocbookXInclude. For the DocbookMan transformation you
can specify a target name, but the actual output names are automatically set from
the refname entries in your XML source.
Please refer to the section Chunked output for more infos about the other Builders.
Selecting your own stylesheetIf you want to use a specific XSL file, you can set the additional xsl parameter to your
Builder call as follows:
env.DocbookHtml('other.html', 'manual.xml', xsl='html.xsl')
Since this may get tedious if you always use the same local naming for your customized XSL files,
e.g. html.xsl for HTML and pdf.xsl for PDF output, a set of variables for setting the
default XSL name is provided. These are:
DOCBOOK_DEFAULT_XSL_HTML
DOCBOOK_DEFAULT_XSL_HTMLCHUNKED
DOCBOOK_DEFAULT_XSL_HTMLHELP
DOCBOOK_DEFAULT_XSL_PDF
DOCBOOK_DEFAULT_XSL_MAN
DOCBOOK_DEFAULT_XSL_SLIDESPDF
DOCBOOK_DEFAULT_XSL_SLIDESHTML
and you can set them when constructing your environment:
env = Environment(tools=['docbook'],
DOCBOOK_DEFAULT_XSL_HTML='html.xsl',
DOCBOOK_DEFAULT_XSL_PDF='pdf.xsl')
env.DocbookHtml('manual') # now uses html.xsl
Chunked outputThe Builders DocbookHtmlChunked, DocbookHtmlhelp and DocbookSlidesHtml
are special, in that:
they create a large set of files, where the exact names and their number depend
on the content of the source file, and
the main target is always named index.html, i.e. the output name for the
XSL transformation is not picked up by the stylesheets.
As a result, there is simply no use in specifying a target HTML name.
So the basic syntax for these builders is:
env = Environment(tools=['docbook'])
env.DocbookHtmlhelp('manual')
Only if you use the root.filename (titlefoil.html for slides) parameter in
your own stylesheets you have to give the new target name. This ensures that the
dependencies get correct, especially for the cleanup via scons -c:
env = Environment(tools=['docbook'])
env.DocbookHtmlhelp('mymanual.html','manual', xsl='htmlhelp.xsl')
Some basic support for the base.dir is added (this has not been properly tested
with variant dirs, yet!). You can add the base_dir keyword to your Builder
call, and the given prefix gets prepended to all the created filenames:
env = Environment(tools=['docbook'])
env.DocbookHtmlhelp('manual', xsl='htmlhelp.xsl', base_dir='output/')
Make sure that you don't forget the trailing slash for the base folder, else
your files get renamed only!
All buildersA simple list of all builders currently available:
DocbookHtml
Single HTML file.
DocbookHtmlChunked
Chunked HTML files, with support for the base.dir parameter. The chunkfast.xsl
file (requires "EXSLT") is used as the default stylesheet.
DocbookHtmlhelp
Htmlhelp files, with support for base.dir.
DocbookPdf
PDF output.
DocbookMan
Man pages.
DocbookSlidesPdf
Slides in PDF format.
DocbookSlidesHtml
Slides in HTML format, with support for base.dir.
DocbookXInclude
Can be used to resolve XIncludes in a preprocessing step.
Need more?This work is still in a very basic state and hasn't been tested well
with things like variant dirs, yet. Unicode problems and poor performance
with large input files may occur. There will definitely arise the need for
adding features, or a variable. Let us know if you can think of a nice
improvement or have worked on a bugfix/patch with success. Enter your issues at the
Launchpad bug tracker for the Docbook Tool, or write to the User General Discussion
list of SCons at users@scons.tigris.org.