This is the command dblatex that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator
PROGRAM:
NAME
dblatex - convert DocBook to LaTeX, DVI, PostScript, and PDF
SYNOPSIS
dblatex [options] {file | -}
DESCRIPTION
This manual page briefly documents the dblatex command. For more details read the PDF
manual; see below.
dblatex is a program that transforms your SGML/XML DocBook documents to DVI, PostScript or
PDF by translating them into pure LaTeX as a first process. MathML 2.0 markups are
supported, too. It started as a clone of DB2LaTeX.
OPTIONS
A summary of options is included below. For a complete description, see the PDF manual.
-h, --help
Show a help message and exit.
-b backend, --backend=backend
Backend driver to use: pdftex (default), dvips, or xetex.
-B, --no-batch
All the tex output is printed.
-c config, -S config, --config=config
Configuration file. A configuration file can be used to group all the options and
customizations to apply.
-d, --debug
Debug mode: Keep the temporary directory in which dblatex actually works.
-D, --dump
Dump the error stack when an error occurs (debug purpose).
-e indexstyle, --indexstyle indexstyle
Index style file to pass to makeindex instead of the dblatex default index style.
-f figure_format, --fig-format=figure_format
Input figure format: fig, eps. Used when not deduced from figure file extension.
-F input_format, --input-format=input_format
Input file format: sgml, xml (default).
-i texinputs, --texinputs texinputs
Path added to TEXINPUTS
-I figure_path, --fig-path=figure_path
Additional lookup path of the figures.
-l bst_path, --bst-path=bst_path
Additional lookup path of the BibTeX styles.
-L bib_path, --bib-path=bib_path
Additional lookup path of the BibTeX databases.
-m xslt, --xslt=xslt
XSLT engine to use. The available engines are: xsltproc (default), 4xslt, saxon.
-o output, --output=output
Output filename. When not specified, the input filename is used, with the suffix of
the output format. The option is ignored if several books are chunked from a set. In
this case the -O option is applied instead.
-O output_dir, --output-dir=output_dir
Output directory of the books built from a set. When not specified, the current
working directory is used instead. The option is ignored if a single document is
outputed, and the -o is taken into account.
-p xsl_user, --xsl-user=xsl_user
An XSL user stylesheet to use. Several user stylesheets can be specified, but the
option order is meaningful: a user stylesheet takes precedence over previously defined
user stylesheets.
-P param=value, --param=param=value
Set an XSL parameter from command line.
-q, --quiet
Less verbose, showing only TeX output messages and error messages.
-r script, --texpost=script
Script called at the very end of the tex compilation. Its role is to modify the tex
file or one of the compilation files before the last round.
-s latex_style, --texstyle=latex_style
Latex style to apply. It can be a package name, or directly a latex package path. A
package name must be without a directory path and without the '.sty' extension. On the
contrary, a full latex package path can contain a directory path, but must ends with
the '.sty' extension.
-t format, --type=format
Output format. Available formats: tex, dvi, ps, pdf (default).
--dvi
DVI output. Equivalent to -tdvi.
PDF output. Equivalent to -tpdf.
--ps
PostScript output. Equivalent to -tps.
-T style, --style=style
Output style, predefined are: db2latex, simple, native (default).
-v, --version
Display the dblatex version.
-V, --verbose
Verbose mode, showing the running commands
-x xslt_options, --xslt-opts=xslt_options
Arguments directly passed to the XSLT engine
-X, --no-external
Disable the external text file support. This support is needed for callouts on
external files referenced by textdata or imagedata, but it can be disabled if the
document does not contain such callouts. Disabling this support can improve the
processing performance for big documents.
FILES AND DIRECTORIES
$HOME/.dblatex/
User configuration directory.
/etc/dblatex/
System-wide configuration directory.
The predefined output styles are located in the installed package directory.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
DBLATEX_CONFIG_FILES
Extra configuration directories that may contain some dblatex configuration files.
EXAMPLES
To produce myfile.pdf from myfile.xml:
dblatex myfile.xml
To set some XSL parameters from the command line:
dblatex -P latex.babel.language=de myfile.xml
To use the db2latex output style:
dblatex -T db2latex myfile.xml
To apply your own latex style:
dblatex -s mystyle myfile.xml
dblatex -s /path/to/mystyle.sty myfile.xml
To pass extra arguments to the XSLT engine:
dblatex -x "--path /path/to/load/entity" myfile.xml
To use dblatex and profiling:
xsltproc --param profile.attribute "'output'" \
--param profile.value "'pdf'" \
/path/to/profiling/profile.xsl \
myfile.xml | dblatex -o myfile.pdf -
To build a set of books:
dblatex -O /path/to/chunk/dir -Pset.book.num=all myfile.xml
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