//! # mdBook //! //! **mdBook** is a tool for rendering a collection of markdown documents into //! a form more suitable for end users like HTML or EPUB. It offers a command //! line interface, but this crate can be used if more control is required. //! //! This is the API doc, the [user guide] is also available if you want //! information about the command line tool, format, structure etc. It is also //! rendered with mdBook to showcase the features and default theme. //! //! Some reasons why you would want to use the crate (over the cli): //! //! - Integrate mdbook in a current project //! - Extend the capabilities of mdBook //! - Do some processing or test before building your book //! - Accessing the public API to help create a new Renderer //! - ... //! //! > **Note:** While we try to ensure `mdbook`'s command-line interface and //! > behaviour are backwards compatible, the tool's internals are still //! > evolving and being iterated on. If you wish to prevent accidental //! > breakages it is recommended to pin any tools building on top of the //! > `mdbook` crate to a specific release. //! //! # Examples //! //! If creating a new book from scratch, you'll want to get a `BookBuilder` via //! the `MDBook::init()` method. //! //! ```rust,no_run //! use mdbook::MDBook; //! use mdbook::config::Config; //! //! let root_dir = "/path/to/book/root"; //! //! // create a default config and change a couple things //! let mut cfg = Config::default(); //! cfg.book.title = Some("My Book".to_string()); //! cfg.book.authors.push("Michael-F-Bryan".to_string()); //! //! MDBook::init(root_dir) //! .create_gitignore(true) //! .with_config(cfg) //! .build() //! .expect("Book generation failed"); //! ``` //! //! You can also load an existing book and build it. //! //! ```rust,no_run //! use mdbook::MDBook; //! //! let root_dir = "/path/to/book/root"; //! //! let mut md = MDBook::load(root_dir) //! .expect("Unable to load the book"); //! md.build().expect("Building failed"); //! ``` //! //! ## Implementing a new Backend //! //! `mdbook` has a fairly flexible mechanism for creating additional backends //! for your book. The general idea is you'll add an extra table in the book's //! `book.toml` which specifies an executable to be invoked by `mdbook`. This //! executable will then be called during a build, with an in-memory //! representation ([`RenderContext`]) of the book being passed to the //! subprocess via `stdin`. //! //! The [`RenderContext`] gives the backend access to the contents of //! `book.toml` and lets it know which directory all generated artefacts should //! be placed in. For a much more in-depth explanation, consult the [relevant //! chapter] in the *For Developers* section of the user guide. //! //! To make creating a backend easier, the `mdbook` crate can be imported //! directly, making deserializing the `RenderContext` easy and giving you //! access to the various methods for working with the [`Config`]. //! //! [user guide]: https://rust-lang-nursery.github.io/mdBook/ //! [`RenderContext`]: renderer/struct.RenderContext.html //! [relevant chapter]: https://rust-lang-nursery.github.io/mdBook/for_developers/backends.html //! [`Config`]: config/struct.Config.html #![deny(missing_docs)] #[macro_use] extern crate error_chain; extern crate handlebars; extern crate itertools; #[macro_use] extern crate lazy_static; #[macro_use] extern crate log; extern crate memchr; extern crate pulldown_cmark; extern crate regex; extern crate serde; #[macro_use] extern crate serde_derive; #[macro_use] extern crate serde_json; extern crate shlex; extern crate tempfile; extern crate toml; extern crate toml_query; #[cfg(test)] #[macro_use] extern crate pretty_assertions; pub mod book; pub mod config; pub mod preprocess; pub mod renderer; pub mod theme; pub mod utils; /// The current version of `mdbook`. /// /// This is provided as a way for custom preprocessors and renderers to do /// compatibility checks. pub const MDBOOK_VERSION: &str = env!("CARGO_PKG_VERSION"); pub use book::BookItem; pub use book::MDBook; pub use config::Config; pub use renderer::Renderer; /// The error types used through out this crate. pub mod errors { use std::path::PathBuf; error_chain!{ foreign_links { Io(::std::io::Error) #[doc = "A wrapper around `std::io::Error`"]; HandlebarsRender(::handlebars::RenderError) #[doc = "Handlebars rendering failed"]; HandlebarsTemplate(Box<::handlebars::TemplateError>) #[doc = "Unable to parse the template"]; Utf8(::std::string::FromUtf8Error) #[doc = "Invalid UTF-8"]; SerdeJson(::serde_json::Error) #[doc = "JSON conversion failed"]; } links { TomlQuery(::toml_query::error::Error, ::toml_query::error::ErrorKind) #[doc = "A TomlQuery error"]; } errors { /// A subprocess exited with an unsuccessful return code. Subprocess(message: String, output: ::std::process::Output) { description("A subprocess failed") display("{}: {}", message, String::from_utf8_lossy(&output.stdout)) } /// An error was encountered while parsing the `SUMMARY.md` file. ParseError(line: usize, col: usize, message: String) { description("A SUMMARY.md parsing error") display("Error at line {}, column {}: {}", line, col, message) } /// The user tried to use a reserved filename. ReservedFilenameError(filename: PathBuf) { description("Reserved Filename") display("{} is reserved for internal use", filename.display()) } } } // Box to halve the size of Error impl From<::handlebars::TemplateError> for Error { fn from(e: ::handlebars::TemplateError) -> Error { From::from(Box::new(e)) } } }