Create book from markdown files. Like Gitbook but implemented in Rust
Go to file
Boris-Chengbiao Zhou 9b1e224680 Fix no-default-features build 2016-05-08 21:51:34 +02:00
book-example Add documentation and example for description config 2016-02-25 15:01:16 +01:00
ci travis: use rustup instead of Travis built-in Rust support 2016-04-13 16:48:57 -05:00
src Fix no-default-features build 2016-05-08 21:51:34 +02:00
.gitignore Bumped version that was still set to 0.0.1 + added a bigger top margin for h2 and h3 elements 2015-11-10 16:26:39 +01:00
.travis.yml travis: use rustup instead of Travis built-in Rust support 2016-04-13 16:48:57 -05:00
Cargo.toml Bump version to 0.0.12, version 0.0.11 has been published to crates.io 2016-04-13 22:37:46 +02:00
LICENSE Create LICENSE 2015-07-29 01:11:30 +02:00
README.md Add documentation for Serve feature 2016-04-02 05:43:21 +02:00
appveyor.yml manually package artifact during before_deploy phase 2016-03-07 18:01:05 -05:00
build.rs Only regenerate css when feature regenerate-css is enabled 2015-09-24 15:37:20 +02:00
deploy.sh Travis CI: expand to test and deploy for Linux and Mac 2016-03-07 18:16:42 -05:00
rustfmt.toml Add a rustfmt config and run rustfmt on the code base 2016-03-17 22:31:28 +01:00

README.md

mdBook

Linux / OS X
Windows

mdBook is a utility to create modern online books from markdown files.

This project is still evolving. For more information, check the issue tracker.

What does it look like?

The Documentation for mdBook has been written in markdown and is using mdBook to generate the online book-like website you can read. The documentation uses the latest version on github and showcases the available features.

Installation

There are multiple ways to install mdBook.

  1. Binaries
    Binaries are available for download here. Make sure to put the path to the binary into your PATH.

  2. From Crates.io
    This requires Rust and Cargo to be installed. Once you have installed Rust, type the following in the terminal:

    cargo install mdbook
    

    This will download and compile mdBook for you, the only thing left to do is to add the Cargo bin directory to your PATH.

  3. From Git
    The version published to Crates.io will ever so slightly be behind the version hosted here on Github. If you need the latest version you can build the git version of mdBook yourself. Cargo makes this super easy!

    cargo install --git https://github.com/azerupi/mdBook.git
    

    Again, make sure to add the Cargo bin directory to your PATH

  4. For Contributions
    If you want to contribute to mdBook you will have to clone the repository on your local machine:

    git clone https://github.com/azerupi/mdBook.git
    

    cd into mdBook/ and run

    cargo build
    

    the resulting binary can be found in mdBook/target/debug/ under the name mdBook or mdBook.exe

Usage

mdBook will primaraly be used as a command line tool, even though it exposes all its functionality as a Rust crate for integration in other projects.

Here are the main commands you will want to run, for a more exhaustive explanation, check out the documentation.

  • mdbook init

    The init command will create a directory with the minimal boilerplate to start with.

    book-test/
    ├── book
    └── src
        ├── chapter_1.md
        └── SUMMARY.md
    

    book and src are both directories. src contains the markdown files that will be used to render the ouput to the book directory.

    Please, take a look at the Documentation for more information and some neat tricks.

  • mdbook build

    This is the command you will run to render your book, it reads the SUMMARY.md file to understand the structure of your book, takes the markdown files in the source directory as input and outputs static html pages that you can upload to a server.

  • mdbook watch

    When you run this command, mdbook will watch your markdown files to rebuild the book on every change. This avoids having to come back to the terminal to type mdbook build over and over again.

  • mdbook serve

    Does the same thing as mdbook watch but additionally serves the book at http://localhost:3000 (port is changeable) and reloads the browser when a change occures.

As a library

Aside from the command line interface, this crate can also be used as a library. This means that you could integrate it in an existing project, like a web-app for example. Since the command line interface is just a wrapper around the library functionality, when you use this crate as a library you have full access to all the functionality of the command line interface with and easy to use API and more!

See the Documentation and the API docs for more information.

Contributions

Contributions are highly appreciated and encouraged! Don't hesitate to participate to discussions in the issues, propose new features and ask for help.

If you are not very confident with Rust, I will be glad to mentor as best as I can if you decide to tackle an issue or new feature.

People who are not familiar with the code can look at issues that are tagged easy. A lot of issues are also related to web development, so people that are not comfortable with Rust can also participate! 😉

You can pick any issue you want to work on. Usually it's a good idea to ask if someone is already working on it and if not to claim the issue.

License

All the code is released under the Mozilla Public License v2.0, for more information take a look at the LICENSE file