5.0 KiB
Configuration
You can configure the parameters for your book in the book.toml file.
Here is an example of what a book.toml file might look like:
[book]
title = "Example book"
author = "John Doe"
description = "The example book covers examples."
[build]
build-dir = "my-example-book"
create-missing = false
[output.html]
additional-css = ["custom.css"]
Supported configuration options
It is important to note that any relative path specified in the in the configuration will always be taken relative from the root of the book where the configuration file is located.
General metadata
This is general information about your book.
- title: The title of the book
- authors: The author(s) of the book
- description: A description for the book, which is added as meta
information in the html
<head>
of each page - src: By default, the source directory is found in the directory named
src
directly under the root folder. But this is configurable with thesrc
key in the configuration file.
book.toml
[book]
title = "Example book"
authors = ["John Doe", "Jane Doe"]
description = "The example book covers examples."
src = "my-src" # the source files will be found in `root/my-src` instead of `root/src`
Build options
This controls the build process of your book.
- build-dir: The directory to put the rendered book in. By default this is
book/
in the book's root directory. - create-missing: By default, any missing files specified in
SUMMARY.md
will be created when the book is built (i.e.create-missing = true
). If this isfalse
then the build process will instead exit with an error if any files do not exist.
book.toml
[build]
build-dir = "build"
create-missing = false
HTML renderer options
The HTML renderer has a couple of options as well. All the options for the
renderer need to be specified under the TOML table [output.html]
.
The following configuration options are available:
- theme: mdBook comes with a default theme and all the resource files needed for it. But if this option is set, mdBook will selectively overwrite the theme files with the ones found in the specified folder.
- curly-quotes: Convert straight quotes to curly quotes, except for
those that occur in code blocks and code spans. Defaults to
false
. - google-analytics: If you use Google Analytics, this option lets you enable it by simply specifying your ID in the configuration file.
- additional-css: If you need to slightly change the appearance of your book without overwriting the whole style, you can specify a set of stylesheets that will be loaded after the default ones where you can surgically change the style.
- additional-js: If you need to add some behaviour to your book without removing the current behaviour, you can specify a set of javascript files that will be loaded alongside the default one.
- playpen: A subtable for configuring various playpen settings.
- no-section-label: mdBook by defaults adds section label in table of
contents column. For example, "1.", "2.1". Set this option to true to
disable those labels. Defaults to
false
.
book.toml
[book]
title = "Example book"
authors = ["John Doe", "Jane Doe"]
description = "The example book covers examples."
[output.html]
theme = "my-theme"
curly-quotes = true
google-analytics = "123456"
additional-css = ["custom.css", "custom2.css"]
additional-js = ["custom.js"]
[output.html.playpen]
editor = "./path/to/editor"
editable = false
Environment Variables
All configuration values van be overridden from the command line by setting the
corresponding environment variable. Because many operating systems restrict
environment variables to be alphanumeric characters or _
, the configuration
key needs to be formatted slightly differently to the normal foo.bar.baz
form.
Variables starting with MDBOOK_
are used for configuration. The key is
created by removing the MDBOOK_
prefix and turning the resulting
string into kebab-case
. Double underscores (__
) separate nested
keys, while a single underscore (_
) is replaced with a dash (-
).
For example:
MDBOOK_foo
->foo
MDBOOK_FOO
->foo
MDBOOK_FOO__BAR
->foo.bar
MDBOOK_FOO_BAR
->foo-bar
MDBOOK_FOO_bar__baz
->foo-bar.baz
So by setting the MDBOOK_BOOK__TITLE
environment variable you can
override the book's title without needing to touch your book.toml
.
Note: To facilitate setting more complex config items, the value of an environment variable is first parsed as JSON, falling back to a string if the parse fails.
This means, if you so desired, you could override all book metadata when building the book with something like
$ export MDBOOK_BOOK="{'title': 'My Awesome Book', authors: ['Michael-F-Bryan']}" $ mdbook build
The latter case may be useful in situations where mdbook
is invoked
from a script or CI, where it sometimes isn't possible to update the
book.toml
before building.