# LaTeX Makefile # Find 'get_revision', used to get the current SVN (or Git) revision. # This script is required for 'make foo.draft.pdf' -- if get_revision # is not found somewhere, that rule will fail. REVBIN := $(OTS_DOCTOOLS_DIR)/get_revision ifeq ("$(wildcard $(REVBIN))","") REVBIN := $(shell find . -type f -name get_revision -print -quit) endif LTX=$(wildcard *.ltx) PDFLATEX="pdflatex" default: build-or-help build-or-help: @if [ `ls -1 *.ltx | wc -l` = 1 ]; then \ echo "Examining '`basename *.ltx .ltx`.pdf' for build."; \ echo "No output means PDF is already up-to-date."; \ $(MAKE) `basename *.ltx .ltx`.pdf; \ elif [ `ls -1 *.ltx | wc -l` -lt 5 ]; then \ echo 'Build a specific PDF here by running "make DOCUMENT_NAME.pdf".'; \ echo 'If you put ".draft" before the file extension, you get a version with'; \ echo 'a "DRAFT" watermark diagonally across the background of each page.'; \ echo 'You may be able to build all non-draft PDFs with "make all".'; \ echo ""; \ for name in *.ltx; do \ echo " make `basename $${name} .ltx`.pdf"; \ done; \ echo ""; \ for name in *.ltx; do \ echo " make `basename $${name} .ltx`.draft.pdf"; \ done; \ fi # The 'make all' and 'make all-drafts' functionality only works in # directories where each .ltx file corresponds to an output .pdf. # When there's a main .ltx file that includes lots of subsidiary # .ltx files (which are also present in the dir), then making 'all' # doesn't work because we don't know which doc is the real target. # # There are various possible solutions to this. One is to autodetect # the primary .ltx files, for example by looking for certain headers # or by counting the number of times "\input" or "\include" appears. # Another way would be to have a control file ('.ots-doctools-cfg' # or something) that names the primary documents. # # But for now, we just punt on the whole issue. In the 'help' rule # instructions above, we weasel out by saying "You may be able to..." all: @for name in *.ltx; do $(MAKE) `basename $${name} .ltx`.pdf; done all-drafts: @for name in *.ltx; do $(MAKE) `basename $${name} .ltx`.draft.pdf; done %.ltx: %.mdwn pandoc -s -f markdown -t latex -o $@ $< # A LaTeX document may consist of multiple .ltx files all included # (via \input or \include) into a single master .ltx file. But # tracing those dependencies here in the Makefile would be too much # trouble, so instead we just rebuild the requested PDF if any LaTeX # file in the directory changed. That is guaranteed to be correct: it # may do an unnecessary rebuild, but won't skip a necessary rebuild. # # (Also, it looks like some of the LaTeX tools do dependency tracking # on their own anyway. E.g. if a .ltx source file's timestamp changed # but no content was changed, then 'latexmk' will run very quickly: # it'll wake up, issue its cheery version-header greeting, realize # that nothing actually needs to be done, and exit.) LTX_SRCS := $(shell find . -name '*.ltx' ! -path './.\#*') %.pdf: %.ltx #$(LTX_SRCS) @latexmk -pdf -pdflatex=$(PDFLATEX) -halt-on-error $< # This builds the draft. It can handle underscores in the jobname, # but will produce spurious "type a command or say \end" notices. %.draft.pdf: %.ltx Makefile @if [ -L $(shell basename $< .ltx).draft.pdf ]; then rm $(shell basename $< .ltx).draft.pdf; fi @if test $(findstring _, $<); then \ export SVNREVISION="$(shell $(REVBIN) $<)" ; \ export DRAFT=yes ; \ sed "s/\\\getenv\\[\\\JOBNAME.*/\\\newcommand{\\\JOBNAME}{$(subst _,\\\_,$<)}/" $< | \ latexmk -pdf -pdflatex=$(PDFLATEX) -halt-on-error --shell-escape -jobname=$(addsuffix , $(basename $@)); \ else \ export SVNREVISION="$(shell $(REVBIN) $<)" ; \ export DRAFT=yes ; \ export JOBNAME="$<" ; \ latexmk -pdf -pdflatex=$(PDFLATEX) -halt-on-error --shell-escape -jobname=$(addsuffix , $(basename $@)) $< ; \ fi; mv $(shell basename $< .ltx).draft.pdf $(shell basename $< .ltx)-$(shell $(REVBIN) $<).pdf ln -sf $(shell basename $< .ltx)-$(shell $(REVBIN) $<).pdf $(shell basename $< .ltx).draft.pdf # LaTeX litters a lot clean_latex: @rm -f *.fdb_latexmk *.aux *.fls *.lof *.lot *.log *.out *.toc # We don't remove .pdf files by default, even though they're generated # files, because in practice one usually wants to keep them around. # However, when a series of PDFs ordered by revision number (e.g., # "foo-r1729.pdf", etc) is present, remove all but the most recent. clean: clean_latex @(find . -maxdepth 1 -regex '.*-r[0-9]+\.pdf' -print \ | sort > $$$$-rev-pdfs.tmp; \ cat $$$$-rev-pdfs.tmp | sort | tail -1 > $$$$-rev-pdf-to-save.tmp; \ if [ `wc -l $$$$-rev-pdf-to-save.tmp | cut -d " " -f 1` != "0" ]; \ then \ mv `cat $$$$-rev-pdf-to-save.tmp` $$$$-fish; \ fi; \ rm -f `cat $$$$-rev-pdfs.tmp`; \ if [ `wc -l $$$$-rev-pdf-to-save.tmp | cut -d " " -f 1` != "0" ]; \ then \ mv $$$$-fish `cat $$$$-rev-pdf-to-save.tmp`; \ fi; \ rm $$$$-rev-pdfs.tmp; \ rm $$$$-rev-pdf-to-save.tmp; \ ) @if [ -s "latex2docx" ]; then rm -f latex2docx; fi @if [ -s "latex2odt" ]; then rm -f latex2odt; fi # Don't delete intermediate files .SECONDARY: