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11.1 Texinfo
If the current directory contains Texinfo source, you must declare it
with the TEXINFOS
primary. Generally Texinfo files are converted
into info, and thus the info_TEXINFOS
variable is most commonly used
here. Any Texinfo source file must end in the ‘.texi’,
‘.txi’, or ‘.texinfo’ extension. We recommend ‘.texi’
for new manuals.
Automake generates rules to build ‘.info’, ‘.dvi’, ‘.ps’, ‘.pdf’ and ‘.html’ files from your Texinfo sources. Following the GNU Coding Standards, only the ‘.info’ files are built by ‘make all’ and installed by ‘make install’ (unless you use ‘no-installinfo’, see below). Furthermore, ‘.info’ files are automatically distributed so that Texinfo is not a prerequisite for installing your package.
Other documentation formats can be built on request by ‘make dvi’, ‘make ps’, ‘make pdf’ and ‘make html’, and they can be installed with ‘make install-dvi’, ‘make install-ps’, ‘make install-pdf’ and ‘make install-html’ explicitly. ‘make uninstall’ will remove everything: the Texinfo documentation installed by default as well as all the above optional formats.
All these targets can be extended using ‘-local’ rules (see section Extending Automake Rules).
If the ‘.texi’ file @include
s ‘version.texi’, then
that file will be automatically generated. The file ‘version.texi’
defines four Texinfo flag you can reference using
@value{EDITION}
, @value{VERSION}
,
@value{UPDATED}
, and @value{UPDATED-MONTH}
.
-
EDITION
-
VERSION
Both of these flags hold the version number of your program. They are kept separate for clarity.
-
UPDATED
This holds the date the primary ‘.texi’ file was last modified.
-
UPDATED-MONTH
This holds the name of the month in which the primary ‘.texi’ file was last modified.
The ‘version.texi’ support requires the mdate-sh
script; this script is supplied with Automake and automatically
included when automake
is invoked with the
‘--add-missing’ option.
If you have multiple Texinfo files, and you want to use the ‘version.texi’ feature, then you have to have a separate version file for each Texinfo file. Automake will treat any include in a Texinfo file that matches ‘vers*.texi’ just as an automatically generated version file.
Sometimes an info file actually depends on more than one ‘.texi’
file. For instance, in GNU Hello, ‘hello.texi’ includes the file
‘gpl.texi’. You can tell Automake about these dependencies using
the texi_TEXINFOS
variable. Here is how GNU Hello does it:
info_TEXINFOS = hello.texi hello_TEXINFOS = gpl.texi |
By default, Automake requires the file ‘texinfo.tex’ to appear in
the same directory as the ‘Makefile.am’ file that lists the
‘.texi’ files. If you used AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR
in
‘configure.ac’ (see (autoconf)Input section `Finding `configure' Input' in The Autoconf Manual), then ‘texinfo.tex’ is looked for
there. In both cases, automake
then supplies ‘texinfo.tex’ if
‘--add-missing’ is given, and takes care of its distribution.
However, if you set the TEXINFO_TEX
variable (see below),
it overrides the location of the file and turns off its installation
into the source as well as its distribution.
The option ‘no-texinfo.tex’ can be used to eliminate the
requirement for the file ‘texinfo.tex’. Use of the variable
TEXINFO_TEX
is preferable, however, because that allows the
dvi
, ps
, and pdf
targets to still work.
Automake generates an install-info
rule; some people apparently
use this. By default, info pages are installed by ‘make
install’, so running make install-info
is pointless. This can
be prevented via the no-installinfo
option. In this case,
‘.info’ files are not installed by default, and user must
request this explicitly using ‘make install-info’.
The following variables are used by the Texinfo build rules.
-
MAKEINFO
The name of the program invoked to build ‘.info’ files. This variable is defined by Automake. If the
makeinfo
program is found on the system then it will be used by default; otherwisemissing
will be used instead.-
MAKEINFOHTML
The command invoked to build ‘.html’ files. Automake defines this to ‘$(MAKEINFO) --html’.
-
MAKEINFOFLAGS
User flags passed to each invocation of ‘$(MAKEINFO)’ and ‘$(MAKEINFOHTML)’. This user variable (see section Variables reserved for the user) is not expected to be defined in any ‘Makefile’; it can be used by users to pass extra flags to suit their needs.
-
AM_MAKEINFOFLAGS
-
AM_MAKEINFOHTMLFLAGS
Maintainer flags passed to each
makeinfo
invocation. UnlikeMAKEINFOFLAGS
, these variables are meant to be defined by maintainers in ‘Makefile.am’. ‘$(AM_MAKEINFOFLAGS)’ is passed tomakeinfo
when building ‘.info’ files; and ‘$(AM_MAKEINFOHTMLFLAGS)’ is used when building ‘.html’ files.For instance, the following setting can be used to obtain one single ‘.html’ file per manual, without node separators.
AM_MAKEINFOHTMLFLAGS = --no-headers --no-split
AM_MAKEINFOHTMLFLAGS
defaults to ‘$(AM_MAKEINFOFLAGS)’. This means that definingAM_MAKEINFOFLAGS
without definingAM_MAKEINFOHTMLFLAGS
will impact builds of both ‘.info’ and ‘.html’ files.-
TEXI2DVI
The name of the command that converts a ‘.texi’ file into a ‘.dvi’ file. This defaults to ‘texi2dvi’, a script that ships with the Texinfo package.
-
TEXI2PDF
The name of the command that translates a ‘.texi’ file into a ‘.pdf’ file. This defaults to ‘$(TEXI2DVI) --pdf --batch’.
-
DVIPS
The name of the command that builds a ‘.ps’ file out of a ‘.dvi’ file. This defaults to ‘dvips’.
-
TEXINFO_TEX
-
If your package has Texinfo files in many directories, you can use the variable
TEXINFO_TEX
to tell Automake where to find the canonical ‘texinfo.tex’ for your package. The value of this variable should be the relative path from the current ‘Makefile.am’ to ‘texinfo.tex’:TEXINFO_TEX = ../doc/texinfo.tex
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