1ASCIIDOCTOR(1) Asciidoctor Manual ASCIIDOCTOR(1)
2
3
4
6 asciidoctor - converts AsciiDoc source files to HTML, DocBook, and
7 other formats
8
10 asciidoctor [OPTION]... FILE...
11
13 The asciidoctor(1) command converts the AsciiDoc source file(s) FILE to
14 HTML5, DocBook 5, man(ual) page, and other custom output formats.
15
16 If FILE is - then the AsciiDoc source is read from standard input.
17
19 Security Settings
20 -B, --base-dir=DIR
21 Base directory containing the document and resources. Defaults to
22 the directory containing the source file or, if the source is read
23 from a stream, the working directory. When combined with the safe
24 mode setting, can be used to chroot the execution of the program.
25
26 -S, --safe-mode=SAFE_MODE
27 Set safe mode level: unsafe, safe, server, or secure. Disables
28 potentially dangerous macros in source files, such as include::[].
29 If not set, the safe mode level defaults to unsafe when Asciidoctor
30 is invoked using this script.
31
32 --safe
33 Set safe mode level to safe. Enables include directives, but
34 prevents access to ancestor paths of source file. Provided for
35 compatibility with the asciidoc command. If not set, the safe mode
36 level defaults to unsafe when Asciidoctor is invoked using this
37 script.
38
39 Document Settings
40 -a, --attribute=ATTRIBUTE
41 Define, override, or unset a document attribute. Command-line
42 attributes take precedence over attributes defined in the source
43 file unless either the name or value ends in @. No substitutions
44 are applied to the value.
45
46 ATTRIBUTE is normally formatted as a key-value pair, in the form
47 NAME=VALUE. Alternate forms are NAME (where the VALUE defaults to
48 an empty string), NAME! (unsets the NAME attribute), and
49 NAME=VALUE@ (or NAME@=VALUE) (where VALUE does not override the
50 NAME attribute if it’s already defined in the source document). A
51 value containing spaces must be enclosed in quotes, in the form
52 NAME="VALUE WITH SPACES".
53
54 This option may be specified more than once.
55
56 -b, --backend=BACKEND
57 Backend output file format: html5, docbook5, and manpage are
58 supported out of the box. You can also use the backend alias names
59 html (aliased to html5) or docbook (aliased to docbook5). Other
60 values can be passed, but if Asciidoctor cannot resolve the backend
61 to a converter, it will fail. Defaults to html5.
62
63 -d, --doctype=DOCTYPE
64 Document type: article, book, manpage, or inline. Sets the root
65 element when using the docbook backend and the style class on the
66 HTML body element when using the html backend. The book document
67 type allows multiple level-0 section titles in a single document.
68 The manpage document type enables parsing of metadata necessary to
69 produce a man page. The inline document type allows the content of
70 a single paragraph to be formatted and returned without wrapping it
71 in a containing element. Defaults to article.
72
73 Document Conversion
74 -D, --destination-dir=DIR
75 Destination output directory. Defaults to the directory containing
76 the source file or, if the source is read from a stream, the
77 working directory. If specified, the directory is resolved relative
78 to the working directory.
79
80 -E, --template-engine=NAME
81 Template engine to use for the custom converter templates. The gem
82 with the same name as the engine will be loaded automatically. This
83 name is also used to build the full path to the custom converter
84 templates. If a template engine is not specified, it will be
85 auto-detected based on the file extension of the custom converter
86 templates found.
87
88 -e, --embedded
89 Output an embeddable document, which excludes the header, the
90 footer, and everything outside the body of the document. This
91 option is useful for producing documents that can be inserted into
92 an external template.
93
94 -I, --load-path=DIRECTORY
95 Add the specified directory to the load path, so that -r can load
96 extensions from outside the default Ruby load path. This option may
97 be specified more than once.
98
99 -n, --section-numbers
100 Auto-number section titles. Synonym for --attribute sectnums.
101
102 -o, --out-file=OUT_FILE
103 Write output to file OUT_FILE. Defaults to the base name of the
104 input file suffixed with backend extension. The file is resolved
105 relative to the working directory. If the input is read from
106 standard input or a named pipe (fifo), then the output file
107 defaults to stdout. If OUT_FILE is -, then the output file is
108 written to standard output.
109
110 -R, --source-dir=DIR
111 Source directory. Currently only used if the destination directory
112 is also specified. Used to preserve the directory structure of
113 files converted within this directory in the destination directory.
114 If specified, the directory is resolved relative to the working
115 directory.
116
117 -r, --require=LIBRARY
118 Require the specified library before executing the processor, using
119 the standard Ruby require. This option may be specified more than
120 once.
121
122 -s, --no-header-footer
123 Output an embeddable document, which excludes the header, the
124 footer, and everything outside the body of the document. This
125 option is useful for producing documents that can be inserted into
126 an external template.
127
128 -T, --template-dir=DIR
129 A directory containing custom converter templates that override one
130 or more templates from the built-in set. (requires tilt gem)
131
132 If there is a subfolder that matches the engine name (if
133 specified), that folder is appended to the template directory path.
134 Similarly, if there is a subfolder in the resulting template
135 directory that matches the name of the backend, that folder is
136 appended to the template directory path.
137
138 This option may be specified more than once. Matching templates
139 found in subsequent directories override ones previously
140 discovered.
141
142 Processing Information
143 --failure-level=LEVEL
144 Set the minimum logging level (default: FATAL) that yields a
145 non-zero exit code (i.e., failure). If this option is not set, the
146 program exits with a zero exit code even if warnings or errors have
147 been logged.
148
149 -q, --quiet
150 Silence application log messages and script warnings.
151
152 --trace
153 Include backtrace information when reporting errors.
154
155 -v, --verbose
156 Sets log level to DEBUG so application messages logged at INFO or
157 DEBUG level are printed to stderr.
158
159 -w, --warnings
160 Turn on script warnings (applies to executed code).
161
162 -t, --timings
163 Print timings report to stderr (time to read, parse, and convert).
164
165 Program Information
166 -h, --help [TOPIC]
167 Print a help message. Show the command usage if TOPIC is not
168 specified or recognized. Dump the Asciidoctor man page (in
169 troff/groff format) if TOPIC is manpage. Print an AsciiDoc syntax
170 crib sheet (in AsciiDoc) if TOPIC is syntax.
171
172 -V, --version
173 Print program version number.
174
175 -v can also be used if no source files are specified.
176
178 Asciidoctor honors the SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH environment variable. If this
179 variable is assigned an integer value, that value is used as the epoch
180 of all input documents and as the local date and time. See
181 https://reproducible-builds.org/specs/source-date-epoch/ for more
182 information about this environment variable.
183
185 0
186 Success.
187
188 1
189 Failure (syntax or usage error; configuration error; document
190 processing failure; unexpected error).
191
193 Refer to the Asciidoctor issue tracker at
194 https://github.com/asciidoctor/asciidoctor/issues?q=is%3Aopen.
195
197 Asciidoctor is led and maintained by Dan Allen and Sarah White and has
198 received contributions from many individuals in the Asciidoctor
199 community. The project was started in 2012 by Ryan Waldron based on a
200 prototype written by Nick Hengeveld for the Git website. Jason Porter
201 wrote the first implementation of the CLI interface provided by this
202 command.
203
204 AsciiDoc.py was created by Stuart Rackham and has received
205 contributions from many individuals in the AsciiDoc.py community.
206
208 Project website: https://asciidoctor.org
209
210 Project documentation: https://docs.asciidoctor.org
211
212 Community chat: https://chat.asciidoctor.org
213
214 Source repository: https://github.com/asciidoctor/asciidoctor
215
216 Mailing list archive: https://discuss.asciidoctor.org
217
219 Copyright (C) 2012-present Dan Allen, Sarah White, Ryan Waldron, and
220 the individual contributors to Asciidoctor. Use of this software is
221 granted under the terms of the MIT License.
222
223
224
225Asciidoctor 2.0.20 2018-03-20 ASCIIDOCTOR(1)