README
1
2 Valgrind Documentation
3 ----------------------
4 This text assumes the following directory structure:
5
6 Distribution text files (eg. AUTHORS, NEWS, ...):
7 valgrind/
8
9 Main /docs/ dir:
10 valgrind/docs/
11
12 Top-level XML files:
13 valgrind/docs/xml/
14
15 Tool specific XML docs:
16 valgrind/<toolname>/docs/
17
18 All images used in the docs:
19 valgrind/docs/images/
20
21 Stylesheets, catalogs, parsing/formatting scripts:
22 valgrind/docs/lib/
23
24 Some files of note:
25 docs/xml/index.xml: Top-level book-set wrapper
26 docs/xml/FAQ.xml: The FAQ
27 docs/valgrind-manpage.xml The valgrind manpage
28 docs/xml/vg-entities.xml: Various strings, dates etc. used all over
29 docs/xml/xml_help.txt: Basic guide to common XML tags.
30
31 The docs/internals directory contains some useful high-level stuff about
32 Valgrind's internals. It's not relevant for the rest of this discussion.
33
34
35 Overview
36 ---------
37 The Documentation Set contains all books, articles, manpages,
38 etc. pertaining to Valgrind, and is designed to be built as:
39 - chunked html files
40 - PDF file
41 - PS file
42 - manpage
43
44 The whole thing is a "book set", made up of multiple books (the user
45 manual, the FAQ, the tech-docs, the licenses). Each book could be
46 made individually, but the build system doesn't do that.
47
48 CSS: the style-sheet used by the docs is the same as that used by the
49 website (consistency is king). It might be worth doing a pre-build diff
50 to check whether the website stylesheet has changed.
51
52
53 The build process
54 -----------------
55 It's not obvious exactly when things get built, and so on. Here's an
56 overview:
57
58 - The HTML docs can be built manually by running 'make html-docs' in
59 valgrind/docs/. (Don't use 'make html'; that is a valid built-in
60 automake target, but does nothing.) Likewise for PDF/PS with 'make
61 print-docs'.
62
63 - 'make dist' (nb: at the top level, not in docs/) puts the XML files
64 into the tarball. It also builds the HTML docs and puts them in too,
65 in valgrind/docs/html/ (including style sheets, images, etc).
66
67 - 'make install' installs the HTML docs in
68 $(install)/share/doc/valgrind/html/, if they are present. (They will
69 be present if you are installing from the result of a 'make dist'.
70 They might not be present if you are developing in a Subversion
71 workspace and have not built them.) It doesn't install the XML docs,
72 as they're not useful installed.
73
74 If the XML processing tools ever mature enough to become standard, we
75 could just build the docs from XML when doing 'make install', which
76 would be simpler.
77
78
79 The XML Toolchain
80 ------------------
81 I spent some time on the docbook-apps list in order to ascertain
82 the most-useful / widely-available / least-fragile / advanced
83 toolchain. Basically, everything has problems of one sort or
84 another, so I ended up going with what I felt was the
85 least-problematical of the various options.
86
87 The maintainer is responsible for ensure the following tools are
88 present on his system:
89 - xmllint: using libxml version 20620
90 - xsltproc: Using libxml 20620, libxslt 10114 and libexslt 812
91 (Nb:be sure to use a version based on libxml2
92 version 2.6.11 or later. There was a bug in
93 xml:base processing in versions before that.)
94 - pdfxmltex: pdfeTeX 3.141592-1.21a-2.2 (Web2C 7.5.4)
95 - pdftops: version 3.00
96 - DocBook: version 4.2
97 - bzip2
98
99 A big problem is latency. Norman Walsh is constantly updating
100 DocBook, but the tools tend to lag behind somewhat. It is
101 important that the versions get on with each other. If you
102 decide to upgrade something, then it is your responsibility to
103 ascertain whether things still work nicely - this *cannot* be
104 assumed.
105
106 Print output: if make expires with an error, cat output.
107 If you see something like this:
108 ! TeX capacity exceeded, sorry [pool size=436070]
109
110 then look at this:
111 http://lists.debian.org/debian-doc/2003/12/msg00020.html
112 and modify your texmf files accordingly.
113
114
115
116 Catalog/Stylesheet Location
117 ---------------------------
118 /etc/xml/ seems to have become the standard place for catalogs
119 in recent distros.
120
121
122 Notes [May 2009]
123 -----------------
124 For Ubuntu 9.04, to build HTML docs I had to:
125
126 sudo apt-get install docbook docbook-xsl
127
128 Actually, I'm not sure if the 'docbook' is necessary, but 'docbook-xsl'
129 definitely is.
130
131 To build the man pages I also changed the Makefile.am to try this
132 stylesheet:
133
134 /usr/share/xml/docbook/stylesheet/nwalsh/current/manpages/docbook.xsl
135
136 if it can't find this one:
137
138 /usr/share/xml/docbook/stylesheet/nwalsh/manpages/docbook.xsl
139
140 I haven't succeeded in building the print docs.
141
142 Notes [Mar. 2007]
143 -----------------
144 For SuSE 10.1, I have to install the following packages to get a
145 working toolchain. Non-indented ones I asked YaST to install;
146 indented ones are extras it added on:
147
148 docbook_4
149 iso_ent
150 xmlcharent
151 docbook-dsssl-stylesheets
152 docbook_3
153 docbook-xsl-stylesheets
154 xmltex
155 gd
156 latex-ucs
157 te_latex
158 tetex
159 xaw3d
160 passivetex
161 xpdf
162 xpdf-tools
163
164 pdfxmltex still bombs when building the print docs. On SuSE 10.1 I
165 edited /etc/texmf/web2c/texmf.cnf and changed
166 pool_size.pdfxmltex = 500000
167 to
168 pool_size.pdfxmltex = 1500000
169 and that fixes it.
170
171 It is also reported that the print docs build OK on Fedora Core 5.
172
173
174 Notes [Nov. 2005]
175 -----------------
176 After upgrading to Suse 10, found a (known) bug in PassiveTex which
177 broke the build, so added a bug-fix to 'docs/lib/vg-fo.xsl'.
178 Bug-fix related links:
179 http://lists.oasis-open.org/archives/docbook/200509/msg00032.html
180 http://www.dpawson.co.uk/docbook/tools.html#d850e300
181 http://www.haskell.org/pipermail/glasgow-haskell-bugs/2005-January.txt
182
183
184 Notes [July 2005]
185 -----------------
186 jrs had to install zillions of packages on SuSE 9.2 in order to
187 build the print docs (make print-docs), including
188 passivetex
189 xpdf (for pdftops, which does the nicest job)
190
191 Even then, pdfxmltex eventually dies with "TeX capacity exceeded,
192 sorry [pool size = 67555]" or some such. To fix this, he edited
193 /etc/texmf/texmf.cnf and changed
194 pool_size.pdfxmltex = 500000
195 to
196 pool_size.pdfxmltex = 1500000
197 and that fixed it.
198
199
200 Notes [Nov. 2004]:
201 -----------------
202 - the end of file.xml must have only ONE newline after the last tag:
203 </book>
204 - pdfxmltex barfs if given a filename with an underscore in it
205
206
207 References:
208 ----------
209 - samba have got all the stuff
210 http://websvn.samba.org/listing.php?rep=4&path=/trunk/&opt=dir&sc=1
211
212 excellent on-line howto reference:
213 - http://www.cogent.ca/
214
215 using automake with docbook:
216 - http://www.movement.uklinux.net/docs/docbook-autotools/index.html
217
218 Debugging catalog processing:
219 - http://xmlsoft.org/catalog.html#Declaring
220 xmlcatalog -v <catalog-file>
221
222 shell script to generate xml catalogs for docbook 4.1.2:
223 - http://xmlsoft.org/XSLT/docbook.html
224
225 configure.in re pdfxmltex
226 - http://cvs.sourceforge.net/viewcvs.py/logreport/service/configure.in?rev=1.325
227
228 some useful xls stylesheets in cvs:
229 - http://cvs.sourceforge.net/viewcvs.py/perl-xml/perl-xml-faq/
230
231
232 TODO LESS CRUCIAL:
233 ------------------
234 - concat titlepage + subtitle page in fo output
235 - try and get the QuickStart and FAQ titlepage+toc+content onto one page
236