sdf

Langue: en

Version: 2008-02-28 (debian - 07/07/09)

Section: 1 (Commandes utilisateur)

NAME

sdf - SDF Conversion Utility

PURPOSE

sdf converts SDF files to other document formats.

USAGE

  usage  : sdf [+alias] [-h[help]] [-o[out_ext]]
          [-l[log_ext]] [-O[out_dir]] [-2 format]
          [-D variable,..] [-n split_level]
          [-f flag,..] [-I include_path,..]
          [-p[prefilter]] [-a parameters] [-P[plang]]
          [-N[line_numbers]] [-g[get_report]]
          [-r report] [-L locale] [-k look]
          [-s style] [-S page_size] [-c config]
          [-u uses,..] [-H head_level] [-K head_look]
          [-d driver] [-y post_filter]
          [-z post_process,..] [-t target]
          [-v[verbose]] [-T trace_levels,..]
          [-w width] [-Y library_path,..]
          sdf_file ...
 purpose: convert an sdf file to another format
 version: 2.001    (SDF 2.001)
 
 

The options are:

  Option       Description
  -h           display help on options
  -o           output file extension
  -l           log file extension
  -O           output to input file's (or explicit) directory
  -2           the output format you want
  -D           define variables
  -n           heading level to autosplit into topics
  -f           define flags (i.e. DOC_* variables)
  -I           search path for include files, templates, etc.
  -p           pre-filter input file from each argument
  -a           parameters for the pre-filter
  -P           pre-filter as a programming language
  -N           number lines in pretty-printed source code
  -g           pre-filter using sdfget with the report specified
  -r           report to run on the SDF to transform it before formatting
  -L           locale
  -k           look library
  -s           style of document
  -S           page size for paper documents
  -c           configuration library
  -u           modules to use
  -H           initial heading level
  -K           heading look (H, A or P)
  -d           format driver - default is expand
  -y           filter to post-filter the output with
  -z           list of post processing actions to do
  -t           logical target format
  -v           verbose mode
  -T           debugging trace levels
  -w           width for text-based outputs
  -Y           search path for libraries
 
 

The aliases are:

  Alias        Description
  mc           generate a MIMS chapter
  ms           generate a MIMS spec
  mt           generate a MIMS topic
  sdf2doc_fm   generate Frame binary format via FrameMaker
  sdf2dvi_sgml generate DVI format via SGML
  sdf2fvo_fm   generate FrameViewer format via FrameMaker
  sdf2hlp_mif  generate Windows Help input files via MIF
  sdf2html_    generate a HTML document
  sdf2html_dir generate an SDF directory in HTML
  sdf2html_fm  generate a HTML document via FrameMaker
  sdf2html_topicsgenerate HTML topics
  sdf2htx_     generate MIMS HTX format
  sdf2info_sgmlgenerate GNU info format via SGML
  sdf2latex_   generate LaTeX
  sdf2latex_podgenerate LaTeX format via POD
  sdf2latex_sgmlgenerate LaTeX format via SGML
  sdf2lyx_sgml generate a LyX file via SGML
  sdf2man_pod  generate Man page format via POD
  sdf2mf6_     generate MIMS F6 help format
  sdf2mif_     generate Frame MIF format
  sdf2pdf_html generate PDF via HTML
  sdf2pdf_mif  generate PostScript and PDF via FrameMaker
  sdf2pod_     generate POD format
  sdf2ps_fm    generate PostScript via FrameMaker
  sdf2ps_fmbookgenerate PostScript via a FrameMaker book
  sdf2ps_html  generate PostScript via HTML
  sdf2ps_pod   generate PostScript via POD
  sdf2ps_sgml  generate PostScript via SGML
  sdf2rtf_fm   generate RTF format via FrameMaker
  sdf2rtf_mif  generate RTF format via MIF
  sdf2rtf_sgml generate RTF format via SGML format
  sdf2sdf_expandgenerate expanded SDF
  sdf2sdf_raw  generate raw SDF
  sdf2sgml_    generate SGML format
  sdf2txt_     generate plain text format
  sdf2txt_fm   generate plain text format via FrameMaker
  sdf2txt_pod  generate plain text format via POD
 
 

DESCRIPTION

The -h option provides help. If it is specified without a parameter, a brief description of each option is displayed. To display the attributes for an option, specify the option letter as a parameter.

By default, generated output goes to standard output. To direct output to a file per input file, use the -o option to specify an extension for output files. If the -o option is specified without a parameter, an extension of out is assumed.

Likewise, error messages go to standard error by default. Use the -l option to create a log file per input file. If the -l option is specified without a parameter, an extension of log is assumed.

By default, generated output and log files are created in the current directory. Use the -O option to specify an explicit output directory. If the -O option is specified without a parameter, the input file's directory is used.

The -2 option is a convenient way of specifying the alias (collection of options) which generates the output you want. e.g.

      sdf -2html abc
 
 

is equivalent to:

      sdf +sdf2html abc
 
 

The -D option is used to define variables. These are typically used for controlling conditional text and substituting text which changes. The format used is:

  -Dvariable1=value1,variable2=value2
 
 

A flag is a shorthand way of specifying variables in the DOC family. i.e. -ftoc=3 is equivalent to -DDOC_TOC=3. The format of the -f option is:

  -fflag1=value1,flag2=value2
 
 

If a variable or flag is specified without a value, 1 is assumed.

To generate HTML topics, the command is:

      sdf -2topics abc
 
 

By default, this will create sub-topics for each heading already in a separate file. It will also autosplit level 1 headings into sub-topics. The -n option can be used to control which level headings are split at:

1 autosplits on level 1 headings (the default)
2 autosplits on level 2 headings
3 autosplits on level 3 headings
0 disables autosplitting.

Include files are searched for in the current directory, then in the directories given by the -I option, then in the default library directory.

By default, sdf is configured to prefilter files with certain extensions. For example:

  sdf mytable.tbl
 
 

is equivalent to executing sdf on a file which only contains:

  !include "mytable.pl"; table
 
 

The -p option can be used to explicitly prefilter files or to override the default prefilter used. If a parameter is not provided, the prefilter is assumed to be table.

The -a option can be used to specify parameters for the prefilter. For example:

  sdf -aformat='15,75,10' mytable.tbl
 
 

The -P option prefilters the input files as programming languages. The parameter is the language to use. If none is provided, the extension is assumed to be the language name. For example:

  sdf -P myapp.c
 
 

is equivalent to executing sdf on a file which only contains:

  !include "myapp.c"; example; wide; lang='c'
 
 

The -N option adds line numbers at the frequency given. The default frequency is 1. i.e. every line.

The -g option prefilters the input files by executing sdfget using the default report (default.sdg). To change the report used, specify the report name as the parameter. If the report name doesn't include an extension, sdg is assumed.

Note: sdfget searches for reports in the current directory, then in the stdlib directory within SDF's library directory.

The -r option runs the nominated SDR report on each input before formatting. In other words, SDR reports provide a mechanism for:

analysing the SDF just before it would be formatted, and
replacing that SDF with the output of the report (also SDF) so that the final output is a nicely formatted report.

For example, the sdf_dir report generates a directory (tree) of the components (files) included in an SDF document. Reports are stored in sdr files and are searched for using the usual rules.

The -L option can be used to specify a locale. The default locale name is specified in sdf.ini. Locale naming follows POSIX conventions (i.e. language_country), so the locale name for American english is en_us. The information for each locale is stored in the locale directory, so you'll need to have to look in there to see what locales are available. (As the default locale can be set in sdf.ini, this isn't as ugly as it first sounds.)

Note: At the moment, a locale file simply contains a list of language specific strings. Ultimately, it should be extended to support localisation of date and time formats.

The -k option is used to specify a look. The default look library is specified in sdf.ini.

The -s option can be used to specify a document style. Typical values are:

document - a technical document
memo - a memo
fax - a facsimile
minutes - minutes of a meeting.

The -S option is used to specify the page size. Values supported include:

  Name             Width            Height            Comment
  global           21.0cm           11.0in            will fit on either A4 or letter
  A3               29.7cm           42.0cm            
  A4               21.0cm           29.7cm            
  A5               14.8cm           21.0cm            
  B4               25.7cm           36.4cm            
  B5               17.6cm           25.0cm            
  letter           8.5in            11.0in            
  legal            8.5in            14.0in            
  tabloid          11.0in           17.0in
 
 

Additional page sizes can be configured in sdf.ini. To specify a rotated version of a named page size, append an R. For example, A4R implies a width of 29.7cm and a height of 21cm. A custom page size can also be specified using the format:

      {{width}}x{{height}}
 
 

where width and height are the respective sizes in points.

The -c option is used to specify a configuration library.

A list of modules to use can be specified via the -u option.

The initial heading level to start on can be specified via the -H option. This is useful if you want to preview how a topic will be displayed without regenerating the complete document. If a topic begins with a level 1 heading (e.g. H1) and you wish to format it as a document (i.e. the level 1 text becomes the DOC_NAME for build_title), use the -H option with a value of 0.

The look of headings can also be adjusted. By default, H-style headings are numbered, A-style headings are lettered and P-style headings are plain. To force a particular style for all headings, the -K option can be used. Sensible parameter values are H, A and P although other values may work depending on what paragraph styles are configured at your site.

The -d option is used to specify the format driver. Values supported include:

expand - format as expanded text (the default)
mif - Maker Interchange Format
pod - Plain Old Documentation (as used by Perl).

Additional drivers can be configured in sdf.ini.

The -y option can to used to specify a post-filter.

The -z option can be used to specify a list of post-processing actions you want to execute on each output file after it is generated. The actions supported include:

ps - generate PostScript
doc - generate a Frame (binary) file
fvo - generate a Frame View-Only file
txt - generate a text file
rtf - generate an RTF file
clean - delete the output file (must be last).

Additional actions can be configured in sdf.ini. By convention, the generated files are given the same names as the action keywords.

The -t option is used to specify the logical target format. If none is specified, the default is the first post processing action, if any. Otherwise, the default is the format driver name.

The -v option enables verbose mode. This is useful for debugging problems related to post processing. In particular, post processing actions containing the pattern clean are skipped in verbose mode. You can also switch off the post processing messages by using a verbose value of -1. Values higher than 1 switch on additional trace messages as follows:

2 - show how names of files and libraries are resolved

3 - show the directories searched for libraries

4 - show the directories searched for modules

5 - show the directories searched for normal files.

The -T option can be used to switch on debug tracing. The parameter is a comma-separated list of name-value pairs where each name is a tracing group and each value is the level of tracing for that group. To get the trace output provided by the -v option, one can use the user group like this:

   sdf -Tuser=2 ...
 
 

This is slightly different from the -v option in that intermediate files are not implicitly kept. Additional tracing groups will be added over time (probably one per output driver).

The -w option is used to specify the width for text-based outputs.

The -z, -D, -f and -I options are list options. i.e. multiple values can be separated by commas and/or the options can be supplied multiple times.

EXAMPLES

Convert mydoc.sdf to a technical document in mif format, output is mydoc.mif:
  sdf -2mif mydoc.sdf
 
 

Convert mydoc.sdf to online documentation in FrameViewer format, output is mydoc.fvo:

  sdf -2fvo mydoc.sdf
 
 

Convert mydoc.sdf to online documentation in HTML, output is mydoc.html:

  sdf -2html mydoc.sdf
 
 

The following command will build the reference documentation for a SDF module in HTML:

  sdf -2html abc.sdm
 
 

LIMITATIONS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS

Many of the default post processing (-z) actions only works on Unix as FrameMaker for Windows does not support batch conversion.

Topics mode has several limitations:

only documents in the current directory can be converted
all sub-topics must also be in the current directory.