texfot --version (return code: 0)
$Id: texfot,v 1.32 2016/02/09 19:13:22 karl Exp $
texfot --help (return code: 0)
[1mNAME[0m
texfot - run TeX, filtering online transcript for interesting messages
[1mSYNOPSIS[0m
texfot [[4moption[0m]... [4mtexcmd[0m [[4mtexarg[0m...]
[1mDESCRIPTION[0m
"texfot" invokes [4mtexcmd[0m with the given [4mtexarg[0m arguments, filtering the
online output for ``interesting'' messages. Its exit value is that of
[4mtexcmd[0m. Examples:
# Sample basic invocation:
texfot pdflatex file.tex
# Ordinarily all output is copied to /tmp/fot before filtering;
# that can be omitted:
texfot pdflatex --tee=/dev/null file.tex
# Example of more complex engine invocation:
texfot lualatex --recorder '\nonstopmode\input file'
Aside from its own options, described below, "texfot" just runs the given
command with the given arguments (same approach to command line syntax as
"env", "nice", "time", "timeout", etc.). Thus, "texfot" works with any
engine and any command line options.
"texfot" does not look at the log file or any other possible output
file(s); it only looks at the standard output and standard error from the
command. stdout is processed first, then stderr. Lines from stderr have an
identifying prefix. "texfot" writes all accepted lines to its stdout.
The messages shown are intended to be those which likely need action by
the author: error messages, overfull and underfull boxes, undefined
citations, missing characters from fonts, etc.
[1mFLOW OF OPERATION[0m
Here is the order in which lines of output are checked:
1. If the ``next line'' needs to be printed (see below), print it.
2. Otherwise, if the line matches the built-in list of regexps to ignore,
or any user-supplied list of regexps to ignore (given with "--ignore",
see below), in that order, ignore it.
3. Otherwise, if the line matches the list of regexps for which the next
line (two lines in all) should be shown, show this line and set the
``next line'' flag for the next time around the loop. Examples are the
common "!" and "filename:lineno:" error messages, which are generally
followed by a line with specific detail about the error.
4. Otherwise, if the line matches the list of regexps to show, show it.
5. Otherwise, the default: if the line came from stdout, ignore it; if
the line came from stderr, print it (to stdout). (This distinction is
made because TeX engines write relatively few messages to stderr, and
it's not unlikely that any such should be considered.
It would be easy to add more options to allow for user additions to
the various regex lists, if that ever seems useful. Or email me (see
end).
Once a particular check matches, the program moves on to process the next
line.
Don't hesitate to peruse the source to the script, which is essentially a
straightforward loop matching against the different lists as above. You
can see the exact regexps being matched in the different categories in the
source.
Incidentally, although nothing in this basic operation is specific to TeX
engines, all the regular expressions included in the program are specific
to TeX. So in practice the program isn't useful except with TeX engines,
although it would be easy enough to adapt it (if there was anything else
as verbose as TeX to make that useful).
[1mOPTIONS[0m
The following are the options to "texfot" itself (not the TeX engine being
invoked; consult the TeX documentation or the engine's "--help" output for
that).
The first non-option terminates "texfot"'s option parsing, and the
remainder of the command line is invoked as the TeX command, without
further parsing. For example, "texfot --debug tex --debug" will output
debugging information from both "texfot" and "tex".
Options may start with either - or --, and may be unambiguously
abbreviated. It is best to use the full option name in scripts, though, to
avoid possible collisions with new options in the future.
"--debug"
"--no-debug"
Output (or not) what is being done on standard error. Off by default.
"--ignore" [4mregexp[0m
Ignore lines in the TeX output matching (Perl) [4mregexp[0m. Can be
repeated. Adds to the default set of ignore regexps rather than
replacing. These regexps are not automatically anchored (or otherwise
altered), simply used as-is.
"--interactive"
"--no-interactive"
By default, standard input to the TeX process is closed so that TeX's
interactive mode (waiting for input upon error, the "*" prompt, etc.)
is never entered. Giving "--interactive" allows interaction to happen.
"--quiet"
"--no-quiet"
By default, the TeX command being invoked is reported on standard
output. "--quiet" omits that reporting.
"--stderr"
"--no-stderr"
The default is for "texfot" to report everything written to stderr by
the TeX command (on stdout). "--no-stderr" omits that reporting. (Some
programs, "dvisvgm" is one, can be rather verbose on stderr.)
"--tee" [4mfile[0m
By default, the output being filtered is "tee"-ed, before filtering,
to "$TMPDIR/fot" ("/tmp/fot" if "TMPDIR" is not set), to make it easy
to check the full output when the filtering seems suspect. This option
allows specifying a different file. Use "--tee /dev/null" if you don't
want the original output at all.
"--version"
Output version information and exit successfully.
"--help"
Display this help and exit successfully.
[1mRATIONALE[0m
I wrote this because, in my work as a TUGboat editor
(<http://tug.org/TUGboat>, journal submissions always welcome!), I end up
running and rerunning many papers, many times each. It was too easy to
lose warnings I needed to see in the mass of unvarying and uninteresting
output from TeX, such as style files being read and fonts being used. I
wanted to see all and only those messages which needed some action by me.
I found some other programs of a similar nature, the LaTeX package
"silence", and plenty of other (La)TeX wrappers, but it seemed none of
them did what I wanted. Either they read the log file (I wanted the online
output only), or they output more or less than I wanted, or they required
invoking TeX differently (I wanted to keep my build process exactly the
same, most critically the TeX invocation, which can get complicated).
Hence I wrote this.
Here are some keywords if you want to explore other options:
texloganalyser, pydflatex, logfilter, latexmk, rubber, arara, and
searching for "log" at <http://ctan.org/search>.
"texfot" is written in Perl, and runs on Unix, and does not work on
Windows. (If by some chance anyone wants to use this program on Windows,
please make your own fork; I'm not interested in supporting that os.)
The name comes from the "trip.fot" and "trap.fot" files that are part of
Knuth's trip and trap torture tests, which record the online output from
the programs. I am not sure what "fot" stands for in trip and trap, but I
can pretend that it stands for "filter online transcript" in the present
case :).
[1mAUTHORS AND COPYRIGHT[0m
This script and its documentation were written by Karl Berry and both are
released to the public domain. Email "karl@freefriends.org" with bug
reports. It has no home page beyond the package on CTAN:
<http://www.ctan.org/pkg/texfot>.