Chapter 6. Building the stylesheets
If you wish, you can also clone the distribution and build them yourself. The distribution is designed to be self contained. In a Unix or Mac environment, running:
./gradlew distwill build the stylesheets. Building will:
Compile the stylesheets and run the unit tests. The compiled stylesheets will be available in
build/xslt.Running all the tests requires building the reference guide and a few other things. You can build the stylesheets without running any of the tests with the
makeXslttask.Compile the extension functions. The compiled extension functions will be available in
build/libs. Thejartask will compile the extensions without running the tests.“Compile” the Python script that helps run the stylesheets. (It’s not really compiled, but several stylesheet-version-specific strings are interpolated.) The
copyBintask will setup the Python script without running the tests.
In principle, it should be possible to build the stylesheets on Windows. In practice, it isn’t entirely reliable. It has been much improved as of version 2.1.4, but still fails randomly on some Windows machines, but not others. It may be more expedient to build in the Linux subsystem on Windows 10 or in a Docker container.
6.1. Prerequisites
In order to build the stylesheets, you must configure your system with several prerequisites:
Gradle. The stylesheet builds use the Gradle wrapper to assure a consistent environment across systems, it’ll be downloaded automatically the first time you build.
A modern version of Java. (Java 1.8 or later, for example.)
Python 3 and the click module. The Pygmentize program is also required for syntax highlighting, though that’s not technically a build requirement.
If you discover other prerequisites that have been overlooked, or have questions or suggestions about how best to manage them, please let us know.
6.2. Repository structure
The most significant parts of the repository hierarchy are:
|src/main/xslt|src/main/xslt/transforms|src/main/xslt/modules
These are the sources for the stylesheets themselves. The
transform subdirectory contains the preprocessing
stylesheets that are run as separate transforms. The
modules directory doesn’t have any special significance, it
just makes the main entry points easier to find.
You cannot run the XSLT stylesheets directly from the source
location. You must build them first with the
makeXslt build target.
|src/main/web|src/main/web/resources/css|src/main/web/resources/js
These are the CSS and JavaScript files needed for accurate rendering in the browser or formatter process.
|src/main/locales/locale-10|src/main/locales/locale
The local-10 directory holds copies of the
localization files from the XSLT 1.0 stylesheets. They’re transformed
into the locale versions by the build system. This whole
area is one that needs work.
|src/test/xspec|src/test/generators|src/test/resources/xml|src/test/resources/expected
These are the testing resources. You cannot run the XSpec tests
directly from src/test/xspec. The build system copies them into
build/xspec along with a few XSpec tests generated
automatically by the stylesheets in generators.
The library of DocBook documents that are used for testing is
stored in the xml directory. The HTML files in
expected correspond to the expected results. The expected
results aren’t usefully viewed in a browser. Only the
body element and its
decendants are stored in the expected results. This avoids a lot of
noise in the
head.
|src/main/java
These are the sources for the extension functions.
|src/guide|src/website
These are the sources, resources, and ancillary files for the reference guide and the website.
|tools
The tools directory holds a number of stylesheets and other scripts used
by the build process.
|lib
The lib directory holds third party jar files. This is also where
you can put your Saxon PE or EE files if you have them.
|build|build/actual|build/xslt
The build system puts all of its temporary files under build. It’s
always safe to delete the entire directory and start over, though it will require internet
access and it may take a while.
Test files that you format are published to
build/actual and the images, CSS, and JavaScript resources
are copied under there so that everything will look right in the
browser. For security reasons, some JavaScript features may not work
if you are looking at the documents from the filesystem. You can work
around this by pointing a local web server at the build directory.
The built stylesheets are in build/xslt. You can run
them directly from there.
6.3. Build configuration
Several build properties are defined in gradle.properties.
verboseIf true, enables additional messages in the extension functions.
requireCompileSuccessIf true, the build will fail if there are any errors building the stylesheets.
requireTestSuccessIf true, the build will fail if any tests fail.
xspecVersionThe version of XSpec.
xsltExplorerVersionThe version of XSLT Explorer.
pdftoolSelect a tool for formatting PDFs. Expected values are
antennahouseorprince.antennahouseThe path to the Antenna House Formatter.
princeThe path to the Prince formatter.
There are four additional properties that are used by the
dbtransform target. This target allows you to process arbitrary
documents with the stylesheets. It takes care of loading all of the extension functions.
dbsourceThe URI of the source document.
dboutputThe path for outputting the principle result document.
dbstyleThe URI of the base stylesheet, defaults to the main DocBook xslTNG stylesheet.
dbparamsStylesheet parameters.
You can change these variables in your local version of gradle.properties,
or you can specify them on the command line. For example, to enable verbose
processing, pass -Pverbose=true on the Gradle command line.
6.4. Build tasks
The build system is Gradle. Gradle’s processing model operates in several phases, this allows an initial configuration phase to construct build targets (called tasks) dynamically. The DocBook xslTNG Stylesheets build script uses this facility quite a bit.
In the discussion that follows, testdoc is the
base name of a test document, that is, one of the example files from the
src/test/resources/xml directory. For example, one of the test documents
is src/test/resources/xml/article.001.xml. In the build
targets that would be the “testdoc” article.001.
In an analogous way, “testset” is the root name of an XSpec test file in
src/test/xspec.
The most important tasks are:
makeXsltThis tasks “compiles” the stylesheets into
build/xslt.reportThis task runs all of the tests and generates a unified report in
build/report. This is the default task.testRuns the test suite against the stylesheets.
jarCompiles the extension functions and creates the jar file in
build/libs.distBuilds an archive in
build/distributionssuitable for distribution.guideBuilds the reference guide.
websiteBuilds the website.
explorerGenerates the XSLT Explorer report for the stylesheets in
build/explorer.helloWorldA smoke test target. It just prints a message, but doing so will exercise a bunch of the build machinery in Gradle.
6.5. Testing tasks
The way tests are managed was completely refactored in version 2.0.13. The new system is largely automatic.
Create a new test document in
src/test/resources/xml. For this example, we’ll createpara.003.xml, an example of asidebarin apara.Use the build target
para.003.htmlto format the document. This build target (and several others) exist automatically because the source file has been created.Inspect the results (in
build/actual/para.003.html) and adjust the stylesheets until you are satisfied that the results are correct. Each time you make a stylesheet change, you can re-run thepara.003.htmltarget to rebuild the output.When you are satisified, run
param.003.expectedto update the expected results.Run the
reporttarget to make sure no other tests have broken as a result of your changes.
More generally, the following targets exist for any source document in
src/test/resources/xml:
testdoc.htmlFormats testdoc into HTML and stores the result in
build/actualwhere it can be viewed in the browser with the appropriate CSS, JavaScript, images, etc.testdoc.expectedFormats testdoc into HTML and stores the result in
src/test/resources/expected. You should only run this task when you’ve made a change and determined that the new results are correct and should replace the previously expected results.testdoc.pdf.htmlFormats testdoc into HTML suitable for paged media and stores the result in
build/actual.testdoc.pdfThe
.pdftarget will generate the.pdf.htmloutput and then attempt to transform it into PDF with either AntennaHouse or PrinceXML. Additional configuration may be necessary to get this to work.testdoc.chunkFormats testdoc into HTML with chunking turned on. The result is stored in
index.htmland other files inbuild/actual. No attempt is made to avoid having the output files from different documents overwrite each other. At the moment, none of the automated tests create chunked output.testset.xspecRuns the testset set of XSpec tests. The test sets that are available are the sets constructed from build environments and the sets created by hand (in
src/test/xspec).
6.6. Running XSpec
In order to get consistent results across different runs and in different
environments, the XSpec tests run a driver stylesheet, xspec-driver.xsl.
Note also that the XSpec shell script is modified by the stylesheets.