Provided by: ruby-asciidoctor-pdf_2.3.4-3_all bug

NAME

       asciidoctor-pdf - converts AsciiDoc source files to PDF format

SYNOPSIS

       asciidoctor-pdf [OPTION]... FILE...

DESCRIPTION

       The asciidoctor-pdf(1) command converts the AsciiDoc source file(s) FILE to PDF format.

       If FILE is - then the AsciiDoc source is read from standard input.

OPTIONS

   Security Settings
       -B, --base-dir=DIR
           Base directory containing the document and resources. Defaults to the directory containing the source
           file, or the working directory if the source is read from a stream. When combined with the safe mode
           setting, can be used to chroot the execution of the program.

       -S, --safe-mode=SAFE_MODE
           Set safe mode level: unsafe, safe, server or secure. Disables potentially dangerous macros in source
           files, such as include::[]. If not set, the safe mode level defaults to unsafe when Asciidoctor-pdf
           is invoked using this script.

       --safe
           Set safe mode level to safe. Enables include directives, but prevents access to ancestor paths of
           source file. Provided for compatibility with the asciidoc command. If not set, the safe mode level
           defaults to unsafe when Asciidoctor-pdf is invoked using this script.

   Document Settings
       -a, --attribute=ATTRIBUTE
           Define, override or delete a document attribute. Command-line attributes take precedence over
           attributes defined in the source file unless the value ends with @.

           ATTRIBUTE is normally formatted as a key-value pair, in the form NAME=VALUE. Alternate acceptable
           forms are NAME (where the VALUE defaults to an empty string), NAME! (unassigns the NAME attribute)
           and NAME=VALUE@ (where VALUE does not override value of NAME attribute if it’s already defined in the
           source document). Values containing spaces should be enclosed in quotes.

           This option may be specified more than once.

       -d, --doctype=DOCTYPE
           Document type: article, book, manpage or inline. The book document type allows multiple level-0
           section titles in a single document. The manpage document type enables parsing of metadata necessary
           to produce a man page. The inline document type allows the content of a single paragraph to be
           formatted and returned without wrapping it in a containing element. Defaults to article.

   Document Conversion
       -D, --destination-dir=DIR
           Destination output directory. Defaults to the directory containing the source file, or the working
           directory if the source is read from a stream. If specified, the directory is resolved relative to
           the working directory.

       -E, --template-engine=NAME
           Template engine to use for the custom converter templates. The gem with the same name as the engine
           will be loaded automatically. This name is also used to build the full path to the custom converter
           templates. If a template engine is not specified, it will be auto-detected based on the file
           extension of the custom converter templates found.

       -e, --eruby
           Specifies the eRuby implementation to use for executing the custom converter templates written in
           ERB. Supported values are erb and erubis. Defaults to erb.

       -I, --load-path=DIRECTORY
           Add the specified directory to the load path, so that -r can load extensions from outside the default
           Ruby load path. This option may be specified more than once.

       -n, --section-numbers
           Auto-number section titles. Synonym for --attribute sectnums.

       -o, --out-file=OUT_FILE
           Write output to file OUT_FILE. Defaults to the base name of the input file suffixed with backend
           extension. The file is resolved relative to the working directory. If the input is read from standard
           input or a named pipe (fifo), then the output file defaults to stdout. If OUT_FILE is -, then the
           output file is written to standard output.

       -R, --source-dir=DIR
           Source directory. Currently only used if the destination directory is also specified. Used to
           preserve the directory structure of files converted within this directory in the destination
           directory. If specified, the directory is resolved relative to the working directory.

       -r, --require=LIBRARY
           Require the specified library before executing the processor, using the standard Ruby require. This
           option may be specified more than once.

       -s, --no-header-footer
           Output an embeddable document, which excludes the header, the footer, and everything outside the body
           of the document. This option is useful for producing documents that can be inserted into an external
           template.

       -T, --template-dir=DIR
           A directory containing custom converter templates that override one or more templates from the
           built-in set. (requires tilt gem)

           If there is a subfolder that matches the engine name (if specified), that folder is appended to the
           template directory path. Similarly, if there is a subfolder in the resulting template directory that
           matches the name of the backend, that folder is appended to the template directory path.

           This option may be specified more than once. Matching templates found in subsequent directories
           override ones previously discovered.

   Processing Information
       --failure-level=LEVEL
           The minimum logging level that triggers a non-zero exit code (failure). If this option is not set
           (default: FATAL), the program exits with a status code zero even if warnings or errors have been
           logged.

       -q, --quiet
           Silence warnings.

       --trace
           Include backtrace information on errors. Not enabled by default.

       -v, --verbose
           Verbosely print processing information and configuration file checks to stderr.

       -t, --timings
           Display timings information (time to read, parse and convert).

   Program Information
       -h, --help [TOPIC]
           Print the help message. Show the command usage if TOPIC is not specified (or not recognized).

       -V, --version
           Print program version number.

           -v can also be used if no other flags or arguments are present.

ENVIRONMENT

       Asciidoctor-pdf honors the SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH environment variable. If this variable is assigned an
       integer value, that value is used as the epoch of all input documents and as the local date and time. See
       https://reproducible-builds.org/specs/source-date-epoch/ for more information about this environment
       variable.

EXIT STATUS

       0
           Success.

       1
           Failure (syntax or usage error; configuration error; document processing failure; unexpected error).

BUGS

       Refer to the Asciidoctor issue tracker at https://github.com/asciidoctor/asciidoctor/issues?q=is%3Aopen.

AUTHORS

       Asciidoctor-pdf was written by Dan Allen, Ryan Waldron, Jason Porter, Nick Hengeveld and other
       contributors.

       Asciidoctor was written by Dan Allen, Ryan Waldron, Jason Porter, Nick Hengeveld and other contributors.

       AsciiDoc was written by Stuart Rackham and has received contributions from many other individuals.

RESOURCES

       Project web site: https://asciidoctor.org

       Git source repository on GitHub: https://github.com/asciidoctor/asciidoctor-pdf

       GitHub organization: https://github.com/asciidoctor

       Discussion list / forum: http://discuss.asciidoctor.org

COPYING

       Copyright (C) 2012-2018 Dan Allen, Ryan Waldron and the Asciidoctor Project. Free use of this software is
       granted under the terms of the MIT License.

AUTHORS

       Dan Allen

       Sarah White

       Ryan Waldron

Asciidoctor 1.5.8                                  2019-02-04                                 ASCIIDOCTOR-PDF(1)