4.4 KiB
Preprocessors
A preprocessor is simply a bit of code which gets run immediately after the book is loaded and before it gets rendered, allowing you to update and mutate the book. Possible use cases are:
- Creating custom helpers like
\{{#include /path/to/file.md}} - Updating links so
[some chapter](some_chapter.md)is automatically changed to[some chapter](some_chapter.html)for the HTML renderer - Substituting in latex-style expressions (
$$ \frac{1}{3} $$) with their mathjax equivalents
Hooking Into MDBook
MDBook uses a fairly simple mechanism for discovering third party plugins.
A new table is added to book.toml (e.g. preprocessor.foo for the foo
preprocessor) and then mdbook will try to invoke the mdbook-foo program as
part of the build process.
While preprocessors can be hard-coded to specify which backend it should be run
for (e.g. it doesn't make sense for MathJax to be used for non-HTML renderers)
with the preprocessor.foo.renderer key.
[book]
title = "My Book"
authors = ["Michael-F-Bryan"]
[preprocessor.foo]
# The command can also be specified manually
command = "python3 /path/to/foo.py"
# Only run the `foo` preprocessor for the HTML and EPUB renderer
renderer = ["html", "epub"]
In typical unix style, all inputs to the plugin will be written to stdin as
JSON and mdbook will read from stdout if it is expecting output.
The easiest way to get started is by creating your own implementation of the
Preprocessor trait (e.g. in lib.rs) and then creating a shell binary which
translates inputs to the correct Preprocessor method. For convenience, there
is an example no-op preprocessor in the examples/ directory which can easily
be adapted for other preprocessors.
Example no-op preprocessor
// nop-preprocessors.rs
{{#include ../../../examples/nop-preprocessor.rs}}
Hints For Implementing A Preprocessor
By pulling in mdbook as a library, preprocessors can have access to the
existing infrastructure for dealing with books.
For example, a custom preprocessor could use the
CmdPreprocessor::parse_input() function to deserialize the JSON written to
stdin. Then each chapter of the Book can be mutated in-place via
Book::for_each_mut(), and then written to stdout with the serde_json
crate.
Chapters can be accessed either directly (by recursively iterating over
chapters) or via the Book::for_each_mut() convenience method.
The chapter.content is just a string which happens to be markdown. While it's
entirely possible to use regular expressions or do a manual find & replace,
you'll probably want to process the input into something more computer-friendly.
The pulldown-cmark crate implements a production-quality event-based
Markdown parser, with the pulldown-cmark-to-cmark allowing you to
translate events back into markdown text.
The following code block shows how to remove all emphasis from markdown, without accidentally breaking the document.
fn remove_emphasis(
num_removed_items: &mut usize,
chapter: &mut Chapter,
) -> Result<String> {
let mut buf = String::with_capacity(chapter.content.len());
let events = Parser::new(&chapter.content).filter(|e| {
let should_keep = match *e {
Event::Start(Tag::Emphasis)
| Event::Start(Tag::Strong)
| Event::End(Tag::Emphasis)
| Event::End(Tag::Strong) => false,
_ => true,
};
if !should_keep {
*num_removed_items += 1;
}
should_keep
});
cmark(events, &mut buf, None).map(|_| buf).map_err(|err| {
Error::from(format!("Markdown serialization failed: {}", err))
})
}
For everything else, have a look at the complete example.