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# Installing pandoc
## Windows
- There is a package installer at pandoc's [download page].
- For PDF output, you'll also need to install LaTeX.
We recommend [MiKTeX](http://miktex.org/).
- If you'd prefer, you can extract the pandoc and pandoc-citeproc
executables from the MSI and copy them directly to any directory,
without running the installer. Here is an example showing how to
extract the executables from the pandoc-1.19.1 installer and copy
them to `C:\Utils\Console\`:
mkdir "%TEMP%\pandoc\"
start /wait msiexec.exe /a pandoc-1.19.1-windows.msi /qn targetdir="%TEMP%\pandoc\"
copy /y "%TEMP%\pandoc\pandoc.exe" C:\Utils\Console\
copy /y "%TEMP%\pandoc\pandoc-citeproc.exe" C:\Utils\Console\
rmdir /s /q "%TEMP%\pandoc\"
## MacOS
- There is a package installer at pandoc's [download page].
If you later want to uninstall the package, you can do so
by downloading [this script][uninstaller]
and running it with `perl uninstall-pandoc.pl`.
- It is possible to extract the pandoc and pandoc-citeproc
executables from the MacOS pkg file, if you'd rather not run
the installer. To do this (for the version 1.19.1 package):
mkdir pandoc-extract
cd pandoc-extract
xar -x ../pandoc-1.19.1-osx.pkg
cat pandoc.pkg/Payload | gunzip -dc | cpio -i
# executables are now in ./usr/bin/, man pages in ./usr/share/man
- You can also install pandoc using
[homebrew](http://brew.sh): `brew install pandoc`.
- For PDF output, you'll also need LaTeX. Because a full [MacTeX]
installation takes more than a gigabyte of disk space, we recommend
installing [BasicTeX](http://www.tug.org/mactex/morepackages.html)
(64M) and using the `tlmgr` tool to install additional packages
as needed. If you get errors warning of fonts not found, try
tlmgr install collection-fontsrecommended
## Linux
- First, try your package manager.
Pandoc is in the [Debian], [Ubuntu], [Slackware],
[Arch], [Fedora], [NiXOS], [openSUSE], and [gentoo] repositories.
Note, however, that versions in the repositories are often
old.
- For 64-bit [Debian] and [Ubuntu], we provide a debian package
on the [download page].
sudo dpkg -i $DEB
where `$DEB` is the path to the downloaded deb, will
install the `pandoc` and `pandoc-citeproc` executables
and man pages.
- If you use an RPM-based distro, you may be
able to install this deb using `alien`, or try
ar p $DEB data.tar.gz | sudo tar xvz --strip-components 2 -C /usr/local
- If you'd rather install pandoc in your home directory, say
in `$HOME/.local`, then you can extract the files manually
from the deb:
ar p $DEB data.tar.gz | tar xvz --strip-components 2 -C $HOME/.local/
where, again, `$DEB` is the path to the downloaded deb.
- If the version in your repository is too old and you cannot
use the deb we provide, you can install from source, using the
instructions below under [Compiling from source].
Note that most distros have the Haskell platform in their
package repositories. For example, on Debian/Ubuntu,
you can install it with `apt-get install haskell-platform`.
- For PDF output, you'll need LaTeX. We recommend installing
[TeX Live](http://www.tug.org/texlive/) via your package
manager. (On Debian/Ubuntu, `apt-get install texlive`.)
## BSD
- Pandoc is in the [NetBSD] and [FreeBSD ports] repositories.
## Compiling from source
If for some reason a binary package is not available for your
platform, or if you want to hack on pandoc or use a non-released
version, you can install from source.
### Getting the pandoc source code
Source tarballs can be found at
<https://hackage.haskell.org/package/pandoc>. For example, to
fetch the source for version 1.17.0.3:
wget https://hackage.haskell.org/package/pandoc-1.17.0.3/pandoc-1.17.0.3.tar.gz
tar xvzf pandoc-1.17.0.3.tar.gz
cd pandoc-1.17.0.3
Or you can fetch the development code by cloning the repository:
git clone https://github.com/jgm/pandoc
cd pandoc
Note: there may be times when the development code is broken
or depends on other libraries which must be installed
separately. Unless you really know what you're doing, install
the last released version.
### Quick stack method
The easiest way to build pandoc from source is to use [stack]:
1. Install [stack].
2. Change to the pandoc source directory and issue the following commands:
stack setup
stack install --test
`stack setup` will automatically download the ghc compiler
if you don't have it. `stack install` will install the
`pandoc` executable into `~/.local/bin`, which you should
add to your `PATH`. This process will take a while, and
will consume a considerable amount of disk space.
### Quick cabal method
1. Install the [Haskell platform]. This will give you [GHC] and
the [cabal-install] build tool. Note that pandoc requires
GHC >= 7.8.
2. Update your package database:
cabal update
3. Use `cabal` to install pandoc and its dependencies:
cabal install pandoc --enable-tests
This procedure will install the released version of pandoc,
which will be downloaded automatically from HackageDB.
If you want to install a modified or development version
of pandoc instead, switch to the source directory and do
as above, but without the 'pandoc':
cabal install
4. Make sure the `$CABALDIR/bin` directory is in your path. You should
now be able to run `pandoc`:
pandoc --help
[Not sure where `$CABALDIR` is?](http://www.haskell.org/haskellwiki/Cabal-Install#The_cabal-install_configuration_file)
5. If you want to process citations with pandoc, you will also need to
install a separate package, `pandoc-citeproc`. This can be installed
using cabal:
cabal install pandoc-citeproc
By default `pandoc-citeproc` uses the "i;unicode-casemap" method
to sort bibliography entries (RFC 5051). If you would like to
use the locale-sensitive unicode collation algorithm instead,
specify the `unicode_collation` flag:
cabal install pandoc-citeproc -funicode_collation
Note that this requires the `text-icu` library, which in turn
depends on the C library `icu4c`. Installation directions
vary by platform. Here is how it might work on MacOS with homebrew:
brew install icu4c
cabal install --extra-lib-dirs=/usr/local/Cellar/icu4c/51.1/lib \
--extra-include-dirs=/usr/local/Cellar/icu4c/51.1/include \
-funicode_collation text-icu pandoc-citeproc
6. The `pandoc.1` man page will be installed automatically. cabal shows
you where it is installed: you may need to set your `MANPATH`
accordingly. If `MANUAL.txt` has been modified, the man page can be
rebuilt: `make man/pandoc.1`.
The `pandoc-citeproc.1` man page will also be installed automatically.
### Custom cabal method
This is a step-by-step procedure that offers maximal control
over the build and installation. Most users should use the
quick install, but this information may be of use to packagers.
For more details, see the [Cabal User's Guide]. These instructions
assume that the pandoc source directory is your working directory.
1. Install dependencies: in addition to the [Haskell platform],
you will need a number of additional libraries. You can install
them all with
cabal update
cabal install --only-dependencies
2. Configure:
cabal configure --prefix=DIR --bindir=DIR --libdir=DIR \
--datadir=DIR --libsubdir=DIR --datasubdir=DIR --docdir=DIR \
--htmldir=DIR --program-prefix=PREFIX --program-suffix=SUFFIX \
--mandir=DIR --flags=FLAGSPEC --enable-tests
All of the options have sensible defaults that can be overridden
as needed.
`FLAGSPEC` is a list of Cabal configuration flags, optionally
preceded by a `-` (to force the flag to `false`), and separated
by spaces. Pandoc's flags include:
- `embed_data_files`: embed all data files into the binary (default no).
This is helpful if you want to create a relocatable binary.
- `https`: enable support for downloading resources over https
(using the `http-client` and `http-client-tls` libraries).
3. Build:
cabal build
cabal test
4. Build API documentation:
cabal haddock --html-location=URL --hyperlink-source
5. Copy the files:
cabal copy --destdir=PATH
The default destdir is `/`.
6. Register pandoc as a GHC package:
cabal register
Package managers may want to use the `--gen-script` option to
generate a script that can be run to register the package at
install time.
### Creating a relocatable binary
It is possible to compile pandoc such that the data files
pandoc uses are embedded in the binary. The resulting binary
can be run from any directory and is completely self-contained.
With cabal, add `-fembed_data_files` to the `cabal configure`
or `cabal install` commands.
With stack, use `--flag pandoc:embed_data_files`.
### Running tests
Pandoc comes with an automated test suite.
To run with cabal, `cabal test`; to run with stack, `stack
test`.
To run particular tests (pattern-matching on their names), use
the `-p` option:
cabal test --test-options='-p markdown'
Or with stack:
stack test --test-arguments='-p markdown'
It is often helpful to add `-j4` (run tests in parallel)
and `--hide-successes` (don't clutter output with successes)
to the test arguments as well.
If you add a new feature to pandoc, please add tests as well, following
the pattern of the existing tests. The test suite code is in
`test/test-pandoc.hs`. If you are adding a new reader or writer, it is
probably easiest to add some data files to the `test` directory, and
modify `test/Tests/Old.hs`. Otherwise, it is better to modify the module
under the `test/Tests` hierarchy corresponding to the pandoc module you
are changing.
### Running benchmarks
To build and run the benchmarks:
cabal configure --enable-benchmarks && cabal build
cabal bench
or with stack:
stack bench
To use a smaller sample size so the benchmarks run faster:
cabal bench --benchmark-options='-s 20'
To run just the markdown benchmarks:
cabal bench --benchmark-options='markdown'
### Building the whole pandoc ecosystem
Sometimes pandoc's development code depends on unreleased versions
of dependent libraries. You'll need to build these as well. A
maximal build method would be
mkdir pandoc-build
cd pandoc-build
git clone https://github.com/jgm/pandoc-types
git clone https://github.com/jgm/texmath
git clone https://github.com/jgm/pandoc-citeproc
git clone https://github.com/jgm/pandoc
git clone https://github.com/jgm/cmark-hs
git clone https://github.com/jgm/zip-archive
cd pandoc
stack install --test --install-ghc --stack-yaml stack.full.yaml
To pull in the latest changes, after you've done this and there have been
changes in the repositories: Visit each repository in pandoc-build
(pandoc-types, texmath, pandoc-citeproc, pandoc, zip-archive, cmark-hs) and do
`git pull`. In the pandoc repo, also do `stack install --test
--stack-yaml stack.full.yaml`.
[Arch]: https://www.archlinux.org/packages/community/x86_64/pandoc/
[Cabal User's Guide]: http://www.haskell.org/cabal/release/latest/doc/users-guide/builders.html#setup-configure-paths
[Debian]: http://packages.debian.org/lenny/pandoc
[Fedora]: https://apps.fedoraproject.org/packages/pandoc
[FreeBSD ports]: http://www.freshports.org/textproc/pandoc/
[GHC]: http://www.haskell.org/ghc/
[GPL]: http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html
[Haskell platform]: http://hackage.haskell.org/platform/
[MacPorts]: http://trac.macports.org/browser/trunk/dports/textproc/pandoc/Portfile
[MacTeX]: https://tug.org/mactex/
[NetBSD]: http://pkgsrc.se/wip/pandoc
[NixOS]: http://nixos.org/nixos/
[Slackware]: http://www.linuxpackages.net/search_view.php?by=name&name=pandoc&ver=
[Ubuntu]: http://www.ubuntu.com
[download page]: https://github.com/jgm/pandoc/releases/latest
[gentoo]: http://packages.gentoo.org/package/app-text/pandoc
[haskell repository]: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Haskell_Package_Guidelines#.5Bhaskell.5D
[openSUSE]: https://software.opensuse.org/package/pandoc
[source tarball]: http://hackage.haskell.org/package/pandoc
[stack]: http://docs.haskellstack.org/en/stable/install_and_upgrade.html
[cabal-install]: http://hackage.haskell.org/trac/hackage/wiki/CabalInstall
[uninstaller]: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/jgm/pandoc/master/macos/uninstall-pandoc.pl
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