Provided by: wml_2.0.12ds1-9build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       WMk - Website META Language Make

VERSION

       2.0.12 (16-Apr-2008)

SYNOPSIS

       wmk [-a] [-A WILDMAT] [-F WILDMAT] [-x PATH] [-X PATH] [-a] [-f] [-n] [-r] [WML-options]
       [path ...]

       wmk [-V] [-h]

DESCRIPTION

       This is the high-level frontend to the Website META Language (WML), a free HTML generation
       toolkit for Unix, internally consisting of 9 independent languages.  See wml(1) for more
       details on WML.

       Use this command to run wml on a bunch of .wml files either directly given on the command
       line as path or found via directory traversal in path.

       WMk recognizes WML's shebang lines (``"#!wml" options'') in the .wml files and
       automatically adds options to the command line of wml when invoking it for this particular
       file.

OPTIONS

       -a, --all
           Specifies that WMk should recursively process all .wml files it finds in path.

       -A, --accept=WILDMAT
           Accepts (=includes) all files matched by the shell wildcard pattern WILDMAT for
           processing. WMk always has a pre-configured ``"-A *.wml"'' option which forces it to
           process all WML files per default.   This option is only used when path is a
           directory.

       -F, --forget=WILDMAT
           Forgets (=exclude) all files and directories matched by the shell wildcard pattern
           WILDMAT which were previously accepted by option -A.

       -o, --outputfile=PATH
           Specifies output files.  When this flag is used in .wmlrc, the same flag must be put
           in .wmkrc to let WMk know when to rebuild these output files.

       -x, --exec-prolog=PATH
           Executes PATH in the local context of path before the WML commands are run.  This
           options is only used when path is a directory.

       -X, --exec-epilog=PATH
           Executes PATH in the local context of path after the WML commands are run.  This
           options is only used when path is a directory.

       -f, --force
           Forces the creation of output files. Usually WMk tries to determine if the input file
           was really modified and skips WML invocations if the output files are still up-to-
           date.

       -n, --nop
           Sets no-operation (nop) where WMk runs as usual but does not actually invoce the wml
           commands. Use this option to see what wmk would do.

       -r, --norcfile
           This forces WMk to ignore all .wmkrc and WML to ignore all .wmlrc files.

       -V, --version
           Gives the version identification string of WMk. Use this to determine the version of a
           installed WML toolkit.

       -h, --help
           Prints the usage summary page.

       All WML-options directly correspond to their counterparts in wml(1) because they are just
       forwarded by wmk except the -n and -o options which are implicitly created by wmk for each
       wml invocation.

USER FILES

       $HOME/.wmkrc and (../)*.wmkrc
           These files can also contain option strings, one option per line.  One may use this
           file to exclude some directories from being searched for input files

             -F images
             -F templates
              ...

CAVEAT

       Auto-adjusted variables specfied as -DNAME~PATH on the wmk command-line will not
       necessarily have the same effect as a similar definition in a ./.wmlrc file.  This is
       because, when processing sub-directories, wmk changes its working directory to each of
       those directories, which can influence the interpolation of such auto-adjusted variables.
       When specified on the command line, such variables are interpolated with respect to wml's
       current working directory at the time of its invocation.  So, if you wish such variables
       to be interpolated relative to wmk's current working directory at the time of its
       invocation, one can work-around this issue by specifying -DNAME~PATH in a .wmlrc in that
       directory rather than specifying it on the wmk command-line.

AUTHORS

        Ralf S. Engelschall
        rse@engelschall.com
        www.engelschall.com

        Denis Barbier
        barbier@engelschall.com

SEE ALSO

       wml(1), wml_intro(1)