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NAME

       ctanify - Prepare a package for upload to CTAN

SYNOPSIS

       ctanify [--pkgname=string] [--[no]auto] [--tdsonly=filespec ...]  [--[no]unixify]
       [--[no]skip] [--tdsdir=dirname ...]  [--tex=macro_pkg] [--[no]miscify] [--[no]tds]
       filespec[=dirname] ...

       ctanify [--help]

       ctanify [--version]

DESCRIPTION

       ctanify is intended for developers who have a LaTeX package that they want to distribute
       via the Comprehensive TeX Archive Network (CTAN).  Given a list of filenames, ctanify
       creates a tarball (a .tar.gz file) with the files laid out in CTAN's preferred structure.
       The tarball additionally contains a ZIP (.zip) file with copies of all files laid out in
       the standard TeX Directory Structure (TDS), which facilitates inclusion of the package in
       the TeX Live distribution.

OPTIONS

       ctanify accepts the following command-line options:

       -h, --help
            Output basic usage information and exit.

       -V, --version
            Output ctanify's version number and exit.

       -p string, --pkgname=string
            Specify explicitly a package name.  Normally, ctanify uses the base name of the first
            .ins or .sty file listed as the package name.  The package name forms the base name
            of the tarball that ctanify produces.

       --noauto
            Do not automatically add files to the tarball.  Normally, ctanify automatically
            includes all files mentioned in a .ins file.

       -t filespec, --tdsonly=filespec
            Specify a subset of the files named on the command line to include only in the TDS
            ZIP file, not in the CTAN package directory.  Wildcards are allowed (quoted if
            necessary), and --tdsonly can be used multiple times on the same command line.

       At least one filename must be specified on the command line.  ctanify automatically places
       files in the TDS tree based on their extension, but this can be overridden by specifying
       explicitly a target TDS directory using the form filespec=dirname.  Wildcards are allowed
       for the filespec (quoted if necessary).

ADDITIONAL OPTIONS

       The following options are unlikely to be necessary in ordinary usage.  They are provided
       for special circumstances that may arise.

       -d dirname, --tdsdir=dirname
            Instead of creating a tarball for CTAN, merely create the package TDS tree rooted in
            directory dirname.

       -T macro_pkg, --tex=macro_pkg
            Assert that the files being packaged for CTAN target a TeX macro package other than
            LaTeX.  Some common examples of macro_pkg are "generic", "plain", and "context".

       -nou, --no-unixify
            Store text files unmodified instead of converting their end-of-line character to Unix
            format (a single linefeed character with no carriage-return character), even though
            CTAN prefers receiving all files with Unix-format end-of-line characters.

       -nok, --no-skip
            Force ctanify to include files such as Unix hidden files, Emacs backup files, and
            version-control metadata files, all of which CTAN dislikes receiving.

       -m, --miscify
            Rename directories containing a single file to "misc".  (For example, rename
            "tex/latex/mypackage/mypackage.sty" to "tex/latex/misc/mypackage.sty".)  This was
            common practice in the past but is now strongly discouraged.

       -nos, --no-tds
            Do not embed a .tds.zip file in the generated tarball.

DIAGNOSTICS

       "Failed to copy filename (No such file or directory)"
            This message is typically caused by a .ins file that generates filename but that has
            not already been run through tex or latex to actually produce filename.  ctanify does
            not automatically run tex or latex; this needs to be done manually by the user.  See
            "CAVEATS" for more information.

       "Modified filename to use Unix line endings (use --no-unixify to prevent this)"
            For consistency, CTAN stores all text files with Unix-style line endings (a single
            linefeed character with no carriage-return character).  To help in this effort,
            ctanify automatically replaces non-Unix-style line endings.  The preceding merely
            message notifies the user that he should not be alarmed to see a different size for
            filename in the tarball versus the original filename on disk (which ctanify never
            modifies).  If there's a good reason to preserve the original line endings (and there
            rarely is), the --no-unixify option can be used to prevent ctanify from altering any
            files when storing them in the tarball.

       "Excluding filename (use --no-skip to force inclusion)"
            ctanify normally ignores files--even when specified explicitly on the command
            line--that CTAN prefers not receiving.  These include files whose names start with
            "." (Unix hidden files), end in "~" (Emacs automatic backups), or that come from a
            CVS or .svn directory (version-control metadata files).  If there's a good reason to
            submit such files to CTAN (and there rarely is), the --no-skip option can be used to
            prevent ctanify from ignoring them.

       "CTAN prefers having only PDF documentation (re: filename)"
            Because of the popularity of the PDF format, CTAN wants to have as much documentation
            as possible distributed in PDF.  The preceding message asks the user to replace any
            PostScript or DVI documentation with PDF if possible.  (ctanify will still include
            PostScript and DVI documentation in the tarball; the preceding message is merely a
            polite request.)

       "Not including filename in the TDS tree (unknown extension)"
            ctanify places files in the TDS tree based on a table of file extensions.  For
            example, all .sty files are placed in tex/latex/package-name.  If ctanify does not
            know where to put a file it does not put it anywhere.  See the last paragraph of
            "OPTIONS" for an explanation of how to specify explicitly a file's target location in
            the TDS tree.  For common file extensions that happen to be absent from ctanify's
            table, consider also notifying ctanify's author at the address shown below under
            "AUTHOR".

EXAMPLES

   The Common Case
       Normally, all that's needed is to tell ctanify the name of the .ins file (or .sty if the
       package does not use DocStrip) and the prebuilt documentation, if any:

           $ ctanify mypackage.ins mypackage.pdf README

             490347  mypackage.tar.gz

                         1771  mypackage/README
                        15453  mypackage/mypackage.dtx
                         1957  mypackage/mypackage.ins
                       277683  mypackage/mypackage.pdf
                       246935  mypackage.tds.zip

                                   1771  doc/latex/mypackage/README
                                 277683  doc/latex/mypackage/mypackage.pdf
                                  15453  source/latex/mypackage/mypackage.dtx
                                   1957  source/latex/mypackage/mypackage.ins
                                   1725  tex/latex/mypackage/mypackage.sty

       ctanify outputs the size in bytes of the resulting tarball, each file within it, and each
       file within the contained ZIP file.  In the preceding example, notice how ctanify
       automatically performed all of the following operations:

       •    including mypackage.dtx (found by parsing mypackage.ins) in both the mypackage
            directory and the ZIP file,

       •    including mypackage.sty (found by parsing mypackage.ins) in the ZIP file but, because
            it's a generated file, not in the mypackage directory, and

       •    placing all files into appropriate TDS directories (documentation, source, main
            package) within the ZIP file.

       Consider what it would take to manually produce an equivalent mypackage.tar.gz file.
       ctanify is definitely a simpler, quicker alternative.

   Advanced Usage
       ctanify assumes that PostScript files are documentation and therefore stores them under
       doc/latex/package-name/ in the TDS tree within the ZIP File.  Suppose, however, that a
       LaTeX package uses a set of PostScript files to control dvips's output.  In this case,
       ctanify must be told to include those PostScript files in the package directory, not the
       documentation directory.

           $ ctanify mypackage.ins "mypackage*.ps=tex/latex/mypackage"

FILES

       perl ctanify is written in Perl and needs a Perl installation to run.

       tar, gzip
            ctanify requires the GNU tar and gzip programs to create a compressed tarball
            (.tar.gz).

       zip  ctanify uses a zip program to archive the TDS tree within the main tarball.

CAVEATS

       ctanify does not invoke tex or latex on its own, e.g., to process a .ins file.  The reason
       is that ctanify does not know in the general case how to produce all of a package's
       generated files.  It was deemed better to do nothing than to risk overwriting existing
       .sty (or other) files or to include outdated generated files in the tarball.  In short,
       before running ctanify you should manually process any .ins files and otherwise generate
       any files that should be sent to CTAN.

       ctanify has been tested only on Linux.  It may work on OS X.  I've been told that it works
       on Windows when run using Cygwin.  Volunteers willing to help port ctanify to other
       platforms are extremely welcome.

SEE ALSO

       tar(1), zip(1), latex(1), Guidelines for uploading TDS-Packaged materials to CTAN
       (<http://www.ctan.org/TDS-guidelines>), A Directory Structure for TeX Files
       (<http://tug.org/tds/>),

AUTHOR

       Scott Pakin, scott+ctify@pakin.org

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       Copyright 2017 Scott Pakin

       This work may be distributed and/or modified under the conditions of the LaTeX Project
       Public License, either version 1.3c of this license or (at your option) any later version.
       The latest version of this license is in

           <http://www.latex-project.org/lppl.txt>

       and version 1.3c or later is part of all distributions of LaTeX version 2008/05/04 or
       later.