Provided by: biber_1.8-1_all 

NAME
"biber" - A bibtex replacement for users of biblatex
SYNOPSIS
biber [options] file[.bcf] biber [options] --tool <datasource>
Creates "file.bbl" using control file "file.bcf" (".bcf" extension is
optional). Normaly use with biblatex requires no options as they are
all set in biblatex and passed via the ".bcf" file
In "tool" mode (see B<--tool> option), takes a datasource (defaults to
"bibtex" datasource) and outputs a copy of the datasource with any command-line
or config file options applied.
Please run "biber --help" for option details
DESCRIPTION
"biber" provides a replacement of the bibtex processor for users of biblatex.
OPTIONS
--cache
If running as a PAR::Packer binary, show the cache location and exit.
--clrmacros
Clears any BibTeX macros (@STRING) between BibLaTeX refsections. This prevents BibTeX warnings about
macro redefinitions if you are using the same datasource several times for different refsections.
--collate|-C
Sort with "Unicode::Collate" instead of the built-in sort function. This is the default.
--collate_options|-c [options]
Options to pass to the "Unicode::Collate" object used for sorting (default is 'level => "4", variable
=> "non-ignorable"'). See "perldoc Unicode::Collate" for details.
--configfile|-g [file]
Use file as configuration file for "biber". The default is the first file found among biber.conf in
the current directory, "$HOME/.biber.conf", or else the output of "kpsewhich biber.conf". In tool
mode, (--tool) the biber-tool.conf installed with Biber is always used to set defaults before
potentially overriding the defaults with a user-defined config specified with this option. Use the
--tool-config option to view the location of the default tool mode config file.
--convert_control
Converts the .bcf control file into html using an XSLT transform. Can be useful for debugging. File
is named by appending ".html" to .bcf file.
--decodecharsset=[recode set name]
The set of characters included in the conversion routine when decoding LaTeX macros into UTF-8 (which
happens when --bblencoding|-E is set to UTF-8). Set to "full" to try harder with a much larger set or
"base" to use a smaller basic set. Default is "base". You may want to try "full" if you have less
common UTF-8 characters in your data source. The recode sets are defined in the reencoding data file
which can be customised. See the --recodedata option and the PDF manual.
--debug|-D
Turn on debugging for "biber".
--dot_include=section,field,xdata,crossref,xref,related
Specifies the element to include in GraphViz DOT output format if the output format is 'dot'. You
can also choose to display crossref, xref, xdata and/or related entry connections. The default if
not specified is "--dot_include=section,xdata,crossref,xref".
--fastsort|-f
Use Perl's sort instead of "Unicode::Collate" for sorting. Also uses OS locale definitions (which may
be broken for some languages ...).
--fixinits
Try to fix broken multiple initials when they have no space between them in BibTeX data sources. That
is, "A.B. Clarke" becomes "A. B. Clarke" before name parsing. This can slightly mess up things like
"{U.K. Government}" and other esoteric cases.
--help|-h
Show this help message.
--input_encoding|-e [encoding]
Specify the encoding of the data source file(s). Default is "UTF-8" Normally it's not necessary to
set this as it's passed via the .bcf file from biblatex's setting of the same name. See "perldoc
Encode::Supported" for a list of supported encodings. The legacy option --bibencoding is supported
as an alias.
--input_format=bibtex|biblatexml
Biber input format. This option only means something in tool mode (see tool option) since normally
the input format of a data source is specified in the .bcf file and therefore from the \addbibresouce
macro in BibLaTeX. The default value when in tool mode is 'bibtex'
--logfile [file]
Use file.blg as the name of the logfile.
--listsep=[sep]
Use sep as the separator for BibTeX data source list fields. Defaults to BibTeX's usual 'and'.
--mincrossrefs|-m [number]
Set threshold for crossrefs.
--mssplit=[string]
Character used to split bibtex data source field names into field/form/language subfields when using
multiscript features. Defaults to underscore (ASCII 95).
--namesep=[sep]
Use sep as the separator for BibTeX data source name fields. Defaults to BibTeX's usual 'and'.
--noconf
Don't look for a configfile.
--nodieonerror
Don't exit on errors, just log and continue as far as possible. This can be useful if the error is
something from, for example, the underlying BibTeX parsing C library which can complain about parsing
errors which can be ignored.
--nolog
Do not write any logfile.
--nostdmacros
Don't automatically define any standard macros like month abbreviations. If you also define these
yourself, this option can be used to suppress macro redefinition warnings.
--onlylog
Do not write any message to screen.
--others_string=[string]
Use string as the final name in a name field which implies "et al". Defaults to BibTeX's usual
'others'.
--output_align
Align field values in neat columns in output. Effect depends on the output format. Default is true.
The legacy option --tool_align is supported as an alias.
--output_directory [directory]
Files (.bbl and .blg) are output to directory directory instead of the current directory. Input files
are also looked for in directory before current directory.
--output_encoding|-E [encoding]
Specify the encoding of the output ".bbl" file. Default is "UTF-8". Normally it's not necessary to
set this as it's passed via biblatex from the inputenc package setting. See "perldoc
Encode::Supported" for a list of supported encodings. The legacy option --bblencoding is supported
as an alias.
--output_indent=[num]
Indentation for body of entries in output. Effect depends on the output format. Defaults to 2. The
legacy option --tool_indent is supported as an alias.
--output_fieldcase=upper|lower|title
Case for field names output. Effect depends on the output format. Defaults to 'upper'. The legacy
option --tool_fieldcase is supported as an alias.
--output_file|-O [file]
Output to file instead of basename.bbl file is relative to --output_directory, if set (absolute paths
in this case are stripped to filename only). file can be absolute if --output_directory is not set.
The legacy option --outfile is supported as an alias.
--output_format=dot|bibtex|biblatexml|bbl
Biber output format. Default if not specified is of course, bbl. Use dot to output a GraphViz DOT
file instead of .bbl. This is a directed graph of the bibliography data showing entries and, as
requested, sections and fields. You must process this file with "dot", e.g. "dot -Tsvg test.dot -o
test.svg" to render the graph. See the --dot_include option to select what is included in the DOT
output. "bibtex" and "biblatexml" are only supported in (and only make sense in) "tool" mode (see
--tool option) The legacy option --outformat is supported as an alias.
--output_macro_fields=[field1, ... fieldn]
A comma-separated list of field names whose values are, on output, treated as BibTeX macros.
Effectively this means that they are not wrapped in braces. Effect depends on the output format. The
legacy option --tool_macro_fields is supported as an alias.
--output_resolve
Whether to resolve aliases and inheritance (XDATA, CROSSREF etc.) in tool mode. Defaults to 'false'.
The legacy option --tool_resolve is supported as an alias.
--output_safechars
Try to convert UTF-8 chars into LaTeX macros when writing the output. This can prevent unknown char
errors when using PDFLaTeX and inputenc as this doesn't understand all of UTF-8. Note, it is better
to switch to XeTeX or LuaTeX to avoid this situation. By default uses the --output_safecharsset
"base" set of characters. The legacy option --bblsafechars is supported as an alias.
--output_safecharsset=[recode set name]
The set of characters included in the conversion routine for --output_safechars. Set to "full" to try
harder with a much larger set or "base" to use a basic set. Default is "base" which is fine for most
use cases. You may need to load more macro packages to deal with the results of "full" (Dings, Greek
characters, special symbols etc.). The recode sets are defined in the reencoding data file which can
be customised. See the --recodedata option and the PDF manual. The legacy option --bblsafecharsset
is supported as an alias.
--quiet|-q
Log only errors. If this option is used more than once, don't even log errors.
--recodedata=[file]
The data file to use for the reencoding between UTF-8 and LaTeX macros. It defines the sets specified
with the --output_safecharsset and --decodecharsset options. It defaults to recode_data.xml in the
same directory as Biber's Recode.pm module. See the PDF documentation for the format of this file.
If this option is used, then file should be somewhere "kpsewhich" can find it.
--sortcase=true|false
Case-sensitive sorting (default is true).
--sortfirstinits=true|false
When sorting names, use only the first name initials, not full first name. Some people expect the
biblatex firstinits option to do this but it needs to be a separate option in case users, for
example, need to show only initials but sort with full first names (default is false).
--sortlocale|-l [locale]
Set the locale to be used for sorting. With default sorting (--collate|-C), the locale is used to
add CLDR tailoring to the sort (if available for the locale). With --fastsort|-f this sets the OS
locale for sorting.
--sortupper=true|false
Whether to sort uppercase before lowercase when using default sorting (--collate|-C). When using
--fastsort|-f, your OS collation locale determines this and this option is ignored (default is true).
--ssl-nointernalca
Don't try to use the default Mozilla CA certificates when using HTTPS to fetch remote data. This
assumes that the user will set one of the perl LWP::UserAgent module environment variables to find
the CA certs.
--ssl-noverify-host
Turn off host verification when using HTTPS to fetch remote data sources. You may need this if the
SSL certificate is self-signed for example.
--tool
Run in tool mode. This mode is datasource centric rather than document centrix. biber reads a
datasource (and a config file if specified), applies the command-line and config file options to the
datasource and writes a new datasource. Essentially, this allows you to change your data sources
using biber's transformation options (such as source mapping, sorting etc.)
--tool_config
Show the location of the default tool mode config file and exit. Useful when you need to copy this
file and customise it.
--trace|T
Turn on tracing. Also turns on --debug|d and additionally provides a lot of low-level tracing
information in the log.
-u Alias for --input_encoding=UTF-8
-U Alias for --output_encoding=UTF-8
--validate_config
Schema validate the biber config file.
--validate_control
Schema validate the .bcf biblatex control file.
--validate_datamodel|-V
Validate the data against a data model.
--version|-v
Display version number.
--wraplines|-w
Wrap lines in the .bbl file.
AUTHOR
Francois Charette, "firmicus at ankabut.net"
Philip Kime, "Philip at kime.org.uk"
BUGS & DOCUMENTATION
To see the full documentation, run texdoc biber or get the biber.pdf manual from SourceForge.
Please report any bugs or feature requests on our sourceforge tracker at
<https://sourceforge.net/tracker2/?func=browse&group_id=228270>.
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2009-2013 Francois Charette and Philip Kime, all rights reserved.
This module is free software. You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Artistic
License 2.0.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but without any warranty; without even
the implied warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose.
perl v5.18.1 2014-01-08 BIBER(1p)