![]() |
The current version of AsciiDoc requires Python 2.4 or newer to run. If you don’t already have an up-to-date version of Python installed it can be downloaded from the official Python website http://www.python.org/. |
Prerequisites
See the README page.
Installing from the Mercurial repository
The AsciiDoc Mercurial repository is hosted by ShareSource. ShareSource is a Mercurial friendly website for hosting Open Source projects. To browse the repository go to http://hg.sharesource.org/asciidoc/. You can install AsciiDoc from the repository if you don’t have an up to date packaged version or want to get the latest version from the trunk:
-
Make sure you have Mercurial installed, you can check with:
$ hg --version
-
Go to the directory you want to install AsciiDoc into and download the repository. This example gets the 8.5.2 tagged release:
$ cd ~/bin $ hg clone -r 8.5.2 http://hg.sharesource.org/asciidoc asciidoc-8.5.2
You now have two choices: you can run asciidoc directly from you local repository or you can use autoconf(1) and make(1) to perform a normal install from the repository.
Running asciidoc from your local copy
Create a symlink to the AsciiDoc script in a search PATH directory so it’s easy to execute asciidoc from the command-line, for example:
$ ln -s ~/bin/asciidoc-8.5.2/asciidoc.py ~/bin/asciidoc $ ln -s ~/bin/asciidoc-8.5.2/a2x.py ~/bin/a2x
Use the Mercurial pull command to update your local AsciiDoc repository.
Installing asciidoc for all users
Create configure using autoconf(1); use configure to create the Makefile; run make(1); build the man pages; install:
$ autoconf $ ./configure $ make $ python a2x.py -f manpage doc/asciidoc.1.txt $ python a2x.py -f manpage doc/a2x.1.txt $ sudo make install
To uninstall:
$ sudo make uninstall
Distribution tarball installation
The distribution source tarballs can be downloaded from the SourceForge http://sourceforge.net/projects/asciidoc/.
If your flavor or UNIX or Linux does not have a packaged AsciiDoc distribution or if you prefer to install the latest AsciiDoc version from source use the configure shell script in the tarball root directory.
The autoconf(1) generated configure script creates a make file that is tailored for your system. To install:
$ tar -xzf asciidoc-8.5.2.tar.gz $ cd asciidoc-8.5.2 $ ./configure $ sudo make install
To install the documentation:
$ sudo make docs
To uninstall AsciiDoc:
$ sudo make uninstall
If Vim is installed on your system the AsciiDoc Vim syntax highlighter and filetype detection scripts will be install in the global Vim configuration file directory (asciidoc.vim in the syntax directory and asciidoc_filetype.vim in the ftdetect directory).
Prepackaged AsciiDoc installation
The following platform specific AsciiDoc packages are available:
- Debian GNU/Linux
-
If you use Debian or a Debian based distribution there’s an AsciiDoc Debian package available. Thanks to Fredrik Steen who built and maintains the Debian AsciiDoc package.
- Gentoo Linux
-
If you use Gentoo Linux there’s a Gentoo AsciiDoc package available. Thanks to Brandon Philips for writing the ebuild.
- Fedora Linux
-
With help from Terje Røsten, Chris Wright added asciidoc to Fedora Extras which is available in the default installation. To install asciidoc execute the following command:
$ yum install asciidoc
- Slackware Linux
-
John Calixto has created a Slackware package for AsciiDoc which can be downloaded from http://linuxpackages.net/.
- Ark Linux
-
Bernhard Rosenkraenzer added AsciiDoc to Ark Linux — the package is available from the Ark Linux repository at http://arklinux.osuosl.org/dockyard-devel/, so Ark Linux users should just run apt-get install asciidoc.
- T2 Linux
-
Christian Wiese added AsciiDoc to the T2 Linux repository at http://svn.exactcode.de/t2/trunk/package/textproc/asciidoc/. To build and install the package on a T2 system, run ./scripts/Emerge-Pkg asciidoc from within your T2 source directory (default: /usr/src/t2-src).
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Fedora and CentOS packages
-
Dag Wieers has built AsciiDoc RPMs for a number of Red Hat based distributions, they can be downloaded from http://dag.wieers.com/rpm/packages/asciidoc/.
- CSW Package for Sun Solaris
-
Ben Walton has created a CSW package for AsciiDoc, you can find it here: http://opencsw.org/packages/asciidoc.
See also Packager Notes in the AsciiDoc User Guide.
Microsoft Windows installation
AsciiDoc is developed and tested on Linux but there seem to be quite a few people using it on Windows. To install AsciiDoc on Windows unzip the distribution Zip file contents to a new folder:
$ mkdir asciidoc $ cd asciidoc $ unzip ../asciidoc-8.5.2.zip
Testing your installation
Test out asciidoc by changing to the AsciiDoc application directory and convert the User Guide document (./doc/asciidoc.txt) to XHTML (./doc/asciidoc.html):
$ python asciidoc.py doc/asciidoc.txt
testasciidoc offers a more extensive set of conformance tests, though you do need to create the test data before running the tests (this in itself is a good post-install test):
$ python ./tests/testasciidoc.py update