This service is developed to compile latex documents online. It can build PDF directly from GIT repository with TeX sources or from any link to TeX file.
In addition, the service provides command-line utility (for compiling local documents), API and Stand-Alone version. See more below.
- Compile
.TEX
file via link. (Limitation: includes will be ignored) - Compile GIT repo via link.
- Compile local files or git repo via command-line interface.
- REST API for compiling.
HTTP Response Codes
The service will return HTTP.2xx on success and compiled PDF file. Otherwise a HTTP.4xx code will be returned with a compilation error log in response body.
Format:
/compile?url=<url to tex file>
Example:
latexonline.cc/compile?url=https://raw.githubusercontent.com/aslushnikov/latex-online/master/sample/sample.tex
Limitation: this command will ignore all includes during compiling
Format:
/compile?text=<tex file content>
Example:
latexonline.cc/compile?text=%5Cdocumentclass%5B%5D%7Barticle%7D%0A%5Cusepackage%5BT1%5D%7Bfontenc%7D%0A%5Cusepackage%7Blmodern%7D%0A%5Cusepackage%7Bamssymb%2Camsmath%7D%0A%5Cusepackage%7Bifxetex%2Cifluatex%7D%0A%5Cusepackage%7Bfixltx2e%7D%20%25%20provides%20%5Ctextsubscript%0A%25%20use%20microtype%20if%20available%0A%5CIfFileExists%7Bmicrotype.sty%7D%7B%5Cusepackage%7Bmicrotype%7D%7D%7B%7D%0A%5Cifnum%200%5Cifxetex%201%5Cfi%5Cifluatex%201%5Cfi%3D0%20%25%20if%20pdftex%0A%20%20%5Cusepackage%5Butf8%5D%7Binputenc%7D%0A%5Celse%20%25%20if%20luatex%20or%20xelatex%0A%20%20%5Cusepackage%7Bfontspec%7D%0A%20%20%5Cifxetex%0A%20%20%20%20%5Cusepackage%7Bxltxtra%2Cxunicode%7D%0A%20%20%5Cfi%0A%20%20%5Cdefaultfontfeatures%7BMapping%3Dtex-text%2CScale%3DMatchLowercase%7D%0A%20%20%5Cnewcommand%7B%5Ceuro%7D%7B%E2%82%AC%7D%0A%5Cfi%0A%5Cusepackage%5Ba4paper%5D%7Bgeometry%7D%0A%5Cifxetex%0A%20%20%5Cusepackage%5Bsetpagesize%3Dfalse%2C%20%25%20page%20size%20defined%20by%20xetex%0A%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20unicode%3Dfalse%2C%20%25%20unicode%20breaks%20when%20used%20with%20xetex%0A%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20xetex%5D%7Bhyperref%7D%0A%5Celse%0A%20%20%5Cusepackage%5Bunicode%3Dtrue%5D%7Bhyperref%7D%0A%5Cfi%0A%5Chypersetup%7Bbreaklinks%3Dtrue%2C%0A%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20bookmarks%3Dtrue%2C%0A%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20pdfauthor%3D%7B%7D%2C%0A%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20pdftitle%3D%7B%7D%2C%0A%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20colorlinks%3Dtrue%2C%0A%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20urlcolor%3Dblue%2C%0A%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20linkcolor%3Dmagenta%2C%0A%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20pdfborder%3D%7B0%200%200%7D%7D%0A%5Csetlength%7B%5Cparindent%7D%7B0pt%7D%0A%5Csetlength%7B%5Cparskip%7D%7B6pt%20plus%202pt%20minus%201pt%7D%0A%5Csetlength%7B%5Cemergencystretch%7D%7B3em%7D%20%20%25%20prevent%20overfull%20lines%0A%5Csetcounter%7Bsecnumdepth%7D%7B0%7D%0A%0A%5Cauthor%7B%7D%0A%5Cdate%7B%7D%0A%0A%5Cbegin%7Bdocument%7D%0A%5Csection%7BHello%20World%7D%5Clabel%7Bhello-world%7D%0A%0AThis%20is%20your%20first%20%5Cemph%7BC%7D%20program%3A%0A%0A%5Cbegin%7Bverbatim%7D%0A%23include%20%3Cstdio.h%3E%0A%0Aint%20main(void)%20%0A%7B%0A%20%20printf(%22hello%2C%20world%5Cn%22)%3B%0A%20%20return%200%3B%0A%7D%0A%5Cend%7Bverbatim%7D%0A%0ALet's%20write%20some%20math%3A%0A%5C%5B%20%5Cfrac%7Bdf(x)%7D%7Bdx%7D%3D%5Clim_%7Bh%20%5Cto%200%7D%7B%5Cfrac%7Bf(x%2Bh)-f(x)%7D%7Bh%7D%7D%20%5C%5D%0A%5Cend%7Bdocument%7D
Format:
/compile?git=<repo>&target=<target file>
This will fetch git repo
and compile the target
. target
should be a relative path to the repository root.
Example:
latexonline.cc/compile?git=https://github.com/aslushnikov/diplom-latex&target=diplom.tex
For every compilation request you can pass the following additional arguments:
force=true
This will force cache skipping and document recompilationcommand=xelatex
This will compile document withxelatex
compiler. Other available options are:pdflatex
xelatex
lualatex
download=sample.pdf
This will initiate downloading of the resulting PDF into the file with the name "sample.pdf"
The command-line interface makes it possible to edit TeX documents in
vim
/emacs
and compile them whenever you want from the command-line. To do so, you will
need a tool called laton
.
curl -L https://raw.githubusercontent.com/aslushnikov/latex-online/master/util/latexonline > laton && chmod 755 laton
This command will result in a laton
script created in a current directory. Put it somewhere
your $PATH references to make it available around the system.
If you've got a single file (say main.tex
) that doesn't have any includes,
then you can compile it like this:
laton main.tex
After compiling file main.pdf
will be created in the current dir
If your paper includes some files, you have to declare them to the
laton
.
laton main.tex some-image.jpg some-cool-file.tex
NB The first file should be the file you want to compile, all others are supporting files.
In case you store all your .tex
and supporting files in a git repo, you
can compile the project with the command
laton -g main.tex
The script will behave as if main.tex
includes each file stored in your git repo.
In this section a brief description of the service from the inside is given.
Generally speaking the service is made out of two parts
Node.js
part which with the help ofexpress.js
provides the REST API, and with the help ofmc
bridges the gap withmemcached
instanceBash
scripts which handle all the jobs related to the service (fetching files, hashSumming them, compiling e.t.c)
There are three types of requests:
- Given a link to a
.TEX
file, compile it - Given a tarball with files structure, compile it
- Given a git repo, compile it
Every request is handled in a bit special way
- The URL of the given file is fetched and saved locally
- The hash sum of the file is counted in some way
- Check in cache if we've got a PDF for the hashsum
- If yes, then just return the precompiled PDF from cache
- If no, then compile the file, cache the result and return it to user
- Given content is saved locally
- The hash sum of the file in counted in some way
- Check in cache if we've got a PDF for the hashsum
- If yes, then just return the precompiled PDF from cache
- If no, then compile the file, cache the result and return it to user
- The tarball is saved locally
- The hash sum of the tarball is counted in some way
- Check in cache if we've got a PDF for the hashsum
- If yes, then just return the precompiled PDF from cache
- If no, then extract file structure from the tarball, compile it, cache the result and return it to user
This kind of request is handled in a bit different way, as we can get a hashSum of the repo without cloning the entire repository.
- Using
git ls-remote
extractingsha1
of the master branch - Check in cache if we've got a PDF for the given
sha1
- If yes, then just return the precompiled PDF from cache
- If no, then do a shallow copy of the given git repo
- Compile it, cache the result and return it to user
This part is for you if you'd like to deploy the service on your own machine. There are two ways to do it:
- easy one, with the help of awesome project Docker
- the hard one - to do everything manually.
A Docker image is hosted and auto-updated on hub.docker.com
docker pull aslushnikov/latex-online
docker run -d -p 2700:2700 -t aslushnikov/latex-online
pdflatex
command to compile documentsbc
to estimate some values in scriptscurl
to fetch documents from webnode.js
to run servernpm
to install node dependenciesmemcached
for caching compiled documentsmd5
ormd5sum
utility to hash documents according to their valuepython3
to run thelatexrun
build system
git clone [email protected]:aslushnikov/latex-online.git
to clone reposh util/check.sh
to check if all dependencies are satisfied and createtmp/
dirnpm install
to install node dependencies
Installation of pdflatex
is beyond the scope of the document.
node app.js
- runs node servermemcached
- runs local memcached instance