----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, October 14, 2009 11:10
AM
Subject: RE: [docbook-apps] Cannot
resolve imagedata element's fileref attribute using modular docbook and
XInclude
Bob,
Thank you *very* much for the reply. There
appears to be a difference between the way graphics are handled between
DbLaTeX and DocBook XSL.
I compared
/usr/share/xml/docbook/stylesheet/dblatex/xsl/graphic.xsl and
/usr/share/xml/docbook/stylesheet/nwalsh/fo/graphics.xsl. The dblatex
version does not contain <xsl:template match="@fileref">.
The
other templates you mention appear to be the same.
So, now that we've
(possibly) found the issue, what do you think would be the best way to
proceed? I don't want to start "hacking" on the dblatex stylesheets
without some understanding about what I'm doing. Is there an easy way to
simply include the DocBook XSL Stylesheet fo/graphics.xsl in the dblatex
one?
Alternatively, is there an "DocBook-to-DocBook" transformation
that I could pass to xsltproc which would resolve xml:base attributes - which
I could then pass to dblatex?
Something like:
$ xsltproc -o
tmp.xml fixup.xsl book.xml
$ # tmp.xml now has all of the paths in
attributes correct
$ dblatex tmp.xml
I've been looking for
something like the above, but haven't found anything yet.
The closest
I've gotten is using xmllint to verify the document. When I view the
output of that, I can see xml:base added to sections and other elements, but
not the fileref attributes.
--
Michael
Erickson
Director Software Products
LOGIC
(612) 436-5118 :
desk
(612) 384-1584 : cell
http://www.logicpd.com
-----Original
Message-----
From: Bob Stayton [mailto:bobs@sagehill.net]
Sent: Wed
10/14/2009 12:41 PM
To: Michael Erickson;
docbook-apps@lists.oasis-open.org; docbook@lists.oasis-open.org
Subject:
Re: [docbook-apps] Cannot resolve imagedata element's fileref attribute using
modular docbook and XInclude
Hi Michael,
Do you know if dblatex
knows how to resolve xml:base attributes? If not, then that is where it
is going wrong.
When XInclude pulls in content from another
directory, the XInclude processor inserts an xml:base attribute indicating the
new directory. That sort of stores a "change-of-directory" in the
resolved XML content, so that relative paths (like yours) in the included
content can be resolved downstream. When the DocBook XSL stylesheets
encounter a relative path in a fileref, they look for xml:base attributes and
reconstruct any fileref path to resolve any xml:base attributes from all its
ancestor elements. If dblatex does not do that xml:base resolution, then
the filerefs are passed through without change and lack the directory
fixups.
The relevant templates in DocBook XSL include:
in
fo/graphics.xsl:
<xsl:template match="@fileref">
in
common/common.xsl:
<xsl:template
name="relative-uri">
<xsl:template
name="xml.base.dirs">
Bob Stayton
Sagehill
Enterprises
bobs@sagehill.net
----- Original Message -----
From: Michael Erickson <mailto:michael.erickson@logicpd.com>
To: docbook-apps@lists.oasis-open.org ;
docbook@lists.oasis-open.org
Sent: Wednesday, October 14, 2009 9:42
AM
Subject: [docbook-apps]
Cannot resolve imagedata element's fileref attribute using modular docbook and
XInclude
Hello
all,
I've posted the question below on the DbLaTeX mailing list, but I have a
suspicion that my problem might be solved if I had a better understanding of
XSL, XInclude, and using
xsltproc.
I would greatly appreciate any advice you might
provide.
Basic information:
------------------
* Debian 5.0
"Lenny" host machine, all packages
up-to-date
* Validating against
DocBook XML V4.5 DTD
* dblatex
version 0.2.9-3
* $ latex
--version
pdfTeX using
libpoppler 3.141592-1.40.3-2.2 (Web2C
7.5.6)
kpathsea version
3.5.6
...
Compiled with libpng 1.2.27;
using libpng 1.2.27
Compiled
with zlib 1.2.3.3; using zlib
1.2.3.3
Compiled with libpoppler
version
3.00
* $ xsltproc --version
Using
libxml 20632, libxslt 10124 and libexslt
813
xsltproc was compiled
against libxml 20632, libxslt 10124 and libexslt
813
libxslt 10124 was compiled
against libxml 20632
libexslt
813 was compiled against libxml
20632
Problem:
--------
I'm having trouble
getting dblatex to locate images. I believe that the trouble lies
someplace with xsltproc not expanding the "fileref" attribute using
xml:path. WARNING, I am *not* an XML or DocBook expert, so you should
take any of my suspicions with a large grain of salt - and you may feel free
to laugh should I say something that makes no sense
:-)
My directory structure looks
like:
book/
____|
main.xml
____|
appendix/
______________|appendix.xml
______________| foo/
___________________| foo.xml
___________________| images/
___________________________|*.png
Book/main.xml uses XInclude to insert book/appendix/appendix.xml, which in
turn uses XInclude to insert book/appendix/foo/foo.xml.
Book/appendix/foo/foo.xml contains elements such
as:
<mediaobject>
<imageobject>
<imagedata fileref="images/image_1.png" format="PNG"
/>
</imageobject>
</mediaobject>
If I enter the book/appendix/foo/ directory and
execute:
$
dblatex foo.xml
I have no
problems. Foo.pdf is created, and includes the images I expect it
to.
If I am anywhere above the "foo" directory, dblatex reports "Image
'images/image_1.png' not found" and the resultant PDF file does not include
the
images.
What I've Tried:
----------------
I can
sucessfully use xsltproc to create HTML and "chunked" HTML files, as long as I
pass the following parameters to
it:
--xinclude
--param
keep.relative.image.uris
0
I've reviewed the XSL Parameters section (5.1) of the DocBook to LaTeX
Publishing User Manual for something similar to "keep.relative.image.uris",
but have been
unsuccesfull.
I've searched and grep'ed through the
/usr/share/xml/docbook/stylesheet/dblatex files - but didn't see anything that
jumped out at me (admittedly, they are out of my comfort
zone).
I've looked into trying to use xmllint or xlstproc to generate an intermediate
XML file with completely resovled path names, so I could pipe that to dblatex,
but haven't had any luck coming up with the proper XSL file or parameter
combination.
I've tried using the "-I" option to point dblatex at additional directories to
search for "figures." I also wrapped some of the <mediaobject>
elements in figures - but that didn't seem to make a
difference.
I *have* confirmed that setting the fileref attribute to an absolute pathname
*does*
work.
I've googled a ton and reviewed the dblatex mailing list on SourceForge.
Since I've come up empty, and I can't believe that nobody else has ever
structured a document the why I have, my intuition tells me that I am missing
something completely
obvious.
Can anyone help me understand what is happening and how to fix
it?
Best regards,
--mike
--
Michael
Erickson
Director Software
Products
LOGIC
(612) 436-5118 :
desk
(612) 384-1584 :
cell
http://www.logicpd.com