java2html - generates highlighted html-files from Java or C++ source
java2html [options] [filename...]
This manual page documents how to use java2html. If no arguments are
given on the command line of java2html, it reads from stdin and writes
to stdout.
If invoked with filenames as arguments java2html will write
it's output into new files. Names of output files are generated by appending
".html" to the corresponding input filename.
java2html can be installed as a CGI program and convert source files on
the fly. In order to set this up for apache the webmaster has to add the two
lines
AddType text/x-java .java
Action text/x-java /cgi-bin/java2html
to the webserver configuration file. java2html depends on
the webserver properly setting environment variable PATH_TRANSLATED to the
pathname of the source file. If java2html has been compiled with
option -DCOMPRESSION=1 then it will invoke gzip to compress the
generated HTML before sending it to the requesting browser. Of course
java2html takes care to check if the browser accepts gzip
encoding.
- --
- Interpret all following arguments on the command line as filenames. This
is useful, if you want to convert files beginning with a '-'.
- -b filename
- Insert the file 'filename' after converted data and before HTML footer.
See also the -s option.
- -c
- Turns off CGI-script detection and HTTP header generation. This is needed
to use java2html as a subcommand in another CGI script.
- -h filename
- Insert the file 'filename' after the HTML headers and before the converted
data. See also the -s option.
- -i
- Generate an index only. This will generate a list of references (HREF's)
to the labels that java2html creates for your source file. The
references are created as list items (<li>) in an HTML list. Each
line has the form
<li><a href="#name">prototype()</a></li>
so they can be used directly as an index list, or further parsed by another
script.
If you want the index at the top of the source file, you will need a wrapper
script like this one:
#! /bin/sh
echo "Content-type: text/html"
echo ""
echo "<html>"
echo "<head><title>$PATH_TRANSLATED</title>"
echo "<meta name=\"generator\""
echo "content=\"`java2html -V`\">"
echo "</head>"
echo "<body>"
echo "<h1>Source of $PATH_TRANSLATED</h1>"
echo "<ul>Structures and functions"
cat $PATH_TRANSLATED | java2html -isc
echo "</ul>"
echo "<hr></hr>"
cat $PATH_TRANSLATED | java2html -sc
echo "</body></html>"
exit
- -n
- Number lines and label them with 'line' followed by the line number. Empty
lines get no label, but the linecounter will count them nevertheless. With
this feature you can refer to special lines of code from other parts of
the generated file or from external files with a line like this:
<A HREF="foo.java.html#line301">Go to line
301</A>
- -s
- With this option you can suppress the generation of HTML headers. This is
especially useful together with options -b file and -h
file.
- -t title
- Set the title to 'title'. The default is the filename you converted or
"stdin" if reading from stdin. This option is only used if
-s is not set.
- -u
- Print usage information.
- -w width
- sets the WIDTH attribute for HTML tag <PRE>. If this option is not
used a default of 80 is assumed. (Currently most browsers are ignoring
this attribute).
- -V
- reports the version number of java2html.
java2html returns 0 on success, 1 if input files are not
existing/readable, 2 if output files are not creatable/writable, 3 if invoked
with illegal options and 4 if gzip cannot be invoked.
Florian Schintke <schintke@cs.tu-berlin.de>
Martin Kammerhofer <mkamm@gmx.net> wrote the CGI feature.
Rob Ewan <rob@ewan.com> wrote the indexing feature.
c2html(1), pas2html(1), perl2html(1).