For Developers
While mdbook
is mainly used as a command line tool, you can also import the underlying library directly and use that to manage a book. It also has a fairly flexible plugin mechanism, allowing you to create your own custom tooling and consumers (often referred to as backends) if you need to do some analysis of the book or render it in a different format.
The For Developers chapters are here to show you the more advanced usage of mdbook
.
The two main ways a developer can hook into the book’s build process is via,
The Build Process
The process of rendering a book project goes through several steps.
- Load the book
- Parse the
book.toml
, falling back to the defaultConfig
if it doesn’t exist - Load the book chapters into memory
- Discover which preprocessors/backends should be used
- Parse the
- Run the preprocessors
- Call each backend in turn
Using mdbook as a Library
The mdbook
binary is just a wrapper around the mdbook
crate, exposing its functionality as a command-line program. As such it is quite easy to create your own programs which use mdbook
internally, adding your own functionality (e.g. a custom preprocessor) or tweaking the build process.
The easiest way to find out how to use the mdbook
crate is by looking at the API Docs. The top level documentation explains how one would use the MDBook
type to load and build a book, while the config module gives a good explanation on the configuration system.