Arguments and options for the `dita` command
The dita
command takes mandatory arguments to process DITA content. Subcommands can be used to manage plug-ins, or print information about the current configuration. A series of options are available to modify the command behavior or specify additional configuration parameters.
Usage
To convert content from one format to another, specify the file to transform and the desired output format. If necessary, you can set additional configuration parameters with options.
Note: Most dita
command options support several syntax alternatives. All options can be specified with a GNU-style option keyword preceded by two hyphens. In many cases, Unix-style single-letter options (preceded by a single hyphen) are also available for brevity and backwards compatibility.
The dita
command also supports a series of subcommands that can be used to manage plug-ins, or print information about the current configuration or version.
Attention: Prior to DITA-OT 3.5, subcommands were specified with the double-hyphen option syntax, which is still supported for backwards compatibility. (For example, dita
--install will still work.)
Arguments
Each transformation requires you to specify at least the file to transform and the desired output format.
--input=file -i file
Specifies the main file for your documentation project.
This argument corresponds to the common parameter args.input.
Typically this is a DITA map, however it also can be a DITA topic if you want to transform a single DITA file. The path can be absolute, relative to args.input.dir, or relative to the current directory if args.input.dir is not defined.
--format=name -f name
Specifies the output format (transformation type).
This argument corresponds to the common parameter transtype.
To list the formats that are currently available in your environment, use
dita transtypes
.You can create plug-ins to add new output formats; by default, the following values are available:
dita
eclipsehelp
html5
htmlhelp
markdown, markdown_gitbook, and markdown_github
pdf
xhtml Tip: See DITA-OT transformations (output formats) for sample command line syntax and more information on each transformation.
Subcommands
deliverables file
Show a list of the available deliverables in the specified project file.
install { ID | URL | file } --install={ ID | URL | file }
Install a single plug-in ID from the registry at dita-ot.org/plugins (or a local registry), from a remote URL, or a local ZIP file.
install --install
If no ID, URL, or file argument is provided, the installation process reloads the current set of plug-ins from the
plugins
directory (or any custom locations defined via the pluginsdir property in theconfiguration.properties
file in theconfig
directory). This approach can be used to add or remove multiple plug-ins at once, or any individual plug-ins you have already copied to (or removed from) the plug-in directories. Any plug-ins added or removed in the process will be listed by their plug-in ID.uninstall ID --uninstall=ID
Remove the plug-in with the specified ID.
For a list of the currently installed plug-in IDs, use
dita plugins
.Attention: The
uninstall
subcommand also removes the corresponding plug-in directory from theplugins
folder.plugins --plugins
Show a list of the currently installed plug-ins.
transtypes --transtypes
Show a list of the available output formats (transformation types).
The entries in this list may be passed as values to the --format argument.
version --version
Print version information and exit.
Options
--debug -d
Debug logging prints considerably more additional information. The debug log includes all information from the verbose log, plus details on Java classes, additional Ant properties and overrides, preprocessing filters, parameters, and stages, and the complete build sequence. Debug logging requires additional resources and can slow down the build process, so it should only be enabled when further details are required to diagnose problems.
--output=dir -o dir
Specifies the path of the output directory; the path can be absolute or relative to the current directory.
This option corresponds to the common parameter output.dir.
By default, the output is written to the
out
subdirectory of the current directory.--filter=files
Specifies filter file(s) used to include, exclude, or flag content. Relative paths are resolved against the current directory and internally converted to absolute paths.
Note:
To specify multiple filter files, use the system path separator character to delimit individual file paths (semicolon ‘
;
’ on Windows, and colon ‘:
’ on macOS and Linux) and wrap the value in quotes:--filter="filter1.ditaval;filter2.ditaval;filter3.ditaval"
As of DITA-OT 3.6, the --filter option can also be passed multiple times:
--filter=filter1.ditaval --filter=filter2.ditaval --filter=filter3.ditaval
DITAVAL files are evaluated in the order specified, so conditions specified in the first file take precedence over matching conditions specified in later files, just as conditions at the start of a DITAVAL document take precedence over matching conditions later in the same document.
--force
Force-install an existing plug-in.
Passed as an additional option to the installation subcommand:
dita install
plug-in-zip --force--help -h
Print a list of available arguments, options, and subcommands.
--logfile=file -l file
Write logging messages to a file.
--parameter=value_ -D___parameter=value
Specify a value for a DITA-OT or Ant build parameter.
The GNU-style --parameter=value form is only available for parameters that are configured in the plug-in configuration file; the Java-style -D form can also be used to specify additional non-configured parameters or set system properties.
Parameters not implemented by the specified transformation type or referenced in a
.properties
file are ignored.Tip: If you are building in different environments where the location of the input files is not consistent, set args.input.dir with the
dita
command and reference its value with${args.input.dir}
in your.properties
file.--propertyfile=file
Use build parameters defined in the referenced
.properties
file.Build parameters specified on the command line override those set in the
.properties
file.--repeat=N
Repeat the transformation N number of times.
This option can be used by plug-in developers to measure performance. To run a conversion five times, for example, use --repeat=5. The duration of each execution will appear in the console when the final transformation is complete.
$ `dita` **--input**=`docsrc/samples/sequence.ditamap` **--format**=html5 \ **--repeat**=5 1 11281ms 2 4132ms 3 3690ms 4 4337ms 5 3634ms--resource=file -r file
Specifies resource files.
This argument corresponds to the common parameter args.resources.
Resource files can be used to convert partial documentation sets by processing input with additional information.
For example, to process a single topic file with a map that contains key definitions, use a command like this:
`dita` **--input**=`topic.dita` **--resource**=`keys.ditamap` **--format**=html5To convert a chapter map to HTML5 and insert related links from relationship tables in a separate map, use:
`dita` **--input**=`chapter.ditamap` **--resource**=`reltables.ditamap` **--format**=html5--temp=dir -t dir
Specifies the location of the temporary directory.
This option corresponds to the common parameter dita.temp.dir.
The temporary directory is where DITA-OT writes intermediate files that are generated during the transformation process.
--verbose -v
Verbose logging prints additional information to the console, including directory settings, effective values for Ant properties, input/output files, and informational messages to assist in troubleshooting.
Related information
Building output using the dita command