GitBook is a command line tool (and Node.js library) for building beautiful books using GitHub/Git and Markdown (or AsciiDoc). Here is an example: Learn Javascript.
You can publish and host books easily online using gitbook.com. A desktop editor is also available.
Check out the GitBook Community Slack Channel, Stay updated by following @GitBookIO on Twitter or GitBook on Facebook.
Complete documentation is available at help.gitbook.com.
GitBook can be installed from NPM using:
$ npm install gitbook-cli -g
Create the directories and files for a book from its SUMMARY.md file (if existing) using
$ gitbook init
You can serve a repository as a book using:
$ gitbook serve
Or simply build the static website using:
$ gitbook build
- Output as a website or ebook (pdf, epub, mobi)
- Multi-Languages
- Glossary
- Cover
- AsciiDoc Support
- Variables and Templating
- Content References
- Plugins
- Interractive reader website:
- Search
- Font Settings (Serif, Sans Serif)
- Themes: white, sepia, night
GitBook can generate your book in the following formats:
- Static Website: This is the default format. It generates a complete interactive static website that can be, for example, hosted on GitHub Pages.
- eBook: You need to have ebook-convert installed. You can specify the eBook filename as the second argument, otherwise
book
will be used.- Generate a PDF using:
gitbook pdf ./myrepo ./mybook.pdf
- Generate a ePub using:
gitbook epub ./myrepo ./mybook.epub
- Generate a MOBI using:
gitbook mobi ./myrepo ./mybook.mobi
- Generate a PDF using:
- JSON: This format is used for debugging or extracting metadata from a book. Generate this format using:
gitbook build ./myrepo --format=json
.
A book is a Git repository containing at least 2 files: README.md
and SUMMARY.md
.
Typically, this should be the introduction for your book. It will be automatically added to the final summary.
The SUMMARY.md
defines your book's structure. It should contain a list of chapters, linking to their respective pages.
Example:
# Summary
This is the summary of my book.
* [section 1](section1/README.md)
* [example 1](section1/example1.md)
* [example 2](section1/example2.md)
* [section 2](section2/README.md)
* [example 1](section2/example1.md)
Files that are not included in SUMMARY.md
will not be processed by gitbook
.
GitBook supports building books written in multiple languages. Each language should be a sub-directory following the normal GitBook format, and a file named LANGS.md
should be present at the root of the repository with the following format:
* [English](en/)
* [French](fr/)
* [Español](es/)
You can see a complete example with the Learn Git book.
Allows you to specify terms and their respective definitions to be displayed in the glossary. Based on those terms, gitbook
will automatically build an index and highlight those terms in pages.
The GLOSSARY.md
format is very simple :
# term
Definition for this term
# Another term
With it's definition, this can contain bold text and all other kinds of inline markup ...
A set of variables can be defined in the book.json
:
{
"variables": {
"host": "mybook.com"
}
}
These variables can be used in the markdown files:
The host is {{ book.host }}
You can also use condition with these variables:
{% if book.host == "mybook.com" %}
{% else %}
{% endif %}
Variables of book.json
are available in the book
namespace. You can also access informations about the file
itself and the gitbook
version:
My file is {{ file.path }}
Modified at {{ file.mtime }}
Book built with GitBook {{ gitbook.version }}
You can use "content references," or conrefs, when writing books or documentation using GitBook.
Include a file from the same book:
{% include "./test.md" %}
or from a git repository (with a specific revision):
{% include "git+https://github.com/GitbookIO/documentation.git/README.md#1.0.1" %}
Includes can be used with variables (see Variables and Templating):
{% include book.ref_doc_readme %}
GitBook will read the .gitignore
, .bookignore
and .ignore
files to get a list of files and folders to skip. (The format inside those files follows the same convention as .gitignore
).
Best practices for the .gitignore
is to ignore build files from node.js (node_modules
, ...) and build files from GitBook: _book
, *.epub
, *.mobi
and *.pdf
(Download GitBook.gitignore).
A cover image can be set by creating a file: /cover.jpg. The best resolution is 1800x2360. The generation of the cover can be done automatically using the plugin autocover.
A small version of the cover can also be set by creating a file: /cover_small.jpg.
Since version 2.0.0, AsciiDoc can be used instead of Markdown, simply replace the .md
by the .adoc
extension. Chapters in the summary are detected from an ordered list in the SUMMARY.adoc
.
The platform GitBook.com is like an "Heroku for books": you can create a book on it (public, paid, or private) and update it using git push.
Plugins can be used to extend your book's functionality. Read GitbookIO/plugin for more information about how to build a plugin for GitBook.
Plugins needed to build a book can be installed using: gitbook install ./
. You can find plugins at plugins.gitbook.com.
You can use the options --log=debug
and --debug
to get better error messages (with stack trace). For example:
$ gitbook build ./ --log=debug --debug
To use the latest commit from GitBook/gitbook
with gitbook-cli
:
$ git clone https://github.com/GitbookIO/gitbook.git ./gitbook
$ gitbook versions:link ./gitbook
Now gitbook-cli
will be using the ./gitbook
folder.
You can uninstall it using: gitbook versions:uninstall latest
.