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authorHiroki Sato <hrs@FreeBSD.org>2016-11-04 19:26:35 +0000
committerHiroki Sato <hrs@FreeBSD.org>2016-11-04 19:26:35 +0000
commitf54f1e63eca416dc82128d3979f091f419da9c2a (patch)
tree0e30e46591f36b6b6f9606ff047e00fd37c95398 /textproc/latex2html
parentfde0acf7afe2d50f9920dc9510ce682d109815b5 (diff)
downloadports-f54f1e63eca416dc82128d3979f091f419da9c2a.tar.gz
ports-f54f1e63eca416dc82128d3979f091f419da9c2a.zip
Update to 2016.
Notes
Notes: svn path=/head/; revision=425352
Diffstat (limited to 'textproc/latex2html')
-rw-r--r--textproc/latex2html/Makefile10
-rw-r--r--textproc/latex2html/distinfo5
-rw-r--r--textproc/latex2html/files/latex2html.11284
-rw-r--r--textproc/latex2html/files/patch-config-install.pl6
-rw-r--r--textproc/latex2html/files/patch-latex2html.pin29
-rw-r--r--textproc/latex2html/pkg-plist4
6 files changed, 16 insertions, 1322 deletions
diff --git a/textproc/latex2html/Makefile b/textproc/latex2html/Makefile
index 920895226378..e6906804b7dc 100644
--- a/textproc/latex2html/Makefile
+++ b/textproc/latex2html/Makefile
@@ -2,14 +2,16 @@
# $FreeBSD$
PORTNAME= latex2html
-PORTVERSION= 2008
-PORTREVISION= 4
+PORTVERSION= 2016
CATEGORIES= textproc
MASTER_SITES= TEX_CTAN/support/${PORTNAME}
MAINTAINER= hrs@FreeBSD.org
COMMENT= Convert LaTeX documents to HTML
+LICENSE= GPLv2
+LICENSE_FILES= ${WRKSRC}/LICENSE
+
BUILD_DEPENDS= ${LOCALBASE}/bin/anytopnm:graphics/netpbm
RUN_DEPENDS:= ${BUILD_DEPENDS}
@@ -26,12 +28,12 @@ CONFIGURE_ARGS= --with-perl=${PERL} \
SUB_FILES= pkg-message
PLIST_SUB= TEXMFDIR=${TEXMFDIR}
TEXHASHDIRS= ${TEXMFDIR}
-PORTDOCS= FAQ INSTALL LICENSE README
+PORTDOCS= FAQ INSTALL README
OPTIONS_DEFINE= DOCS
post-install:
- ${INSTALL_MAN} ${FILESDIR}/latex2html.1 ${STAGEDIR}${MANPREFIX}/man/man1
+ ${INSTALL_MAN} ${WRKSRC}/latex2html.1 ${STAGEDIR}${MANPREFIX}/man/man1
post-install-DOCS-on:
@${MKDIR} ${STAGEDIR}${DOCSDIR}
diff --git a/textproc/latex2html/distinfo b/textproc/latex2html/distinfo
index 4256b492e532..4bc9ba35e3c2 100644
--- a/textproc/latex2html/distinfo
+++ b/textproc/latex2html/distinfo
@@ -1,2 +1,3 @@
-SHA256 (latex2html-2008.tar.gz) = 59456815a3984250c295d3d5c46b85646038db8db2735cdc0d3780cf4da337ad
-SIZE (latex2html-2008.tar.gz) = 1133054
+TIMESTAMP = 1466385409
+SHA256 (latex2html-2016.tar.gz) = ab1dbc18ab0ec62f65c1f8c14f2b74823a0a2fc54b07d73ca49524bcae071309
+SIZE (latex2html-2016.tar.gz) = 1149971
diff --git a/textproc/latex2html/files/latex2html.1 b/textproc/latex2html/files/latex2html.1
deleted file mode 100644
index 70762a6d5edc..000000000000
--- a/textproc/latex2html/files/latex2html.1
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1284 +0,0 @@
-\" Hey, Emacs! This is an -*- nroff -*- source file.
-.\" Copyright (c) 1997 Manoj Srivastava <srivasta@debian.org>
-.\"
-.\" This is free documentation; you can redistribute it and/or
-.\" modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
-.\" published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of
-.\" the License, or (at your option) any later version.
-.\"
-.\" The GNU General Public License's references to "object code"
-.\" and "executables" are to be interpreted as the output of any
-.\" document formatting or typesetting system, including
-.\" intermediate and printed output.
-.\"
-.\" This manual is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
-.\" but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
-.\" MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
-.\" GNU General Public License for more details.
-.\"
-.\" You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public
-.\" License along with this manual; if not, write to the Free
-.\" Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139,
-.\" USA.
-.\"
-.\"
-.\" $Id: latex2html.1,v 1.2 2000/03/04 07:55:13 srivasta Exp $
-.\"
-.TH LaTeX2HTML 1 "March 1 2000" "Debian" "Debian GNU/Linux manual"
-.SH NAME
-latex2html \- translate LaTeX files to HTML (HyperText Markup Language)
-.SH SYNOPSIS
-.B latex2html
-.I [options]
-\&[target [target ...]]
-.SH DESCRIPTION
-This manual page explains the
-.B "LaTeX2HTML"
-utility, which is a
-.B Perl
-program that translates
-.B LaTeX
-document into
-.B HTML
-format. For each source file given as an argument
-the translator will create a directory containing the corresponding
-HTML files. For details and examples, please consult the online html
-documentation, a copy of which should be available in
-.I /usr/share/doc/latex2html/manual.ps.gz
-or
-.I /usr/share/doc/latex2html/html/
-.SH CAVEAT
-This documetation has been derived from the TeX manual, and may not be
-uptodate. Please refer to the online manual for authoritative
-documentation.
-.UN file://localhost/doc/latex2html/html/
-.SH Options controlling Titles, File-Names and Sectioning
-.TP
-.B -t <top-page-title>
-Same as setting:
-.I $TITLE = "<top-page-title>";
-Name the document using this title.
-.TP
-.B -short_extn
-Same as setting:
-.I $SHORTEXTN = 1;
-Use a filename prefix of .htm for the produced
-.B HTML
-files. This is
-particularly useful for creating pages to be stored on CD-ROM or other
-media, to be used with operating systems that require a 3-character
-extension.
-.TP
-.B -long_titles <num>
-Same as setting:
-.I $LONG_TITLES = <num>;
-Instead of the standard names: node1.html, node2.html,... the filenames
-for each
-.B HTML
-page are constructed from the first <num> words of the
-section heading for that page, separated by the `_' character.
-Commas and common short words (a an to by of and for the) are omitted
-from both title and word-count.
-Warning: Use this switch with great caution. Currently there are no
-checks for uniqueness of names or overall length. Very long names can
-easily result from using this feature.
-.TP
-.B -custom_titles
-Same as setting:
-.I $CUSTOM_TITLES = 1;
-Instead of the standard names: node1.html, node2.html, ... the
-filenames for each
-.B HTML
-page are constructed using a
-.B Perl
-subroutine
-named custom_title_hook . The user may define his/her own version of
-this subroutine, within a .latex2html-init file say, to override the
-default (which uses the standard names). This subroutine takes the
-section-heading as a parameter and must return the required name, or
-the empty string (default).
-.TP
-.B -dir <output-directory>
-Same as setting:
-.I $DESTDIR = "<output-directory>";
-Redirect the output to the specified directory.
-The default behaviour is to create (or reuse) a directory having the
-same name as the prefix of the document being processed.
-.TP
-.B -no_subdir
-Same as setting:
-.I $NO_SUBDIR = 1;
-Place the generated
-.B HTML
-files into the current directory. This
-overrides any
-.I $DESTDIR
-setting.
-.TP
-.B -prefix <filename-prefix>
-Same as setting:
-.I $PREFIX = "<filename-prefix>";
-The <filename-prefix> will be prepended to all .gif, .pl and .html
-files produced, except for the top-level .html file; it may include a
-(relative) directory path. This will enable multiple products of
-.B LaTeX2HTML
-to peacefully coexist in the same directory. However, do not
-attempt to simultaneously run multiple instances of
-.B LaTeX2HTML
-using
-the same output directory, else various temporary files will overwrite
-each other.
-.TP
-.B -auto_prefix
-Same as setting:
-.I $AUTO_PREFIX = 1;
-Constructs the prefix as `<title>-' to be prepended to all the files
-produced, where <title> is the name of the
-.B LaTeX
-file being processed.
-(Note the `-' in this prefix.)
-This overrides any
-.I $PREFIX
-setting.
-.TP
-.B -no_auto_link
-Same as setting:
-.I $NO_AUTO_LINK = 1;
-If $NO_AUTO_LINK is empty and variables
-.I $LINKPOINT
-and
-.I $LINKNAME
-are
-defined appropriately (as is the default in the latex2html.config
-file), then a hard link to the main
-.B HTML
-page is produced, using the
-name supplied in
-.I $LINKNAME.
-Typically this is index.html; on many
-systems a file of this name will be used, if it exists, when a browser
-tries to view a URL which points to a directory. On other systems a
-different value for
-.I $LINKNAME
-may be appropriate. Typically
-.I $LINKPOINT
-has
-value
-.I $FILE.html,
-but this may also be changed to match whichever
-HTML page is to become the target of the automatic link.
-Use of the -no_auto_link switch cancels this automatic linking
-facility, when not required for a particular document.
-.TP
-.B -split <num>
-Same as setting:
-.I $MAX_SPLIT_DEPTH = <num>; (default is 8)
-Stop splitting sections into separate files at this depth. Specifying
--split 0 will put the entire document into a single
-.B HTML
-file. See
-below for the different levels of sectioning. Also see the next item
-for how to set a ``relative'' depth for splitting.
-.TP
-.B -split +<num>
-Same as setting:
-.I $MAX_SPLIT_DEPTH = -<num>; (default is 8)
-The level at which to stop splitting sections is calculated ``relative
-to'' the shallowest level of sectioning that occurs within the
-document. For example, if the document contains \\section commands, but
-no \\part or \\chapter commands, then -split +1 will cause splitting at
-each \\section but not at any deeper level; whereas -split +2 or -split
-+3 also split down to \\subsection and \\subsubsection commands
-respectively. Specifying -split +0 puts the entire document into a
-single
-.B HTML
-file.
-.TP
-.B -link <num>
-Same as setting:
-.I $MAX_LINK_DEPTH = <num>; (default is 4)
-For each node, create links to child nodes down to this much deeper
-than the node's sectioning-level.
-Specifying -link 0 will show no links to child nodes from that page,
--link 1 will show only the immediate descendents, etc.
-A value at least as big as that of the -split <num> depth will produce
-a mini table-of-contents (when not empty) on each page, for the tree
-structure rooted at that node.
-When the page has a sectioning-level less than the -split depth, so
-that the a mini table-of-contents has links to other
-.B HTML
-pages, this
-table is located at the bottom of the page, unless placed elsewhere
-using the \\tableofchildlinks command.
-On pages having a sectioning-level just less than the -split depth the
-mini table-of-contents contains links to subsections etc. occurring on
-the same
-.B HTML
-page. Now the table is located at the top of this page,
-unless placed elsewhere using the \\tableofchildlinks command.
-.TP
-.B -toc_depth <num>
-Same as setting:
-.I $TOC_DEPTH = <num>; (default is 4)
-Sectioning levels down to <num> are to be included within the
-Table-of-Contents tree.
-.TP
-.B -toc_stars
-Same as setting:
-.I $TOC_STARS = 1;
-Sections created using the starred-form of sectioning commands are
-included within the Table-of-Contents. As with
-.B LaTeX,
-normally such
-sections are not listed.
-.TP
-.B -show_section_numbers
-Same as setting:
-.I $SHOW_SECTION_NUMBERS = 1;
-Show section numbers. By default section numbers are not shown, so as
-to encourage the use of particular sections as stand-alone documents.
-In order to be shown, section titles must be unique and must not
-contain inlined graphics.
-.TP
-.B -unsegment
-Same as setting:
-.I $UNSEGMENT = 1;
-Treat a segmented document (see the section about document
-segmentation) like it were not segmented. This will cause the
-translator to concatenate all segments and process them as a whole. You
-might find this useful to check a segmented document for consistency.
-For all documents the sectioning levels referred to above are:
-.RS
- 0 document
- 1 part
- 2 chapter
- 3 section
- 4 subsection
- 5 subsubsection
- 6 paragraph
- 7 subparagraph
- 8 subsubparagraph
-.RE
-.P
-These levels apply even when the document contains no sectioning for the
-shallower levels; e.g. no \\part or \\chapter commands is most common,
-especially when using
-.B LaTeX's
-article document-class.
-.SH Options controlling Extensions and Special Features
-The switches described here govern the type of
-.B HTML
-code that can be
-generated, and how to choose between the available options when there are
-alternative strategies for implementing portions of
-.B LaTeX
-code.
-.TP
-.B -html_version (2.0|3.0|3.2)[,(math|i18n|table)]*
-Same as setting:
-.I $HTML_VERSION = "... ";
-This specifies both the
-.B HTML
-version to generate, and any extra
-(non-standard)
-.B HTML
-features that may be required.
-The version number corresponds to a published DTD for an
-.B HTML
-standard
-(although 3.0 was never accepted and subsequently withdrawn). A
-corresponding
-.B Perl
-file in the versions/ subdirectory is loaded; these
-files are named `html<num>.pl'.
-Following the version number, a comma-separated list of extensions can
-be given. Each corresponds to a file `<name>.pl' also located in the
-versions/ subdirectory. When such a file is loaded the resulting HTML
-code can no longer be expected to validate with the specified DTD. An
-exception is math when the -no_math switch is also used, which should
-still validate.
-Currently, versions 2.0, 3.2 and 4.0 are available. (and also 2.1, 2.2,
-3.0 and 3.1, for hoistorical reasons). The extensions i18n, tables,
-math correspond roughly to what used to be called versions `2.1',
-`2.2', `3.1' respectively, in releases of
-.B LaTeX2HTML
-up to 1996. Now
-these extensions can be loaded with any of `2.0', `3.2' or `4.0' as the
-specified standard.
-The default version is usually set to be `3.2', within
-latex2html.config.
-.TP
-.B -no_tex_defs
-Same as setting:
-.I $TEXDEFS = 0; (default is 1)
-When
-.I $TEXDEFS
-is set (default) the file texdefs.perl will be read. This
-provides code to allow common TEX commands like \\def, \\newbox,
-\\newdimen and others, to be recognised, especially within the document
-preamble. In the case of \\def, the definition may even be fully
-interpreted, but this requires the pattern-matching to be not too
-complicated.
-If
-.I $TEXDEFS
-is `0' or empty, then texdefs.perl will not be loaded; the
-translator will make no attempt to interpret any raw TEX commands. This
-feature is intended to enable sophisticated authors the ability to
-insert arbitrary TEX commands in environments that are destined to be
-processed by
-.B LaTeX
-anyway; e.g. figures, theorems, pictures, etc.
-However this should rarely be needed, as now there is better support
-for these types of environment. There are now other methods to specify
-which chunks of code are to be passed to
-.B LaTeX
-for explicit
-image-generation; see the discussion of the makeimage environment.
-.TP
-.B -external_file <filename>
-Same as setting:
-.I $EXTERNAL_FILE = "<filename>";
-Specifies the prefix of the .aux file that this document should read.
-The .aux extension will be appended to this prefix to get the complete
-filename, with directory path if needed.
-This file could contain necessary information regarding citations,
-figure, table and section numbers from
-.B LaTeX
-and perhaps other
-information also. Use of this switch is vital for document segments,
-processed separately and linked to appear as if generated from a single
-LaTeX document.
-.TP
-.B -font_size <size>
-Same as setting:
-.I $FONT_SIZE = "<size>";
-This option provides better control over the font size of environments
-made into images using
-.B LaTeX.
-<size> must be one of the font sizes that
-.B LaTeX
-recognizes; i.e. `10pt', `11pt', `12pt', etc. Default is `10pt',
-or whatever option may have been specified on the \\documentclass or
-\\documentstyle line.
-Whatever size is selected, it will be magnified by the installation
-variables
-.I $MATH_SCALE_FACTOR,
-.I $FIGURE_SCALE_FACTOR
-and
-.I $DISP_SCALE_FACTOR
-as appropriate.
-Note: This switch provides no control over the size of text on the HTML
-pages. Such control is subject entirely to the user's choices of
-settings for the browser windows.
-.TP
-.B -scalable_fonts
-Same as setting:
-.I $SCALABLE_FONTS = 1;
-This is used when scalable fonts, such as PostScript versions of the
-TEX fonts, are available for image-generation.
-It has the effect of setting
-.I $PK_GENERATION
-to `1', and
-.I $DVIPS_MODE
-to
-be empty, overriding any previous settings for these variables.
-.TP
-.B -no_math
-Same as setting:
-.I $NO_SIMPLE_MATH = 1;
-Ordinarily simple mathematical expressions are set using the ordinary
-text font, but italiced. When part of the expression can not be
-represented this way, an image is made of the whole formula. This is
-called ``simple math''. When
-.I $NO_SIMPLE_MATH
-is set, then all
-mathematics is made into images, whether simple or not.
-However, if the math extension is loaded, using the -html_version
-switch described earlier, then specifying -no_math produces a quite
-different effect. Now it is the special <MATH> tags and entities which
-are cancelled. In their place a sophisticated scheme for parsing
-mathematical expressions is used. Images are made of those sub-parts of
-a formula which cannot be adequately expressed using (italiced) text
-characters and <SUB> and <SUP> tags. See the subsection on mathematics
-for more details.
-.TP
-.B -local_icons
-Same as setting:
-.I $LOCAL_ICONS = 1;
-A copy of each of the icons actually used within the document is placed
-in the directory along with the
-.B HTML
-files and generated images. This
-allows the whole document to be fully self-contained, within this
-directory; otherwise the icons must be retrieved from a (perhaps
-remote) server.
-The icons are normally copied from a subdirectory of the
-
-.B $LATEX2HTMLDIR,
- set within latex2html.config. An alternative set of
-icons can be used by specifying a (relative) directory path in
-$ALTERNATIVE_ICONS to where the customised images can be found.
-.TP
-.B -init_file <file>
-Load the specified initialisation file. This
-.B Perl
-file will be loaded
-after loading
-.I $HOME/.latex2html-init,
-or .latex2html-init in the local
-directory, if either file exists. It is read at the time the switch is
-processed, so the contents of the file may change any of the values of
-any of the variables that were previously established, as well as any
-default options. More than one initialisation file can be read in this
-way.
-[change_begin]98.1
-.TP
-.B -no_fork
-Same as setting:
-.I $NOFORK = 1;
-When set this disables a feature in the early part of the processing
-whereby some memory-intensive operations are performed by `forked'
-child processes. Some single-task operating systems, such as DOS, do
-not support this feature. Having
-.I $NOFORK
-set then ensures that
-unnecessary file-handles that are needed with the forked processes, are
-not consumed unnecessarily, perhaps resulting in a fatal
-.B Perl
-error.
-.TP
-.B -iso_language <type>
-This enables you to specify a different language type than 'EN' to be
-used in the DTD entries of the
-.B HTML
-document, e.g. 'EN.US'.
-[change_end] 98.1
-.TP
-.B -short_index
-Same as setting:
-.I $SHORT_INDEX = 1;
-Creates shorter Index listings, using codified links; this is fully
-compatible with the makeidx package.
-.TP
-.B -no_footnode
-Same as setting:
-.I $NO_FOOTNODE = 1;
-Suppresses use of a separate file for footnotes; instead these are
-placed at the bottom of the
-.B HTML
-pages where the references occur.
-When this option is used, it is frequently desirable to change the
-style of the marker used to indicate the presence of a footnote. This
-is done as in
-.B LaTeX,
-using code such as follows.
-\\renewcommand{\\thefootnote}{\\arabic{footnote}}
-All the styles \\arabic, \\alph, \\roman, \\Alph and \\Roman are available.
-[change_begin]98.1
-.TP
-.B -numbered_footnotes
-Same as setting:
-.I $NUMBERED_FOOTNOTES = 1;
-If this is set you will get every footnote applied with a subsequent
-number, to ease readability.
-[change_end] 98.1
-.TP
-.B -address <author-address>
-Same as setting:
-.I $ADDRESS = "<author-address>";
-Sign each page with this address.
-See latex2html.config for an example using
-.B Perl
-code to automatically
-include the date.
-A user-defined
-.B Perl
-subroutine called &custom_address can be used
-instead, if defined; it takes the value of
-.I $ADDRESS
-as a parameter,
-which may be used or ignored as desired. At the time when this
-subroutine will be called, variables named $depth,
-.I $title,
-.I $file
-hold
-the sectioning-level, title and filename of the
-.B HTML
-page being
-produced;
-.I $FILE
-holds the name of the filename for the title-page of
-the whole document.
-.TP
-.B -info <string>
-Same as setting:
-.I $INFO = "<string>";
-Generate a new section ``About this document'' containing information
-about the document being translated. The default is to generate such a
-section with information on the original document, the date, the user
-and the translator. An empty string (or the value `0') disables the
-creation of this extra section.
-If a non-empty string is given, it will be placed as the contents of
-the ``About this document'' page instead of the default information.
-.SH Switches controlling Image Generation
-These switches affect whether images are created at all, whether old images
-are reused on subsequent runs or new ones created afresh, and whether
-anti-aliasing effects are used within the images themselves.
-.TP
-.B -ascii_mode
-Same as setting:
-.I $ASCII_MODE = $EXTERNAL_IMAGES = 1;
-Use only ASCII characters and do not include any images in the final
-output. With -ascii_mode the output of the translator can be used on
-character-based browsers, such as lynx, which do not support inlined
-images (via the <IMG> tag).
-.TP
-.B -nolatex
-Same as setting:
-.I $NOLATEX = 1;
-Disable the mechanism for passing unknown environments to
-.B LaTeX
-for
-processing. This can be thought of as ``draft mode'' which allows
-faster translation of the basic document structure and text, without
-fancy figures, equations or tables.
-(This option has been superseded by the -no_images option, see below.)
-.TP
-.B -external_images
-Same as setting:
-.I $EXTERNAL_IMAGES = 1;
-Instead of including any generated images inside the document, leave
-them outside the document and provide hypertext links to them.
-.TP
-.B -ps_images
-Same as setting:
-.I $PS_IMAGES = $EXTERNAL_IMAGES = 1;
-Use links to external PostScript files rather than inlined images in
-the chosen graphics format.
-.TP
-.B -discard
-Same as setting:
-.I $DISCARD_PS = 1;
-The temporary PostScript files are discarded immediately after they
-have been used to create the image in the desired graphics format.
-.TP
-.B -no_images
-Same as setting:
-.I $NO_IMAGES = 1;
-Do not attempt to produce any inlined images. The missing images can be
-generated ``off-line'' by restarting
-.B LaTeX2HTML
-with the option
--images_only .
-.TP
-.B -images_only
-Same as setting:
-.I $IMAGES_ONLY = 1;
-Try to convert any inlined images that were left over from previous
-runs of
-.B LaTeX2HTML.
-.TP
-.B -reuse <reuse_option>
-Same as setting:
-.I $REUSE = <reuse_option>;
-This switch specifies the extent to which image files are to be shared
-or recycled.
-There are three valid options:
-[*] 0
-Do not ever share or recycle image files.
-This choice also invokes an interactive session prompting the user
-about what to do about a pre-existing
-.B HTML
-directory, if it
-exists.
-[*] 1
-Recycle image files from a previous run if they are available,
-but do not share identical images that must be created in this
-run.
-[*] 2
-Recycle image files from a previous run and share identical images
-from this run.
-This is the default.
-A later section provides additional information about image-reuse.
-.TP
-.B -no_reuse
-Same as setting:
-.I $REUSE = 0;
-Do not share or recycle images generated during previous translations.
-This is equivalent to -reuse 0 . (This will enable the initial
-interactive session during which the user is asked whether to reuse the
-old directory, delete its contents or quit.)
-.TP
-.B -antialias
-Same as setting:
-.I $ANTI_ALIAS = 1; (Default is 0.)
-Generated images of figure environments and external PostScript files
-should use anti-aliasing. By default anti-aliasing is not used with
-these images, since this may interfere with the contents of the images
-themselves.
-.TP
-.B -antialias_text
-Same as setting:
-.I $ANTI_ALIAS_TEXT = 1; (Default is 1.)
-Generated images of typeset material such as text, mathematical
-formulas, tables and the content of makeimage environments, should use
-anti-aliasing effects.
-The default is normally to use anti-aliasing for text, since the
-resulting images are much clearer on-screen. However the default may
-have been changed locally.
-.TP
-.B -no_antialias
-Same as setting:
-.I $ANTI_ALIAS = 0; (Default is 0.)
-Generated images of figure environments and external PostScript files
-should not use anti-aliasing with images, though the local default may
-have been changed to use it.
-.TP
-.B -no_antialias_text
-Same as setting:
-.I $ANTI_ALIAS_TEXT = 0; (Default is 1.)
-Generated images of typeset material should not use anti-aliasing
-effects. Although on-screen images of text are definitely improved
-using anti-aliasing, printed images can be badly blurred, even at
-300dpi. Higher resolution printers do a much better job with the
-resulting grey-scale images.
-[change_begin]98.1
-.TP
-.B -white
-Same as setting:
-.I $WHITE_BACKGROUND = 1; (Default is 1.)
-Ensures that images of figure environments have a white background.
-Otherwise transparency effects may not work correctly.
-.TP
-.B -no_white
-Same as setting:
-.I $WHITE_BACKGROUND = ''; (Default is 1.)
-Cancels the requirement that figure environments have a white
-background.
-.TP
-.B -ldump
-Same as setting:
-.I $LATEX_DUMP = 1; (Default is 0.)
-Use this if you want to speed up image processing during the 2nd and
-subsequent runs of
-.B LaTeX2HTML
-on the same document. The translator now
-produces a
-.B LaTeX
-format-dump of the preamble to images.tex which is
-used on subsequent runs. This significantly reduces the startup time
-when
-.B LaTeX
-reads the images.tex file for image-generation.
-This process actually consumes additional time on the first run, since
-.B LaTeX
-is called twice -- once to create the format-dump, then again to
-load and use it. The pay-off comes with the faster loading on
-subsequent runs. Approximately 1 Meg of disk space is consumed by the
-dump file.
-[change_end] 98.1
-.SH Switches controlling Navigation Panels
-The following switches govern whether to include one or more navigation
-panels on each
-.B HTML
-page, also which buttons to include within such a panel.
-.TP
-.B -no_navigation
-Same as setting:
-.I $NO_NAVIGATION = 1;
-Disable the mechanism for putting navigation links in each page.
-This overrides any settings of the
-.I $TOP_NAVIGATION,
-.I $BOTTOM_NAVIGATION
-and
-.I $AUTO_NAVIGATION
-variables.
-.TP
-.B -top_navigation
-Same as setting:
-.I $TOP_NAVIGATION = 1;
-Put navigation links at the top of each page.
-.TP
-.B -bottom_navigation
-Same as setting:
-.I $BOTTOM_NAVIGATION = 1;
-Put navigation links at the bottom of each page as well as the top.
-.TP
-.B -auto_navigation
-Same as setting:
-.I $AUTO_NAVIGATION = 1;
-Put navigation links at the top of each page. Also put one at the
-bottom of the page, if the page exceeds
-.I $WORDS_IN_PAGE
-number of words
-(default = 450).
-.TP
-.B -next_page_in_navigation
-Same as setting:
-.I $NEXT_PAGE_IN_NAVIGATION = 1;
-Put a link to the next logical page in the navigation panel.
-.TP
-.B -previous_page_in_navigation
-Same as setting:
-.I $PREVIOUS_PAGE_IN_NAVIGATION = 1;
-Put a link to the previous logical page in the navigation panel.
-.TP
-.B -contents_in_navigation
-Same as setting:
-.I $CONTENTS_IN_NAVIGATION = 1;
-Put a link to the table-of-contents in the navigation panel if there is
-one.
-.TP
-.B -index_in_navigation
-Same as setting:
-.I $INDEX_IN_NAVIGATION = 1;
-Put a link to the index-page in the navigation panel if there is an
-index.
-.SH Switches for Linking to other documents
-When processing a single stand-alone document, the switches described in
-this section should not be needed at all, since the automatically generated
-navigation panels, described on the previous page should generate all the
-required navigation links. However if a document is to be regarded as part
-of a much larger document, then links from its first and final pages, to
-locations in other parts of the larger (virtual) document, need to be
-provided explicitly for some of the buttons in the navigation panel.
-The following switches allow for such links to other documents, by providing
-the title and URL for navigation panel hyperlinks. In particular, the
-``Document Segmentation'' feature necessarily makes great use of these
-switches. It is usual for the text and targets of these navigation
-hyperlinks to be recorded in a Makefile, to avoid tedious typing of long
-command-lines having many switches.
-.TP
-.B -up_url <URL>
-Same as setting:
-.I $EXTERNAL_UP_LINK = "<URL>";
-Specifies a universal resource locator (URL) to associate with the
-``UP'' button in the navigation panel(s).
-.TP
-.B -up_title <string>
-Same as setting:
-.I $EXTERNAL_UP_TITLE = "<string>";
-Specifies a title associated with this URL.
-.TP
-.B -prev_url <URL>
-Same as setting:
-.I $EXTERNAL_PREV_LINK = "<URL>";
-Specifies a URL to associate with the ``PREVIOUS'' button in the
-navigation panel(s).
-.TP
-.B -prev_title <string>
-Same as setting:
-.I $EXTERNAL_PREV_TITLE = "<string>";
-Specifies a title associated with this URL.
-.TP
-.B -down_url <URL>
-Same as setting:
-.I $EXTERNAL_DOWN_LINK = "<URL>";
-Specifies a URL for the ``NEXT'' button in the navigation panel(s).
-.TP
-.B -down_title <string>
-Same as setting:
-.I $EXTERNAL_DOWN_TITLE = "<string>";
-Specifies a title associated with this URL.
-.TP
-.B -contents <URL>
-Same as setting:
-.I $EXTERNAL_CONTENTS = "<URL>";
-Specifies a URL for the ``CONTENTS'' button, for document segments that
-would not otherwise have one.
-.TP
-.B -index <URL>
-Same as setting:
-.I $EXTERNAL_INDEX = "<URL>";
-Specifies a URL for the ``INDEX'' button, for document segments that
-otherwise would not have an index.
-.TP
-.B -biblio <URL>
-Same as setting:
-.I $EXTERNAL_BIBLIO = "<URL>";
-Specifies the URL for the bibliography page to be used, when not
-explicitly part of the document itself.
-Warning: On some systems it is difficult to give text-strings <string>
-containing space characters, on the command-line or via a Makefile. One way
-to overcome this is to use the corresponding variable. Another way is to
-replace the spaces with underscores (_).
-.SH Switches for Help and Tracing
-The first two of the following switches are self-explanatory. When problems
-arise in processing a document, the switches -debug and -verbosity will each
-cause
-.B LaTeX2HTML
-to generate more output to the screen. These extra messages
-should help to locate the cause of the problem.
-.TP
-.B -tmp <path>
-Define a temporary directory to use for image generation. If <path> is
-0, the standard temporary directory /tmp is used.
-.TP
-.B -h(elp)
-Print out the list of all command-line options.
-.TP
-.B -v
-Print the current version of
-.B LaTeX2HTML.
-.TP
-.B -debug
-Same as setting:
-.I $DEBUG = 1;
-Run in debug-mode, displaying messages and/or diagnostic information
-about files read, and utilities called by
-.B LaTeX2HTML.
-Shows any
-messages produced by these calls.
-More extensive diagnostics, from the
-.B Perl
-debugger, can be obtained by
-appending the string `-w-' to the 1st line of the latex2html (and
-other)
-.B Perl
-script(s).
-.TP
-.B -verbosity <num>
-Same as setting:
-.I $VERBOSITY = <num>;
-Display messages revealing certain aspects of the processing performed
-by
-.B LaTeX2HTML
-on the provided input file(s). The <num> parameter can be
-an integer in the range 0 to 8. Each higher value adds to the messages
-produced.
-.TP
-0.
-No special tracing; as for versions of
-.B LaTeX2HTML
-prior to V97.1.
-.TP
-1.
-(This is the default.) Show section-headings and the corresponding
-HTML file names, and indicators that major stages in the
-processing have been completed.
-.TP
-2.
-Print environment names and identifier numbers, and new
-theorem-types. Show warnings as they occur, and indicators for
-more stages of processing. Print names of files for storing
-auxiliary data arrays.
-.TP
-3.
-Print command names as they are encountered and processed; also
-any unknown commands encountered while pre-processing. Show names
-of new commands, environments, theorems, counters and
-counter-dependencies, for each document partition.
-.TP
-4.
-Indicate command-substitution the pre-process of
-math-environments. Print the contents of unknown environments for
-processing in
-.B LaTeX,
-both before and after reverting to
-.B LaTeX
-source. Show all operations affecting the values of counters. Also
-show links, labels and sectioning keys, at the stages of
-processing.
-.TP
-5.
-Detail the processing in the document preamble. Show substitutions
-of new environments. Show the contents of all recognised
-environments, both before and after processing. Show the
-cached/encoded information for the image keys, allowing two images
-to be tested for equality.
-.TP
-6.
-Show replacements of new commands, accents and wrapped commands.
-.TP
-7.
-Trace the processing of commands in math mode; both before and
-after.
-.TP
-8.
-Trace the processing of all commands, both before and after.
-The command-line option sets an initial value only. During processing
-the value of
-.I $VERBOSITY
-can be set dynamically using the
-\\htmltracing{...} command, whose argument is the desired value, or by
-using the more general \\HTMLset command as follows:
-\\HTMLset{VERBOSITY}{<num>}.
-.SH Other Configuration Variables, without switches
-The configuration variables described here do not warrant having a
-command-line switch to assign values. Either they represent aspects of
-.B LaTeX2HTML
-that are specific to the local site, or they govern properties
-that should apply to all documents, rather than something that typically
-would change for the different documents within a particular sub-directory.
-Normally these variables have their value set within the latex2html.config
-file. In the following listing the defaults are shown, as the lines of Perl
-code used to establish these values. If a different value is required, then
-these can be assigned from a local .latex2html-init initialisation file,
-without affecting the defaults for other users, or documents processed from
-other directories.
-.TP
-.B $dd
-holds the string to be used in file-names to delimit directories; it
-is set internally to `/', unless the variable has already been given a
-value within latex2html.config .
-Note: This value cannot be set within a .latex2html-init initialisation
-file, since its value needs to be known in order to find such a file.
-.TP
-.B $LATEX2HTMLDIR
-Read by the install-test script from latex2html.config, its value is
-inserted into the latex2html
-.B Perl
-script as part of the installation
-process.
-.TP
-.B $LATEX2HTMLSTYLES = "$LATEX2HTMLDIR/styles";
-Read from the latex2html.config file by install-test, its value is
-checked to locate the styles/ directory.
-.TP
-.B $LATEX2HTMLVERSIONS = "$LATEX2HTMLDIR/versions";
-The value of this variable should be set within latex2html.config to
-specify the directory path where the version and extension files can be
-found.
-.TP
-.B $ALTERNATIVE_ICONS = '';
-This may contain the (relative) directory path to a set of customised
-icons to be used in conjunction with the -local_icons switch.
-.TP
-.B $TEXEXPAND = "$LATEX2HTMLDIR/texexpand";
-Read by the install-test
-.B Perl
-script from latex2html.config, its value
-is used to locate the texexpand
-.B Perl
-script.
-.TP
-.B $PSTOIMG = "$LATEX2HTMLDIR/pstoimg";
-Read by the install-test
-.B Perl
-script from latex2html.config, its value
-is used to locate the pstoimg
-.B Perl
-script.
-.TP
-.B $IMAGE_TYPE = '<image-type>';
-Set in latex2html.config, the currently supported <image-type>s are:
-gif and png.
-.TP
-.B $DVIPS = 'dvips';
-Read from latex2html.config by install-test, its value is checked to
-locate the dvips program or script.
-There could be several reasons to change the value here:
-o add a switch -P<printer> to load a specific configuration-file;
-e.g. to use a specific set of PostScript fonts, for improved
-image-generation.
-o to prepend a path to a different version of dvips than normally
-available as the system default (e.g. the printing requirements
-are different).
-o to append debugging switches, in case of poor quality images;
-one can see which paths are being searched for fonts and other
-resources.
-o to prepend commands for setting path variables that dvips may need
-in order to locate fonts or other resources.
-If automatic generation of fonts is required, using Metafont, the
-following configuration variables are important.
-.RS
-.TP
-.B $PK_GENERATION = 1;
-This variable must be set, to initiate font-generation; otherwise
-fonts will be scaled from existing resources on the local system.
-In particular this variable must not be set, if one wishes to use
-PostScript fonts or other scalable font resources (see the
--scalable_fonts switch).
-.TP
-.B $DVIPS_MODE = 'toshiba';
-The mode given here must be available in the modes.mf file,
-located with the Metafont resource files, perhaps in the misc/
-subdirectory.
-.TP
-.B $METAFONT_DPI = 180;
-The required resolution, in dots-per-inch, should be listed
-specifically within the MakeTeXPK script, called by dvips to
-invoke Metafont with the correct parameters for the required
-fonts.
-.RE
-.TP
-.B $LATEX = 'latex';
-Read from latex2html.config by install-test, its value is checked to
-locate the latex program or script.
-If
-.B LaTeX
-is having trouble finding style-files and/or packages, then
-the default command can be prepended with other commands to set
-environment variables intended to resolve these difficulties;
-e.g.
-.I $LATEX = 'setenv TEXINPUTS <path to search> ; latex' .
-There are several variables to help control exactly which files are
-read by
-.B LaTeX2HTML
-and by
-.B LaTeX
-when processing images:
-.RS
-.TP
-.B $TEXINPUTS
-This is normally set from the environment variable of the same
-name. If difficulties occur so that styles and packages are not
-being found, then extra paths can be specified here, to resolve
-these difficulties.
-.TP
-.B $DONT_INCLUDE
-This provides a list of filenames and extensions to not include,
-even if requested to do so by an \\input or \\include command.
-(Consult latex2html.config for the default list.)
-.TP
-.B $DO_INCLUDE = '';
-List of exceptions within the
-.I $DONT_INCLUDE
-list. These files are
-to be read if requested by an \\input or \\include command.
-.RE
-.TP
-.B $ICONSERVER = '<URL>';
-This is used to specify a URL to find the standard icons, as used for
-the navigation buttons.
-Names for the specific images size, as well as size information, can be
-found in latex2html.config. The icons themselves can be replaced by
-customised versions, provided this information is correctly updated and
-the location of the customised images specified as the value of
-$ICONSERVER.
-When the -local_icons switch is used, so that a copy of the icons is
-placed with the
-.B HTML
-files and other generated images, the value of
-$ICONSERVER is not needed within the
-.B HTML
-files themselves. However it
-is needed to find the original icons to be copied to the local
-directory.
-.TP
-.B $NAV_BORDER = <num>;
-The value given here results in a border, measured in points, around
-each icon.
-A value of `0' is common, to maintain strict alignment of inactive and
-active buttons in the control panels.
-.TP
-.B $LINKNAME = '"index.$EXTN"';
-This is used when the
-.I $NO_AUTO_LINK
-variable is empty, to allow a URL
-to the working directory to be sufficient to reach the main page of the
-completed document. It specifies the name of the
-.B HTML
-file which will
-be automatically linked to the directory name.
-The value of
-.I $EXTN
-is .html unless
-.I $SHORTEXTN
-is set, in which case it
-is .htm .
-.TP
-.B $LINKPOINT = '"$FILE$EXTN"';
-This specifies the name of the
-.B HTML
-file to be duplicated, or
-symbolically linked, with the name specified in
-.I $LINKNAME.
-At
-the appropriate time the value of
-.I $FILE
-is the document name, which
-usually coincides with the name of the working directory.
-.TP
-.B $CHARSET = 'iso_8859_1';
-This specifies the character set used within the
-.B HTML
-pages produced by
-.B LaTeX2HTML.
-If no value is set in a configuration or initialisation
-file, the default value will be assumed. The lowercase form
-.I $charset
-is
-also recognised, but this is overridden by the uppercase form.
-.TP
-.B $ACCENT_IMAGES = 'large';
-Accented characters that are not part of the ISO-Latin fonts can be
-generated by making an image using
-.B LaTeX.
-This variable contains a
-(comma-separated) list of
-.B LaTeX
-commands for setting the style to be
-used when these images are made. If the value of this variable is empty
-then the accent is simply ignored, using an un-accented font character
-(not an image) instead.
-Within the color.perl package, the following variables are used to identify
-the names of files containing specifications for named colors. Files having
-these names are provided, in the
-.I $LATEX2HTMLSTYLES
-directory, but they could
-be moved elsewhere, or replaced by alternative files having different names.
-In such a case the values of these variables should be altered accordingly.
- $RGBCOLORFILE = 'rgb.txt';
- $CRAYOLAFILE = 'crayola.txt';
-The following variables may well be altered from the system defaults, but
-this is best done using a local .latex2html-init initialisation file, for
-overall consistency of style within documents located at the same site, or
-sites in close proximity.
-.TP
-.B $default_language = 'english';
-This establishes which language code is to be placed within the
-<!DOCTYPE ... > tag that may appear at the beginning of the
-.B HTML
-pages
-produced. Loading a package for an alternative language can be expected
-to change the value of this variable.
-See also the
-.I $TITLES_LANGUAGE
-variable, described next.
-.TP
-.B $TITLES_LANGUAGE = 'english';
-This variable is used to specify the actual strings used for standard
-document sections, such as ``Contents'', ``References'', ``Table of
-Contents'', etc.
-Support for French and German titles is available in corresponding
-packages. Loading such a package will normally alter the value of this
-variable, as well as the
-.I $default_language
-variable described above.
-.TP
-.B $WORDS_IN_NAVIGATION_PANEL_TITLES = 4;
-Specifies how many words to use from section titles, within the textual
-hyperlinks which accompany the navigation buttons.
-.TP
-.B $WORDS_IN_PAGE = 450;
-Specifies the minimum page length required before a navigation panel is
-placed at the bottom of a page, when the
-.I $AUTO_NAVIGATION
-variable is
-set.
-.TP
-.B $CHILDLINE = "<BR><HR>\\n";
-This gives the
-.B HTML
-code to be placed between the child-links table and
-the ordinary contents of the page on which it occurs.
-.TP
-.B $NETSCAPE_HTML = 0;
-When set, this variable specifies that
-.B HTML
-code may be present which
-does not conform to any official standard. This restricts the contents
-of any <!DOCTYPE ... > tag which may be placed at the beginning of the
-HTML pages produced.
-.TP
-.B $BODYTEXT = '';
-The value of this variable is used within the <BODY ... > tag; e.g. to
-set text and/or background colors.
-It's value is overridden by the \\bodytext command, and can be added-to
-or parts changed using the \\htmlbody command or \\color and \\pagecolor
-from the color package.
-.TP
-.B $INTERLACE = 1;
-When set, interlaced images should be produced.
-This requires graphics utilities to be available to perform the
-interlacing operation.
-.TP
-.B $TRANSPARENT_FIGURES = 1;
-When set, the background of images should be made transparent;
-otherwise it is white.
-This requires graphics utilities to be available which can specify the
-color to be made transparent.
-.TP
-.B $FIGURE_SCALE_FACTOR = 1.6;
-Scale factor applied to all images of figure and other environments,
-when being made into an image.
-Note that this does not apply to recognised mathematics environments,
-which instead use the contents of
-.I $MATH_SCALE_FACTOR
-and
-$DISP_SCALE_FACTOR to specify scaling.
-.TP
-.B $MATH_SCALE_FACTOR = 1.6;
-Scale factor applied to all images of mathematics, both inline and
-displayed. A value of 1.4 is a good alternative, with anti-aliased
-images.
-.TP
-.B $DISP_SCALE_FACTOR = 1;
-Extra scale factor applied to images of displayed math environments.
-When set, this value multiplies
-.I $MATH_SCALE_FACTOR
-to give the total
-scaling. A value of `1.2' is a good choice to accompany
-$MATH_SCALE_FACTOR = 1.4;.
-.TP
-.B $EXTRA_IMAGE_SCALE
-This may hold an extra scale factor that can be applied to all
-generated images.
-When set, it specifies that a scaling of
-.I $EXTRA_IMAGE_SCALE
-be applied
-when images are created, but to have their height and width recorded as
-the un-scaled size. This is to coax browsers into scaling the (usually
-larger) images to fit the desired size; when printed a better quality
-can be obtained. Values of `1.5' and `2' give good print quality at
-600dpi.
-.TP
-.B $PAPERSIZE = 'a5';
-Specifies the size of a page for typesetting figures or displayed math,
-when an image is to be generated.
-This affects the lengths of lines of text within images. Since images
-of text or mathematics should use larger sizes than when printed, else
-clarity is lost at screen resolutions, then a smaller paper-size is
-generally advisable. This is especially so if both the
-$MATH_SCALE_FACTOR and
-.I $DISP_SCALE_FACTOR
-scaling factors are being
-used, else some images may become excessively large, including a lot of
-blank space.
-.TP
-.B $LINE_WIDTH = 500;
-Formerly specified the width of an image, when the contents were to be
-right- or center-justified. (No longer used.)
-.PP
-The following variables are used to access the utilities required during
-image-generation. File and program locations on the local system are
-established by the configure-pstoimg
-.B Perl
-script and stored within
-.I $LATEX2HTMLDIR/local.pm
-as
-.B Perl
-code, to be read by pstoimg when required.
-After running the configure-pstoimg Perl script it should not be necessary
-to alter the values obtained. Those shown below are what happens on the
-author's system; they are for illustration only and do not represent default
-values.
-.PP
- $GS_LIB = '/usr/local/share/ghostscript/4.02';
- $PNMCAT = '/usr/local/bin/pnmcat';
- $PPMQUANT = '/usr/local/bin/ppmquant';
- $PNMFLIP = '/usr/local/bin/pnmflip';
- $PPMTOGIF = '/usr/local/bin/ppmtogif';
- $HOWTO_TRANSPARENT_GIF = 'netpbm';
- $GS_DEVICE = 'pnmraw';
- $GS = '/usr/local/bin/gs';
- $PNMFILE = '/usr/local/bin/pnmfile';
- $HOWTO_INTERLACE_GIF = 'netpbm';
- $PBMMAKE = '/usr/local/bin/pbmmake';
- $PNMCROP = '/usr/local/bin/pnmcrop';
- $TMP = '/usr/var/tmp';
-The following variables are no longer needed, having been replaced by the
-more specific information obtained using the Perl script configure-pstoimg.
- $USENETPBM = 1;
- $PBMPLUSDIR = '/usr/local/bin';
-.SH "SEE ALSO"
-.BR latex (1)
-.SH AUTHOR
-Nikos Drakos, Computer Based Learning Unit, University of Leeds
-<nikos@cbl.leeds.ac.uk>. Several people have contributed suggestions,
-ideas, solutions, support and encouragement.
-The current maintainer is Ross Moore.
-This manual page was written Manoj Srivastava <srivasta@debian.org>,
-for the Debian GNU/Linux system, based on the LaTeX documentation
-accompanying the program.
diff --git a/textproc/latex2html/files/patch-config-install.pl b/textproc/latex2html/files/patch-config-install.pl
index ef4ed1a1cd99..60c284d2cae2 100644
--- a/textproc/latex2html/files/patch-config-install.pl
+++ b/textproc/latex2html/files/patch-config-install.pl
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
---- config/install.pl.orig 2002-11-29 20:49:01.000000000 +0900
-+++ config/install.pl 2013-11-03 02:31:07.000000000 +0900
-@@ -372,7 +372,7 @@
+--- config/install.pl.orig 2016-04-19 16:52:35 UTC
++++ config/install.pl
+@@ -372,7 +372,7 @@ foreach $item (sort keys %Install_items)
if($cfg{TEXPATH}) {
print "\nNote: trying to install LaTeX2HTML style files in TeX directory tree\n ($cfg{TEXPATH})\n";
diff --git a/textproc/latex2html/files/patch-latex2html.pin b/textproc/latex2html/files/patch-latex2html.pin
deleted file mode 100644
index eb759f80bad1..000000000000
--- a/textproc/latex2html/files/patch-latex2html.pin
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,29 +0,0 @@
---- latex2html.pin.orig 2015-04-20 16:01:37 UTC
-+++ latex2html.pin
-@@ -532,7 +532,7 @@ $CHARSET = $charset || 'iso-8859-1';
- #
- # If possible, use icons of the same type as generated images
- #
--if ($IMAGE_TYPE && defined %{"icons_$IMAGE_TYPE"}) {
-+if ($IMAGE_TYPE && %{"icons_$IMAGE_TYPE"}) {
- %icons = %{"icons_$IMAGE_TYPE"};
- }
-
-@@ -2112,7 +2112,7 @@ sub convert_iso_latin_chars {
- "\nCould not find translation function for $default_language.\n\n")
- }
- );
-- if ($USE_UTF ||(!$NO_UTF &&(defined %unicode_table)&&length(%unicode_table)>2)) {
-+ if ($USE_UTF ||(!$NO_UTF &&(%unicode_table)&&length(%unicode_table)>2)) {
- &convert_to_unicode($_)};
- }
- $_ = join('', @case_processed, $_); undef(@case_processed);
-@@ -9117,7 +9117,7 @@ sub real_replace_strange_accents {
- my ($charset) = "${CHARSET}_character_map_inv";
- $charset =~ s/-/_/g;
- # convert upper 8-bit characters
-- if (defined %$charset &&($CHARSET =~ /8859[_\-]1$/)) {
-+ if ((%$charset) &&($CHARSET =~ /8859[_\-]1$/)) {
- s/([\200-\377])/
- $tmp = $$charset{'&#'.ord($1).';'};
- &mark_string($tmp) if ($tmp =~ m!\{!);
diff --git a/textproc/latex2html/pkg-plist b/textproc/latex2html/pkg-plist
index 5302bbcda960..d32da304bb9e 100644
--- a/textproc/latex2html/pkg-plist
+++ b/textproc/latex2html/pkg-plist
@@ -166,6 +166,7 @@ man/man1/latex2html.1.gz
%%DATADIR%%/styles/CJK.perl
%%DATADIR%%/styles/TEMPLATE.perl
%%DATADIR%%/styles/SIunits.perl
+%%DATADIR%%/styles/abnt.perl
%%DATADIR%%/styles/afrikaan.perl
%%DATADIR%%/styles/alltt.perl
%%DATADIR%%/styles/american.perl
@@ -199,6 +200,7 @@ man/man1/latex2html.1.gz
%%DATADIR%%/styles/epsfig.perl
%%DATADIR%%/styles/esperant.perl
%%DATADIR%%/styles/estonian.perl
+%%DATADIR%%/styles/eurosym.perl
%%DATADIR%%/styles/finnish.perl
%%DATADIR%%/styles/floatfig.perl
%%DATADIR%%/styles/floatflt.perl
@@ -263,6 +265,7 @@ man/man1/latex2html.1.gz
%%DATADIR%%/styles/wrapfig.perl
%%DATADIR%%/styles/xspace.perl
%%DATADIR%%/styles/xy.perl
+%%DATADIR%%/texinputs/floatflt.ins
%%DATADIR%%/texinputs/frames.sty
%%DATADIR%%/texinputs/heqn.sty
%%DATADIR%%/texinputs/hthtml.sty
@@ -304,6 +307,7 @@ man/man1/latex2html.1.gz
%%DATADIR%%/versions/techexpl.pl
%%DATADIR%%/versions/unicode.pl
%%DATADIR%%/versions/utf8.pl
+%%TEXMFDIR%%/tex/latex/html/floatflt.ins
%%TEXMFDIR%%/tex/latex/html/frames.sty
%%TEXMFDIR%%/tex/latex/html/heqn.sty
%%TEXMFDIR%%/tex/latex/html/hthtml.sty