#!/bin/sh
-# Where is Jade? (i.e. James Clark's implementation of DSSSL, or
-# something offsprung)
-if [ "" != "$JADE" ]; then
+. ../find-gnumake.sh
+find_gnumake
+
+# Where is xsltproc?
+if [ "" != "$XSLTPROC" ]; then
# The user has told us where to find jade, good.
- echo using JADE=$JADE
-elif which openjade > /dev/null; then
- # OpenJade is the version of Jade which comes with OpenBSD 2.9,
+ echo using XSLTPROC=$XSLTPROC
+elif which xsltproc > /dev/null; then
+ # Openxsltproc is the version of xsltproc which comes with OpenBSD 2.9,
# and I started using it in sbcl-0.pre7.x. -- WHN
- JADE=openjade
-elif which jade > /dev/null; then
- # I used the original Jade until sbcl-0.pre7.x. It might still
- # work. -- WHN
- JADE=jade
+ XSLTPROC=xsltproc
else
- echo "can't find Jade, sorry"
+ echo "can't find xsltproc, sorry"
exit 1
fi
-# Since Jade has strange ideas about the name of the top level output
-# file, use a symlink as a workaround to provide a reasonable entry
-# point.
-#
-# (KLUDGE: Why does the output always come out in book1.htm? According
-# to the docs of OpenJade 1.3, it should be coming out in
-# user-manual.htm by default, I think. And it should respect the -o
-# option. But experimentally that seems not to be. -- WHN 2002-01-15)
-rm -f book1.htm
-$JADE -t sgml -ihtml -d sbcl-html.dsl\#html user-manual.sgml
-ln -sf book1.htm user-manual.html
+export XSLTPROC
+$GNUMAKE html