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0.1.12 (2019 Dec 6)

It has been just more than a year since the last Tectonic release, mainly because I (@pkgw) started a new job that has massively restructured how I spend my time. But that is not to say that things have been quiet for Tectonic! I count 81 pull requests merged since 0.1.11. (Ignoring automated ones issued by Dependabot.)

User-facing improvements:

  • Thanks to @efx we now have the beginnings of a Tectonic book! It is currently very sparse, but we hope to gradually flesh it out. The book is updated automatically upon merges to master and with tagged releases as well (if @pkgw wired up the infrastructure correctly). (#427, #444, #445, #447, #505; @efx @PHPirates @pkgw)
  • Tectonic’s caching scheme is now much smarter, saving a local copy of the table-of-contents file associated with each online bundle. This means that Tectonic doesn’t need to hit the network at all if a new file is referenced that is not present in the bundle, and saves a large download if a new needed file is present in the bundle. (#431; @rekka)
  • Performance has been improved by avoiding the computation of SHA256 hashes for read-only files. Since these files are known not to change, we don’t have to monitor their contents. (#453; @rekka)
  • Warnings are only flagged if they occur on the final pass of the TeX engine, since sometimes ones that occur in the first pass get fixed by subsequent reruns. (#458; @rekka)

There have been a ton of developer-facing improvements:

  • Tectonic is now built using the Rust 2018 edition! (#388; @Mrmaxmeier)
  • @Mrmaxmeier built an amazing system to start doing crater-like runs of Tectonic on the arxiv.org corpus, yielding bug fixes across the codebase including issues with obscure PNG formats. (#401; @Mrmaxmeier)
  • It is now possible to build various statically-linked versions of Tectonic. One way to accomplish this is to turn off the new serialization Cargo feature. This eliminates the use of Rust “procedural macros” in the build process which in turn allows Tectonic to be built on statically-linked platforms. (Note, however, that it is possible to build Tectonic for statically-linked platforms with the serialization feature by cross-compiling it from a dynamically-linked platform. This is the tactic used by the Tectonic CI build system.) @efx also wrote instructions for how to accomplish a mostly-static build on macOS using vcpkg as well as how to do it on Linux/musl using Docker (#260, #261, #325, #425, #451; @efx, @malbarbo, @pkgw)
  • Tectonic now distributes a continuous-deployment AppImage build. (#283, #285; @pkgw, @probonopd, @xtaniguchimasaya)
  • The size of the binary has decreased somewhat by using a smaller collection of compression libraries; avoiding the use of exceptions and RTTI in the compiled C++ code; avoiding the use of the aho_corasick crate; and making the toml crate optional. (#428, #439, #440, #491; @malbarbo)
  • Tectonic now uses the reqwest crate as its HTTP backend instead of direct use of hyper. Reqwest offers a simpler interface and adds better support for things like HTTP proxies and cookie handling. These new features do increase the binary size somewhat. (#330, @spl)
  • Tectonic can now be built on x86_64-pc-windows-msvc by using vcpkg to discover dependent libraries. This can be activated by setting the new environment variable TECTONIC_DEP_BACKEND=vcpkg during the build process. (#420; @mcgoo)
  • Potential issues with cross-compilation are fixed by properly respecting CARGO_TARGET_* environment variables rather than using cfg!() macros, which have the wrong values in the build.rs script. This support is provided by a new tectonic_cfg_support crate that may be of interest to other projects. (#477; @pkgw @ratmice)
  • Tectonic now comes with beta-level fuzzing support using cargo-fuzz. It is hoped that eventually this infrastructure will help identify and close some truly obscure and gnarly bugs in the Tectonic language implementation. At present, the usefulness of the fuzzer is limited by memory leaks within multiple reruns of the Tectonic engine, although in the process of setting up the fuzzer several egregious leaks were fixed. (#315; @cyplo @pkgw)
  • The Rust codebase is now formatted according to rustfmt and generates no clippy complaints, and the CI system now checs for these. (#282, #336, #337, #338, #339, #340, #341, #342, #343, #344, #345, #346, #347, #348, #349, #352, #353; @pkgw @spl)
  • A new profile feature allows building a debug version of the program suitable for profiling. (#511; @ratmice)
  • The test suite now covers the bibtex tool. (#407; @Mrmaxmeier)
  • The test suite also now covers the local cache and tar bundle code. (#441; @rekka)
  • The CLI client now parses arguments using the structopt crate. (#465, #474; @efx @Mrmaxmeier)
  • A new DirBundle bundle backend provides a simple way for the engine to access a bunch of files in a directory, although it is not yet wired up to the CLI interface in a convenient way. (#492; @malbarbo)
  • The current date tracked by the TeX engine is now settable from the Rust level. (#486; @Mrmaxmeier).
  • More cleanups and symbolification of the C/C++ code (#317, #327, #350, #398; @Mrmaxmeier @pkgw @spl)
  • C++ compilation on certain versions of g++ was fixed (#265; @pkgw)
  • Fix deprecation warnings from the error_chain crate (#351; @spl)
  • Improvements to the Travis CI infrastructure, output clarity, and reliability. (#354, #360, #362, #394, #424, #443; @efx @rekka @spl)
  • Attempts were made to increase the reliability of the Circle CI build, which uses QEMU to compile Tectonic for a big-endian architecture. Unfortunately it still just times out sometimes. (#290, #296; @pkgw)
  • The deprecated tempdir crate has been replaced with tempfile. (#387; @ratmice)
  • Usage of app_dirs directories is now encapsulated better. (#429, #432; @malbarbo @rekka)
  • Bugs in reading unusual PDF files were fixed. (#396; @pkgw)
  • A missing space in bibtex error messages is now back. (#485; @jneem)
  • A memory corruption issue in the bibtex engine was fixed. (#493; @jneem)

0.1.11 (2018 Nov 5)

This release is mainly about the following change:

  • The URL embedded in the code that points to the default bundle has been changed to point to the archive.org domain. Hopefully this will result in more reliable service — there have been problems with SSL certificate updates on purl.org in the past (#253).

Developer-facing improvements:

  • The main crate now provides an all-in-one function, tectonic::latex_to_pdf(), that does what it says, using “sensible” defaults. Run a full TeX processing session, end-to-end, in a single function call! (#252)
  • In support of the previous change, the behavior of the Rust code was changed to use a static global mutex to serialize invocations of the C/C++ engine implementations, which currently include massive amounts of global state and thus cannot be run in a multithreaded fashion. The recommended approach used to be for users of the library to provide such a mutex themselves. @pkgw was initially reluctant to include such a mutex at the crate level since he feared the possibility of weird surprising behavior … but the real weird surprising behavior is when you try to run the engine in a multithreaded program and it blows up on you!
  • Also in support of the previous change, the framework for running the test suite has been revamped and improved. We can now run doctests that invoke the full engine, and the tests of the executable artifacts now activate a special debug mode that prevents accesses of the network and/or the calling user’s personal resource file cache.
  • The usual work on tidying the C/C++ code, and also more work towards the planned HTML output mode. Activating the experimental “semantic pagination” mode now alters the engine behavior in two key ways: it disables the linebreaker and custom output routines. This breaks processing of all extant documents, but @pkgw believes that these changes are important steps toward reliable generation of HTML output. (#237, #239, #245, #250)

0.1.10 (2018 Sep 28)

This release is mainly about upgrading a dependency related to SSL/TLS to increase the range of systems on which Tectonic can be compiled.

User-facing improvements:

  • Tectonic now correctly handles Unicode filenames — even ones containing emoji! — without crashing (#165).

Developer/packager-facing improvements:

  • Tectonic now depends on the 0.3.x series of hyper-native-tls, which can build against the 1.1.x series of OpenSSL.

0.1.9 (2018 Sep 15)

User-facing improvements:

  • Tectonic is now available on Windows! (#210, #231). There are likely to be rough edges to both the developer and user experience, but the test suite passes and Windows is now included in the CI infrastructure. Big thanks to new contributor @crlf0710 who really got the ball rolling on this important milestone.
  • Fully offline operation is now much improved:
    • There is a new --only-cached (AKA -C) option that will avoid all Internet connections (#203). While Tectonic takes pains to avoid needing an Internet connection when compiling documents, there are still times when you can get more done by explicitly preventing it from even trying to talk to the network.
    • The --bundle and --web-bundle options finally work again. The switch to on-the-fly generation of format files broke them due to an internal implementation problem; this has now been fixed ([#181).
    • If you put a file:// URL into your Tectonic configuration file as your default bundle, Tectonic will now load it correctly (#211).

Internal improvements:

  • Tectonic now avoids panicking from Rust into C code, which is not supported behavior (#91). Thanks to @rekka for persistence in getting this one across the finish line.
  • Tectonic now avoids crashing when trying to open empty filenames (#212).

Developer-facing improvements:

  • Tectonic is now more up-front about the fact that it requires Harfbuzz version 1.4 or higher.
  • Much of the code that drives compilation for the CLI tool has been moved into the Tectonic library and has been made (more) reusable (#184). Thanks to new contributor @jneem for doing this!

0.1.8 (2018 Jun 17)

This release contains a variety of bugfixes and features-in-development.

User-facing improvements:

  • A prominent warning is now emitted when missing characters are encountered in a font. The hope is that this will help un-confuse users who include Unicode characters in their input files without loading a Unicode-capable font. Before this change, such characters would just not appear in the output document.
  • Fix the implementation of the DVI “POP” operator, which was broken due to a typo. This should fix various corner-case failures to generate output.
  • The .toc and .snm output files emitted by Beamer are now treated as intermediate files, and therefore not saved to disk by default (contributed by Norbert Pozar).
  • Various hardcoded bibtex buffer sizes are increased, allowing larger bibliographies to be handled.
  • Format files are now stored uncompressed. The compression did not save a ton of disk space, but it did slow down debug builds significantly (contributed by @Mrmaxmeier).
  • The C code has been synchronized with XeTeX as of its Subversion revision 46289. The chief difference from before is the use of newer Harfbuzz features for rendering OpenType math fonts, which should substantially improve “Unicode math” output.

Work towards HTML output:

  • The first steps have been taken! In particular, the engine now has an internal flag to enable output to a new “SPX” format instead of XDV. SPX stands for Semantically Paginated XDV — based on my (PKGW’s) research, to achieve the best HTML output, the engine will have to emit intermediate data that are incompatible with XDV. At the moment, SPX is the same as XDV except with different identifying bytes, but this will change as the work towards excellent HTML output continues. The command-line tool does not provide access to this output format yet, so this work is currently purely internal.
  • In addition, there is a stub engine called spx2html that will translate SPX to HTML. At the moment it is a barely-functional proof-of-concept hook, and it is not exposed to users.
  • A new internal crate, tectonic_xdv, is added. It can parse XDV and SPX files, and is used by the spx2html engine.

Test suite improvements:

  • The test suite now supports reliable byte-for-byte validation of PDF output files, through the following improvements:
    • It is now possible for the engine to disable PDF compression (contributed by @Mrmaxmeier).
    • xdvipdfmx gained a mode to reproducibly generate the “unique tags” associated with fonts.
  • The testing support code is now centralized in a single crate (contributed by @Mrmaxmeier).
  • Continuous integration (CI) coverage now includes Linux and a big-endian platform.
  • The CI coverage now includes code coverage monitoring.

Internal improvements:

  • Much of the command-line rebuild code has been moved inside the tectonic crate so that it can be reused in a library context (contributed by @jneem).

Improvements to the C code. As usual, there has been a great deal of tidying that aims to make the code more readable and hackable without altering the semantics. Many such changes are omitted below.

  • Tectonic’s synchronization with XeTeX is now tracked in version control formally, by referencing the tectonic_staging repository as a Git submodule. It is not actually necessary to check out this submodule to build Tectonic, however.
  • The C code now requires, and takes advantage of, features in the C11 revision of the language standard.
  • All remaining pieces of C code that needed porting to the Rust I/O backend have been ported or removed.
  • Virtually all hardcoded strings in the string pool have been removed (contributed by @Mrmaxmeier).
  • The C code has been split into a few more files. Some subsystems, like the “shipout” code, use a lot of global variables that have been made static thanks to the splitting.
  • A big effort to clarify the pervasive and unintuitive memory_word structure.
  • Effort to tidy the line_break() function and significantly increase its readability. This is in support of the goal of producing HTML output, for which I believe it is going to be necessary to essentially defuse this function.

0.1.7 (2017 Nov 15)

(Copy-pasted from the relevant forum post).

This is a fairly modest release — things have been very quiet lately as real life and the day job have dominated my time.

The most visible change is that I just figured out how to fix issue #58 — Tectonic would fail to parse certain PDF images if one tried to include them in a document. There was a bit of a silly bug in the Rust I/O layer that was not getting exposed except in fairly specialized circumstances. It’s squashed now! So certain documents that used to fail to compile should work now.

There’s also been yet more nice work behind the scenes by some of our indefatigable contributors:

  • @Mrmaxmeier contributed a whole bunch of cleanups to the C code as well as fixes that should allow you to generate multiple PDFs inside a single process.
  • Ronny Chevalier updated the compilation infrastructure to work in parallel and in the end contributed some features to Rust’s upstream [gcc] crate!

There have been intermittent problems lately with the SSL certificate to the purl.org domain which we use to seed the default “bundle” of LaTeX files. It’s working for me at the moment, so it’s not totally busted, but the problem seems to have come and gone over the past few weeks. See this thread for more information and a workaround.

0.1.7 (2017 Jul 9)

(Copy-pasted from the relevant forum post).

The version increment may be small but the project has seen an enormous amount of work since the previous release, thanks to an awesome group of new contributors. Here are some of the highlights:

  • Tectonic is now available for installation on Arch Linux as an AUR package and on macOS as a Homebrew formula, thanks to the hard work of Alexander Bauer, Alexander Regueiro, Jan Tojnar, Kevin Yap, and @ilovezfs.
  • The web fetching is more robust and safer, using HTTPS by default (#69, Ronny Chevalier) and more properly handling CDN redirections (#114, @Mrmaxmeier)
  • Input and output filenames with spaces and non-local paths are now handled much better all around (#44, Alexander Bauer; #89, Norbert Pozar; #94, Peter Williams)
  • SyncTeX output is now fully supported, activated with the new --synctex option (#55, #73, Norbert Pozar)
  • The output files can be placed in a directory other than the input directory if the new --outdir or -o option is specified (#104, Felix Döring)
  • Tectonic will cleanly process TeX code provided on standard input if the input path argument is - (#94, Peter Williams)
  • Tectonic's first new primitive, \TectonicCodaTokens, has been added to allow boilerplate-free document processing (Peter Williams).
  • The API docs can be, and are, built on docs.rs as of this release.

Furthermore, I've launched a Tectonic forum site (running an instance of the Discourse.org software). This is a bit of an experiment since the project is so young and there are of course other venues, like GitHub issues and the TeX StackExchange, for having relevant discussions. But, by launching the Discourse site, we gain a venue for project news (like this announcement!), more open-ended technical discussions, Tectonic-specific tips and tricks that may not fit the StackExchange model, and a knowledge base of answers to the roadblocks that are so common in the TeX/LaTeX ecosystem. We hope that the forums will become a valuable complement to the other community areas that are already out there.

Here are some more improvements since the 0.1.5 release:

  • Some early work has occurred to make it possible to build Tectonic on Android (#105, Marco Barbosa)
  • The project’s build infrastructure is now more efficient (#60, Norbert Pozar; #116, Ronny Chevalier)
  • The style of the translated C code has been improved enormously thanks to both manual interventions and the use of the neat tool Coccinelle, reducing warnings and increasing cleanliness and portability (#66, #76, #83, #92, #107, #112, Ronny Chevalier; #105, Norbert Pozar; #94, #98, Peter Williams )
  • The test suite now covers behaviors of the Tectonic command-line program itself (#84, Alexander Bauer)
  • We now correctly run bibtex when using the amsrefs package (#48, Norbert Pozar)
  • Tectonic will correctly try a wider variety of file extensions when trying to open resources (#93, Marek Šuppa; #100, Norbert Pozar)
  • Cached bundle files are now made read-only (#55, Alexander Bauer)
  • We’ve fixed a subtle path handling issue that was harming generation of the standard LaTeX format (#77, Norbert Pozar)
  • Very large bibliographies are now better supported (#87, Marek Šuppa)
  • The UI now makes it clearer that network failures are not likely Tectonic’s fault (#88, Marek Šuppa)
  • It is now theoretically possible to load Omega font metrics files (#97, Peter Williams)
  • Output log files are now produced if --keep-logs is specified and an error occurs (#103, Norbert Pozar)

There are a few known problems with this release:

  • Tectonic doesn’t support HTTP proxies, and in some parts of the world you can’t access the purl.org website that Tectonic checks for its bundle. You can work around this by creating a custom configuration file.
  • Tectonic doesn’t have a mechanism to invoke the biber tool, so it cannot easily work for anyone that uses biblatex. This is a common complaint so it would be great to see a workaround be devised (relevant issue)!

Enormous thanks are in order to everyone who’s started contributing to the project.

Previous releases

Are not documented here. Consult the Git history.