texlive[42272] trunk: latexmk (13oct16)

commits+karl at tug.org commits+karl at tug.org
Sun Oct 16 00:55:38 CEST 2016


Revision: 42272
          http://tug.org/svn/texlive?view=revision&revision=42272
Author:   karl
Date:     2016-10-16 00:55:38 +0200 (Sun, 16 Oct 2016)
Log Message:
-----------
latexmk (13oct16)

Modified Paths:
--------------
    trunk/Build/source/texk/texlive/linked_scripts/latexmk/latexmk.pl
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/man/man1/latexmk.1
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/man/man1/latexmk.man1.pdf
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/CHANGES
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/INSTALL
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/README
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles/asymptote_latexmkrc
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/extra-scripts/dvipdfm_call.bat
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/extra-scripts/dvipdfmx_call.bat
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/latexmk.pdf
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/latexmk.txt
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/scripts/latexmk/latexmk.pl
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/source/support/latexmk/latexmk.bat

Added Paths:
-----------
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles/README-latexmk-rcfiles
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/extra-scripts/README-latexmk-scripts

Removed Paths:
-------------
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles/README-rcfiles
    trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/extra-scripts/README-scripts

Modified: trunk/Build/source/texk/texlive/linked_scripts/latexmk/latexmk.pl
===================================================================
--- trunk/Build/source/texk/texlive/linked_scripts/latexmk/latexmk.pl	2016-10-15 22:55:03 UTC (rev 42271)
+++ trunk/Build/source/texk/texlive/linked_scripts/latexmk/latexmk.pl	2016-10-15 22:55:38 UTC (rev 42272)
@@ -118,8 +118,8 @@
 
 $my_name = 'latexmk';
 $My_name = 'Latexmk';
-$version_num = '4.45';
-$version_details = "$My_name, John Collins, 22 April 2016";
+$version_num = '4.48';
+$version_details = "$My_name, John Collins, 5 Sep. 2016";
 
 use Config;
 use File::Basename;
@@ -192,6 +192,12 @@
 ##
 ##   12 Jan 2012 STILL NEED TO DOCUMENT some items below
 ##
+##      5 Sep 2016  John Collins  Add routines: rdb_list_source, rdb_set_source
+##     17 Aug 2016  John Collins  Add XDG Base Directory compatibility
+##                                   for per-user rc file
+##      1 May 2016  John Collins  Correct creation of output and aux directories
+##                                to correctly handle relative paths when -cd
+##                                is used.
 ##     22 Apr 2016  John Collins  Fix problem of -C not always working correctly
 ##                                when compilation was with -pdf and clear was default.
 ##                                (Correctly default set of rules in rdb_make_rule_list.)
@@ -1529,6 +1535,16 @@
 elsif (exists $ENV{'USERPROFILE'} ) {
     $HOME = $ENV{'USERPROFILE'};
 }
+# XDG configuration home
+$XDG_CONFIG_HOME = '';
+if (exists $ENV{'XDG_CONFIG_HOME'} ) {
+    $XDG_CONFIG_HOME = $ENV{'XDG_CONFIG_HOME'};
+}
+elsif ($HOME ne '') {
+    if ( -d "$HOME/.config") {
+        $XDG_CONFIG_HOME = "$HOME/.config";
+    }
+}
 
 
 #==================================================
@@ -1569,11 +1585,18 @@
     # System rc file:
     read_first_rc_file_in_list( @rc_system_files );
 }
-if ( $auto_rc_use && ($HOME ne "" ) ) {    
+if ( $auto_rc_use && ($HOME ne "" ) ) {
     # User rc file:
+    @user_rc = ();
+    if ( $XDG_CONFIG_HOME ) { 
+       push @user_rc, "$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/latexmk/latexmkrc";
+    }
     # N.B. $HOME equals "" if latexmk couldn't determine a home directory.
     # In that case, we shouldn't look for an rc file there.
-    read_first_rc_file_in_list( "$HOME/.latexmkrc" );
+    if ( $HOME ) { 
+       push @user_rc, "$HOME/.latexmkrc";
+    }
+    read_first_rc_file_in_list( @user_rc );
 }
 if ( $auto_rc_use ) { 
     # Rc file in current directory:
@@ -2005,40 +2028,20 @@
     add_option( "-recorder", \$latex, \$pdflatex );
 }
 
-# If the output and/or aux directories are specified: Fix the (pdf)latex
-#   commands to use them, and ensure that the directories exist.
-# N.B. We are immune against cd'ing to directory of TeX file, because in
-#   that case we have forced the directories to be absolute.
+# If the output and/or aux directories are specified, fix the (pdf)latex
+#   commands to use them.
+# N.B. We'll ensure that the directories actually exist only after a
+#   possible cd to the document directory, since the directories can be
+#   relative to the document.
 
 if ( $out_dir ) {
     add_option( "-output-directory=\"$out_dir\"", \$latex, \$pdflatex );
-    if ( ! -e $out_dir ) {
-        warn "$My_name: making output directory '$out_dir'\n"
-            if ! $silent;
-        make_path $out_dir;
-    }
-    elsif ( ! -d $out_dir ) {
-        warn "$My_name: you requested output directory '$out_dir',\n",
-             "     but an ordinary file of the same name exists, which will\n",
-             "     probably give an error later\n";
-    }
 }
-
 if ( $aux_dir && ($aux_dir ne $out_dir) ) {
     # N.B. If $aux_dir and $out_dir are the same, then the -output-directory
     # option is sufficient, especially because the -aux-directory exists
     # only in MiKTeX, not in TeXLive.
     add_option( "-aux-directory=\"$aux_dir\"", \$latex, \$pdflatex );
-    if ( ! -e $aux_dir ) {
-        warn "$My_name: making auxiliary directory '$aux_dir'\n"
-            if ! $silent;
-        make_path $aux_dir;
-    }
-    elsif ( ! -d $aux_dir ) {
-        warn "$My_name: you requested aux directory '$aux_dir',\n",
-             "     but an ordinary file of the same name exists, which will\n",
-             "     probably give an error later\n";
-    }
 }
 
 if ( $jobname ne '' ) { 
@@ -2199,7 +2202,36 @@
         $path = '';
     }
 
+    # Ensure the output/auxiliary directories exist, if need be
+    if ( $out_dir ) {
+        if ( ! -e $out_dir ) {
+             warn "$My_name: making output directory '$out_dir'\n"
+                if ! $silent;
+             make_path $out_dir;
+        }
+        elsif ( ! -d $out_dir ) {
+            warn "$My_name: you requested output directory '$out_dir',\n",
+                 "     but an ordinary file of the same name exists, which will\n",
+                 "     probably give an error later\n";
+	}
+    }
 
+    if ( $aux_dir && ($aux_dir ne $out_dir) ) {
+        # N.B. If $aux_dir and $out_dir are the same, then the -output-directory
+        # option is sufficient, especially because the -aux-directory exists
+        # only in MiKTeX, not in TeXLive.
+        if ( ! -e $aux_dir ) {
+            warn "$My_name: making auxiliary directory '$aux_dir'\n"
+               if ! $silent;
+            make_path $aux_dir;
+	}
+        elsif ( ! -d $aux_dir ) {
+            warn "$My_name: you requested aux directory '$aux_dir',\n",
+                 "     but an ordinary file of the same name exists, which will\n",
+                 "     probably give an error later\n";
+	}
+    }
+
     ## remove extension from filename if was given.
     if ( &find_basename($filename, $root_filename, $texfile_name) )
     {
@@ -7503,7 +7535,7 @@
 #************************************************************
 
 sub rdb_remove_files {
-    # rdb_remove_file( rule, file,... )
+    # rdb_remove_file( rule, file, ... )
     # Removes file(s) for the rule.  
     my $rule = shift;
     if (!$rule) { return; }
@@ -7515,6 +7547,36 @@
 
 #************************************************************
 
+sub rdb_list_source {
+    # rdb_list_source( rule )
+    # Return array of source files for rule.
+    my $rule = shift;
+    my @files = ();
+    rdb_one_rule( $rule, 
+                  sub{ @files = keys %$PHsource; }
+    );
+    return @files;
+} #END rdb_list_source
+
+#************************************************************
+
+sub rdb_set_source {
+    # rdb_set_source( rule, file, ... )
+    my $rule = shift;
+    if (!$rule) { return; }
+    my %files = ();
+    foreach (@_) {
+	rdb_ensure_file( $rule, $_ );
+	$files{$_} = 1;
+    }
+    foreach ( rdb_list_source($rule) ) {
+        if ( ! exists $files{$_} ) { rdb_remove_files( $rule, $_ ); }
+    }    
+    return;
+} #END rdb_list_source
+
+#************************************************************
+
 sub rdb_rule_exists { 
     # Call rdb_rule_exists($rule): Returns whether rule exists.
     my $rule = shift;

Modified: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/man/man1/latexmk.1
===================================================================
--- trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/man/man1/latexmk.1	2016-10-15 22:55:03 UTC (rev 42271)
+++ trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/man/man1/latexmk.1	2016-10-15 22:55:38 UTC (rev 42272)
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-.TH LATEXMK 1L "22 April 2016" ""
+.TH LATEXMK 1L "5 September 2016" ""
 .SH NAME
 latexmk \- generate LaTeX document
 .SH SYNOPSIS
@@ -148,7 +148,7 @@
 description concerning the \fI at default_files\fR variable in the
 section "List of configuration variables usable in initialization
 files". 
-.PP
+
 If a file is specified without an extension, then the ".tex" extension
 is automatically added, just as LaTeX does.  Thus, if you specify:
 
@@ -155,10 +155,9 @@
 	latexmk foo
 
 then \fIlatexmk\fR will operate on the file "foo.tex".  
+
 .TP
-
 .B -auxdir=FOO or -aux-directory=FOO
-
 Sets the directory for auxiliary output files of (pdf)latex 
 (.aux, .log etc).  This
 achieves its effect by the \fB-aux-directory\fR option of (pdf)latex,
@@ -171,8 +170,11 @@
 documentation of \fI$out_dir\fR for some complications on what
 directory names are suitable.
 
+If you also use the \fB-cd\fR option, and the specified auxiliary output
+directory is a relative path, then the path is interpreted relative to
+the document directory.
+
 .TP
-
 .B -bibtex 
 When the source file uses bbl files for bibliography, run bibtex or
 biber as needed to regenerate the bbl files.  
@@ -179,6 +181,7 @@
 
 This property can also be configured by setting the \fI$bibtex_use\fR
 variable to 2 in a configuration file
+
 .TP
 .B -bibtex-
 Never run bibtex or biber.  
@@ -189,6 +192,7 @@
 \fB-bibtex-\fR option will prevent \fIlatexmk\fR from trying to run
 \fIbibtex\fR or \fIbiber\fR, which would result in overwriting of the
 bbl files. 
+
 .TP
 .B -bibtex-cond
 When the source file uses bbl file(s) for the bibliography, run
@@ -210,6 +214,7 @@
 program to do the search, and \fIkpsewhich\fR should use the same
 search path as \fIbibtex\fR and \fIbiber\fR.  If this problem arises, use the
 \fB-bibtex\fR option when invoking \fIlatexmk\fR.)
+
 .TP
 .B -bm <message>
 A banner message to print diagonally across each page when converting
@@ -218,11 +223,13 @@
 
 Note that if the \fB-bm\fR option is specified, the \fB-ps\fR option is
 assumed.
+
 .TP
 .B -bi <intensity>
 How dark to print the banner message.  A decimal number between 0 and 1.
 0 is black and 1 is white.  The default is 0.95, which is OK unless your
 toner cartridge is getting low.
+
 .TP
 .B -bs <scale>
 A decimal number that specifies how large the banner message will be
@@ -230,10 +237,12 @@
 message, as a rule of thumb the scale should be about equal to 1100
 divided by the number of characters in the message.  The default is 220.0
 which is just right for 5 character messages.
+
 .TP 
 .B -commands
 List the commands used by \fIlatexmk\fR for processing files, and then
 exit. 
+
 .TP 
 .B -c
 Clean up (remove) all regeneratable files generated by \fIlatex\fR and
@@ -254,6 +263,7 @@
 If \fI$cleanup_includes_cusdep_generated\fR is nonzero, regeneratable
 files are considered as including those generated by custom
 dependencies and are also deleted.  Otherwise these files are not deleted.
+
 .TP 
 .B -C
 Clean up (remove) all regeneratable files generated by \fIlatex\fR and
@@ -270,10 +280,12 @@
 If \fI$cleanup_includes_cusdep_generated\fR is nonzero, regeneratable
 files are considered as including those generated by custom
 dependencies and are also deleted.  Otherwise these files are not deleted.
+
 .TP 
 .B -CA
 (Obsolete).  Now equivalent to the \fB-C\fR option.  See that option
 for details. 
+
 .TP 
 .B -cd
 Change to the directory containing the main source file before processing
@@ -283,6 +295,7 @@
 This option is particularly useful when \fIlatexmk\fR is invoked from
 a GUI configured to invoke \fIlatexmk\fR with a full pathname for the
 source file.
+
 .TP 
 .B -cd-
 Do NOT change to the directory containing the main source file before processing
@@ -294,10 +307,12 @@
 behavior when \fIlatexmk\fR is invoked by a GUI configured to invoke
 \fIlatexmk\fR with a full pathname for the source file.  See the
 \fB-cd\fR option.
+
 .TP 
 .B -CF
 Remove the file containing the database of source file information,
 before doing the other actions requested.
+
 .TP 
 .B -d
 Set draft mode.  This prints the banner message "DRAFT" across your
@@ -310,8 +325,9 @@
 
 Note that if the \fB-d\fR option is specified, the \fB-ps\fR option is
 assumed.
+
 .TP
-.B  -deps 
+.B -deps 
 Show a list of dependent files after processing.  This is in the form
 of a dependency list of the form used by the \fImake\fR program, and
 it is therefore suitable for use in a Makefile.  It gives an overall
@@ -331,18 +347,22 @@
 the \fB-M\fR option to \fIgcc\fR.  (In fact, \fIlatexmk\fR also has
 options \fB-M\fR, \fB-MF\fR, and \fB-MP\fR options that behave like
 those of \fIgcc\fR.)
+
 .TP
-.B  -dependents
+.B -dependents
 Equivalent to \fB-deps\fR.
+
 .TP
-.B   -deps-  
+.B -deps-  
 Do not show a list of dependent files after processing.  (This is the
 default.) 
+
 .TP
-.B  -dependents-
+.B -dependents-
 Equivalent to \fB-deps-\fR.
+
 .TP
-.B   -deps-out=FILENAME  
+.B -deps-out=FILENAME  
 Set the filename to which the list of dependent files is written.  If
 the FILENAME argument is omitted or set to "-", then the output is
 sent to stdout. 
@@ -349,6 +369,7 @@
 
 Use of this option also turns on the output of the list of dependent
 files after processing.
+
 .TP
 .B -dF
 Dvi file filtering.  The argument to this option is a filter which will
@@ -359,14 +380,17 @@
 Example usage: To use dviselect to select only the even pages of the dvi file:
 
 	latexmk -dF "dviselect even" foo.tex
+
 .TP
 .B -diagnostics
 Print detailed diagnostics during a run.  This may help for debugging
 problems or to understand \fIlatexmk\fR's behavior in difficult
 situations. 
+
 .TP
 .B -dvi
 Generate dvi version of document.
+
 .TP
 .B -dvi-
 Turn off generation of dvi version of document.  (This may get
@@ -373,6 +397,7 @@
 overridden, if some other file is made (e.g., a .ps file) that is
 generated from the dvi file, or if no generated file at all is
 requested.) 
+
 .TP
 .B -e <code>
 Execute the specified initialization code before processing.  The code
@@ -415,6 +440,7 @@
 	latexmk -e "$latex='latex %O -shell-escape %S'" file.tex
 
 The last two examples will NOT work with UNIX/LINUX command shells.
+
 .TP
 .B -f
 Force \fIlatexmk\fR to continue document processing despite errors.
@@ -434,6 +460,7 @@
 Turn off the forced processing-past-errors such as is set by the
 \fB-f\fR option.  This could be used to override a setting in a
 configuration file.
+
 .TP
 .B -g
 Force \fIlatexmk\fR to process document fully, even under situations
@@ -441,16 +468,20 @@
 source files have occurred since the previous run. 
 This option is useful, for example, if you change some options and
 wish to reprocess the files.
+
 .TP
 .B -g-
 Turn off \fB-g\fR.
+
 .TP
 .B -gg
 "Super go mode" or "clean make": clean out generated files as if
 \fB-C\fR had been given, and then do a regular make.
+
 .TP
 .B -h, -help
 Print help information.
+
 .TP
 .B -jobname=STRING
 Set the basename of output files(s) to STRING, instead of the default,
@@ -467,9 +498,11 @@
 the dvi to postscript converters.  This option is not normally needed
 nowadays, since current previewers normally determine this information
 automatically. 
+
 .TP
 .B -l-
 Turn off \fB-l\fR.
+
 .TP
 .B -latex="COMMAND"
 This sets the string specifying the command to run latex, and is
@@ -490,6 +523,7 @@
 Note that the effect of this option can also be achieved by using
 the \fB-e\fR option with a suitable line of Perl code to set the
 \fI$latex\fR variable.  See the explanation of the \fB-e\fR option.
+
 .TP
 .B -lualatex
 Use lualatex.  That is, use lualatex to process the source file(s) to
@@ -502,10 +536,12 @@
 .B -M
 Show list of dependent files after processing.  This is equivalent to
 the \fB-deps\fR option.
+
 .TP
 .B -MF file
 If a list of dependents is made, the \fB-MF\fR specifies the file to
 write it to. 
+
 .TP
 .B -MP
 If a list of dependents is made, includes phony target for each source
@@ -512,6 +548,7 @@
 file.  If you use the dependents list in a Makefile, the dummy rules
 work around errors make gives if you remove header files without
 updating the Makefile to match.
+
 .TP
 .B -new-viewer
 When in continuous-preview mode, always start a new viewer to view the
@@ -521,11 +558,13 @@
 test sometimes fails (notably if there is an already-running previewer
 that is viewing a file of the same name as the current file, but in a
 different directory).  This option turns off the default behavior.
+
 .TP
 .B -new-viewer-
 The inverse of the \fB-new-viewer\fR option.  It puts \fIlatexmk\fR
 in its normal behavior that in preview-continuous mode it checks for
 an already-running previewer.  
+
 .TP
 .B -nobibtex
 Never run bibtex or biber.
@@ -536,6 +575,7 @@
 \fB-nobibtex\fR option will prevent \fIlatexmk\fR from trying to run
 \fIbibtex\fR or \fIbiber\fR, which would result in overwriting of the
 bbl files. 
+
 .TP
 .B -norc
 Turn off the automatic reading of initialization (rc) files.
@@ -544,8 +584,8 @@
 command line options are obeyed in the order they are encountered.
 But \fB-norc\fR is an exception to this rule: it is acted on first,
 no matter where it occurs on the command line.
+
 .TP
-
 .B -outdir=FOO or -output-directory=FOO
 
 Sets the directory for the output files of (pdf)latex.  This achieves
@@ -560,8 +600,11 @@
 documentation of \fI$out_dir\fR for some complications on what
 directory names are suitable.
 
+If you also use the \fB-cd\fR option, and the specified output
+directory is a relative path, then the path is interpreted relative to
+the document directory.
+
 .TP
-
 .B -p
 Print out the document.  By default the file to be printed is
 the first in the list postscript, pdf, dvi that is being made.
@@ -582,8 +625,8 @@
 
 This option is incompatible with the \fB-pv\fR and \fB-pvc\fR options,
 so it turns them off. 
+
 .TP
-
 .B -pdf
 Generate pdf version of document using \fIpdflatex\fR.  (If you wish
 to use \fIlualatex\fR or \fIxelatex\fR, you can use whichever of the
@@ -594,10 +637,12 @@
 .TP
 .B -pdfdvi
 Generate pdf version of document from the dvi file, by default using dvipdf.
+
 .TP
 .B -pdfps
 Generate pdf version of document from the ps file, by default using
 ps2pdf. 
+
 .TP
 .B -pdf-
 Turn off generation of pdf version of document.  
@@ -604,6 +649,7 @@
 (This can be used to override a setting in a configuration file.
 It may get overridden if some other option requires the generation of
 a pdf file.)
+
 .TP
 .B -pdflatex="COMMAND"
 This sets the string specifying the command to run pdflatex, and is
@@ -635,6 +681,7 @@
 Note that the effect of this option can also be achieved by using
 the \fB-e\fR option with a suitable line of Perl code to set the
 \fI$pdflatex\fR variable. See the explanation of the \fB-e\fR option.
+
 .TP
 .B -print=dvi, -print=ps, -print=pdf, -print=auto,
 Define which kind of file is printed.  This option also ensures that
@@ -645,9 +692,11 @@
 the set of files that is being made.  The first in the list
 postscript, pdf, dvi that is among the files to be made is the one
 used for print out.
+
 .TP
 .B -ps
 Generate postscript version of document.
+
 .TP
 .B -ps-
 Turn off generation of postscript version of document.
@@ -654,6 +703,7 @@
 This can be used to override a setting in a configuration file.
 (It may get overridden by some other option that requires a postscript
 file, for example a request for printing.)
+
 .TP
 .B -pF
 Postscript file filtering.  The argument to this option is a filter
@@ -672,6 +722,7 @@
 Whether to use single or double quotes round the "psnup -2" will
 depend on your command interpreter, as used by the particular version
 of perl and the operating system on your computer.
+
 .TP
 .B -pv
 Run file previewer.  If the \fB-view\fR option is used, this will select
@@ -682,9 +733,11 @@
 If no file type has been selected, the dvi previewer will be used.
 This option is incompatible with the \fB-p\fR and \fB-pvc\fR options,
 so it turns them off.
+
 .TP
 .B -pv-
 Turn off \fB-pv\fR.
+
 .TP
 .B -pvc
 Run a file previewer and continually update the .dvi, .ps, and/or .pdf
@@ -724,12 +777,15 @@
 will normally use the existing previewer.  (At least this will happen
 when \fIlatexmk\fR is running under an operating system where it knows
 how to determine whether an existing previewer is running.)
+
 .TP
 .B -pvc-
 Turn off \fB-pvc\fR.
+
 .TP
 .B -quiet
 Same as -silent
+
 .TP
 .B -r <rcfile>
 Read the specified initialization file ("RC file") before processing.
@@ -753,8 +809,9 @@
 error results in \fIlatexmk\fR stopping.  Multiple instances of the
 \fB-r\fR and \fB-e\fR options can be used, and they are executed in
 the order they appear on the command line.
+
 .TP
-.B  -recorder
+.B -recorder
 Use the -recorder option with \fIlatex\fR and \fIpdflatex\fR.  In
 (most) modern versions of these programs, this results in a file of
 extension \fI.fls\fR containing a list of the files that these
@@ -764,16 +821,20 @@
 
 For further information, see the documentation for the \fI$recorder\fR
 configuration variable.
+
 .TP
-.B  -recorder-
+.B -recorder-
 Do not use the -recorder option with \fIlatex\fR and \fIpdflatex\fR. 
+
 .TP
-.B  -rules 
+.B -rules 
 Show a list of \fIlatemk\fR's rules and dependencies after processing.
+
 .TP
-.B   -rules-  
+.B -rules-  
 Do not show a list of \fIlatexmk\fR's rules and dependencies after
 processing.  (This is the default.)
+
 .TP
 .B -showextraoptions
 Show the list of extra \fIlatex\fR and \fIpdflatex\fR options that
@@ -841,6 +902,7 @@
 \fI$biber_silent_switch\fR, \fI$dvipdf_silent_switch\fR, 
 \fI$dvips_silent_switch\fR, \fI$latex_silent_switch\fR, 
 \fI$makeindex_silent_switch\fR, and \fI$pdflatex_silent_switch\fR.
+
 .TP
 .B -use-make
 When after a run of \fIlatex\fR or \fIpdflatex\fR, there are warnings
@@ -859,15 +921,19 @@
 
 See also the documentation for the \fI$use_make_for_missing_files\fR
 configuration variable. 
+
 .TP
 .B -use-make-
 Do not use the make program to try to make missing files.  (Default.)
+
 .TP
 .B -v, -version
 Print version number of \fIlatexmk\fR.
+
 .TP
 .B -verbose
 Opposite of \fB-silent\fR.  This is the default setting.
+
 .TP
 .B -view=default, -view=dvi, -view=ps, -view=pdf, -view=none
 Set the kind of file used when previewing is requested (e.g., by the
@@ -878,8 +944,8 @@
 all.  One example of is use is in conjunction with the \fB-pvc\fR
 option, when you want \fIlatexmk\fR to do a compilation automatically
 whenever source file(s) change, but do want a previewer to be opened.
+
 .TP
-
 .B -xelatex
 Use xelatex.  That is, use xelatex to process the source file(s) to
 pdf (in place of pdflatex).  This option is exactly equivalent to
@@ -953,7 +1019,7 @@
 
 e. For possible examples of code for use in an RC file, see the
 directory example_rcfiles in the distribution of \fIlatexmk\fR (e.g.,
-at http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles).
+at http://mirror.ctan.org/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles).
 Even if these examples don't do what you want, they may provide
 suitable inspiration.
 
@@ -1008,13 +1074,31 @@
    In addition, it then tries the same set of locations, but with the
 file name replaced "LatexMk" replaced by "latexmkrc". 
 .PP
-2) The user's RC file, "$HOME/.latexmkrc", if it exists.  Here $HOME
+2) The user's RC file, if it exists.  This can be in one of two
+places.  The traditional one is ".latexmkrc" in the user's home
+directory.  The other possibility is "latexmk/latexmkrc" in the user's
+XDG configuration home directory.  The actual file read is the first
+of "$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/latexmk/latexmkrc" or "$HOME/.latexmkrc" which
+exists.  (See
+https://specifications.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/basedir-spec-latest.html
+for details on the XDG Base Directory Specification.)
+
+Here $HOME
 is the user's home directory.  [\fILatexmk\fR determines the user's
 home directory as follows:  It is the value of the environment variable
 HOME, if this variable exists, which normally is the case on UNIX-like
 systems (including LINUX and OS-X).  Otherwise the environment
 variable USERPROFILE is used, if it exists, which normally is the case
-on MS-Windows systems. Otherwise a blank string is used instead of $HOME.]
+on MS-Windows systems. Otherwise a blank string is used instead of
+$HOME, in which case \fIlatexmk\fR does not look for an RC file in
+it.]
+
+$XDG_CONFIG_HOME is the value of the environment variable
+XDG_CONFIG_HOME if it exists.  If this environment variable does not
+exist, but $HOME is non-blank, then $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is set to the
+default value of $HOME/.config.  Otherwise $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is blank,
+and \fIlatexmk\fR does not look for an RC file under it.
+
 .PP
 3) The RC file in the current working directory.  This file can be
 named either "latexmkrc" or ".latexmkrc", and the first of these to be
@@ -1040,7 +1124,7 @@
 \fI
 For possible examples of code for in an RC file, see the directory
 example_rcfiles in the distribution of latexmk (e.g., at
-http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles).
+http://mirror.ctan.org/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles).
 \fR
 
 .SH HOW TO SET VARIABLES IN INITIALIZATION FILES
@@ -1352,6 +1436,10 @@
 See also the documentation of \fI$out_dir\fR for some complications on
 what directory names are suitable.
 
+If you also use the \fB-cd\fR option, and \fI$out_dir\fR (or \fI$aux_dir\fR) contains a
+relative path, then the path is interpreted relative to the document
+directory.
+
 .TP
 .B $banner [0]
 If nonzero, the banner message is printed across each page when
@@ -2274,7 +2362,7 @@
 quoting only ensures that such filenames are correctly treated by the
 operating system in passing arguments to programs.)
 .TP
-.B $recorder [0]
+.B $recorder [1]
 Whether to use the \fB-recorder\fR option to \fIlatex\fR and
 \fIpdflatex\fR. Use of this option results in a file of extension
 \fI.fls\fR containing a list of the files that these programs have
@@ -2664,7 +2752,21 @@
 This subroutine removes one or more files from the dependency list for
 the given rule. 
 
+.TP
+.B rdb_list_source( $rule )
+This subroutine returns the list of source files (i.e., the dependency
+list) for the given rule. 
 
+.TP
+.B rdb_set_source( $rule, file, ... )
+.B rdb_set_source( $rule, @files )
+This subroutine sets the dependency list for the given rule to be the
+specified files.  Files that are already in the list have unchanged
+information.  Files that were not in the list are added to it.  Files
+in the previous dependency list that are not in the newly specified
+list of files are removed from the dependency list.
+
+
 .SS Advanced configuration: Using \fIlatexmk\fB with \fImake\fR
 
 This section is targeted only at advanced users who use the \fImake\fR
@@ -2828,11 +2930,11 @@
 harvested by worms and viruses.)
 .SH AUTHOR
 Current version, by John Collins (username jcc8 at node psu.edu).
-(Version 4.45).
+(Version 4.48).
 
 Released version can be obtained from CTAN:
-<http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/support/latexmk/>, and from the
-author's website <http://www.phys.psu.edu/~collins/software/latexmk/>.
+<http://www.ctan.org/pkg/latexmk/>, and from the
+author's website <http://www.personal.psu.edu/jcc8/latexmk/>.
 .br
 Modifications and enhancements by Evan McLean (Version 2.0)
 .br

Modified: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/man/man1/latexmk.man1.pdf
===================================================================
(Binary files differ)

Modified: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/CHANGES
===================================================================
--- trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/CHANGES	2016-10-15 22:55:03 UTC (rev 42271)
+++ trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/CHANGES	2016-10-15 22:55:38 UTC (rev 42272)
@@ -491,3 +491,16 @@
   Fix bug in limiting number of passes when $max_repeat >= 10
   Fix bug in finding id of viewer process id under OS-X
 
+From v. 4.45 to 4.46
+  Correct creation of output and aux directories to correctly handle
+  relative paths when -cd is used.
+  Minor documentation corrections.
+
+From v. 4.46 to 4.48
+  Correct documention: default value of $recorder is 1
+  Add routines rdb_list_source, rdb_set_source for manipulating
+    dependency lists of a rule.  Add these to the documentated
+    interface, in addition to the already documented rdb_ensure_file,
+    rdb_remove_files.
+  Update webpages in documentation.
+

Modified: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/INSTALL
===================================================================
--- trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/INSTALL	2016-10-15 22:55:03 UTC (rev 42271)
+++ trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/INSTALL	2016-10-15 22:55:38 UTC (rev 42272)
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
             INSTALLING latexmk
             ==================
-      (Version 4.45, 22 April 2016)
+      (Version 4.48, 5 September 2016)
 
             John Collins
             Physics Department
@@ -9,8 +9,8 @@
             University Park PA 16802
             U.S.A.  
 
-            http://www.phys.psu.edu/~collins/
-            http://www.phys.psu.edu/~collins/latexmk/
+            http://www.personal.psu.edu/jcc8/
+	    http://www.personal.psu.edu/jcc8/latexmk/
             username jcc8 at node psu.edu
 
 Latexmk is a "make" tool for building latex documents. It runs latex

Modified: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/README
===================================================================
--- trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/README	2016-10-15 22:55:03 UTC (rev 42271)
+++ trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/README	2016-10-15 22:55:38 UTC (rev 42272)
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
-Latexmk, version 4.45, 22 April 2016
-------------------------------------
+Latexmk, version 4.48, 5 September 2016
+---------------------------------------
 
 Latexmk completely automates the process of generating a LaTeX
 document.  Essentially, it is a highly specialized cousin of the
@@ -37,7 +37,7 @@
             University Park PA 16802
             U.S.A.  
 
-            http://www.phys.psu.edu/~collins/
+            http://www.personal.psu.edu/jcc8/
             username jcc8 at node psu.edu
 
 The start of the script file has copyright notices and disclaimers.  It
@@ -78,7 +78,7 @@
    perfectly.  Refer to $pscmd in the man page.
 
 6) Latexmk can be downloaded from the author's site at
-   http://www.phys.psu.edu/~collins/software/latexmk/
+   http://www.personal.psu.edu/jcc8/latexmk/
    This site also includes previous versions, and sometimes newer
    versions under development.
 
@@ -91,7 +91,7 @@
 
 John Collins
 ---------------------------- "latexmk -h" ----------------------------
-Latexmk 4.45: Automatic LaTeX document generation routine
+Latexmk 4.48: Automatic LaTeX document generation routine
 
 Usage: latexmk [latexmk_options] [filename ...]
 

Added: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles/README-latexmk-rcfiles
===================================================================
--- trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles/README-latexmk-rcfiles	                        (rev 0)
+++ trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles/README-latexmk-rcfiles	2016-10-15 22:55:38 UTC (rev 42272)
@@ -0,0 +1,62 @@
+The files in this directory provide suggestions for customizing an
+initialization file ("rc file") for latexmk.  See the latexmk
+documentation for general information on its initialization files.
+
+Not only do these files provide solutions to particular problems, but
+they can be also used as inspiration for solutions to other cases.
+
+NOTES: 
+
+1. The examples are not complete rc files, but contain fragments that
+   you can copy to one of your .latexmkrc/latexmkrc files.
+
+2. These examples are developed by particular users to solve
+   particular problems.  You may have to customize them for your own
+   needs.  So read the comments carefully, and understand how the
+   examples are working.
+
+3. Another source of examples is in Herb Schulz's distribution of
+   TexShop, at http://homepage.mac.com/herbs2, for some further
+   examples.  (The file Latexmk321jTeXShop.zip is the one you want.)
+   It shows how to use glossaries, epstopdf, pdftricks and pst-pdf.
+
+4. I have generally arranged for filenames to be quoted on command
+   lines, e.g., 
+
+       system( "makeindex -o \"$_[0].lnd\" \"$_[0].ldx\"" );
+
+   In many cases the quotes may be omitted, as in 
+
+       system( "makeindex -o $_[0].lnd $_[0].ldx" );
+
+   But it is preferable to leave the quotes in, since they provide
+   safety against special characters in filenames.  The double quotes
+   appear not to cause problems in all situations that I have tried.
+
+5. Note that the files for exceltex and pythontex illustrate an answer
+   to an issue that arises in the following generic situation:
+   a.  A LaTeX package wants to use an external program to do some
+       processing. It does this by writing a control file that is used
+       by the external program.
+   b.  The user is to run the external program after a first run of
+       latex/pdflatex (etc).  It generates some files that are to be
+       read by a subsequent compilation of the TeX document.
+   c.  It is desired to do the run of the external program and
+       to do the extra run of latex/pdflatex only when necessary. 
+   d.  Possibly there are further dependencies on files used by the
+       external program.
+   The third problem is handled nicely by latexmk's normal mechanisms,
+   but it is necessary to persuade it to create a suitable rule to run
+   the external program.  A nice trick with custom dependencies,
+   illustrated by exceltex and pythontex examples, gets the rule set
+   up.  The exceltex shows how dependencies on other files can be
+   determined. 
+
+6. Further assistance for latexmk can be provided when style files
+   provide suitable messages about missing files.  See the
+   exceltex1.sty and pythontex1.sty files for examples of what is
+   needed.  These files are modifications of exceltex.sty and
+   pythontex.sty that provide the necessary assistance.  (The versions
+   were the ones current on 30 April 2013.)
+
+


Property changes on: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles/README-latexmk-rcfiles
___________________________________________________________________
Added: svn:eol-style
## -0,0 +1 ##
+native
\ No newline at end of property
Deleted: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles/README-rcfiles
===================================================================
--- trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles/README-rcfiles	2016-10-15 22:55:03 UTC (rev 42271)
+++ trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles/README-rcfiles	2016-10-15 22:55:38 UTC (rev 42272)
@@ -1,62 +0,0 @@
-The files in this directory provide suggestions for customizing an
-initialization file ("rc file") for latexmk.  See the latexmk
-documentation for general information on its initialization files.
-
-Not only do these files provide solutions to particular problems, but
-they can be also used as inspiration for solutions to other cases.
-
-NOTES: 
-
-1. The examples are not complete rc files, but contain fragments that
-   you can copy to one of your .latexmkrc/latexmkrc files.
-
-2. These examples are developed by particular users to solve
-   particular problems.  You may have to customize them for your own
-   needs.  So read the comments carefully, and understand how the
-   examples are working.
-
-3. Another source of examples is in Herb Schulz's distribution of
-   TexShop, at http://homepage.mac.com/herbs2, for some further
-   examples.  (The file Latexmk321jTeXShop.zip is the one you want.)
-   It shows how to use glossaries, epstopdf, pdftricks and pst-pdf.
-
-4. I have generally arranged for filenames to be quoted on command
-   lines, e.g., 
-
-       system( "makeindex -o \"$_[0].lnd\" \"$_[0].ldx\"" );
-
-   In many cases the quotes may be omitted, as in 
-
-       system( "makeindex -o $_[0].lnd $_[0].ldx" );
-
-   But it is preferable to leave the quotes in, since they provide
-   safety against special characters in filenames.  The double quotes
-   appear not to cause problems in all situations that I have tried.
-
-5. Note that the files for exceltex and pythontex illustrate an answer
-   to an issue that arises in the following generic situation:
-   a.  A LaTeX package wants to use an external program to do some
-       processing. It does this by writing a control file that is used
-       by the external program.
-   b.  The user is to run the external program after a first run of
-       latex/pdflatex (etc).  It generates some files that are to be
-       read by a subsequent compilation of the TeX document.
-   c.  It is desired to do the run of the external program and
-       to do the extra run of latex/pdflatex only when necessary. 
-   d.  Possibly there are further dependencies on files used by the
-       external program.
-   The third problem is handled nicely by latexmk's normal mechanisms,
-   but it is necessary to persuade it to create a suitable rule to run
-   the external program.  A nice trick with custom dependencies,
-   illustrated by exceltex and pythontex examples, gets the rule set
-   up.  The exceltex shows how dependencies on other files can be
-   determined. 
-
-6. Further assistance for latexmk can be provided when style files
-   provide suitable messages about missing files.  See the
-   exceltex1.sty and pythontex1.sty files for examples of what is
-   needed.  These files are modifications of exceltex.sty and
-   pythontex.sty that provide the necessary assistance.  (The versions
-   were the ones current on 30 April 2013.)
-
-

Modified: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles/asymptote_latexmkrc
===================================================================
--- trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles/asymptote_latexmkrc	2016-10-15 22:55:03 UTC (rev 42271)
+++ trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles/asymptote_latexmkrc	2016-10-15 22:55:38 UTC (rev 42272)
@@ -19,9 +19,58 @@
 # is to be put in one of latexmk's rc files, e.g., ~/.latexmkrc.)
 #
 
-# The following lines are taken from the documentation for V. 2.03 of
-# asymptote:
-sub asy {return system("asy \"$_[0]\"");}
-add_cus_dep("asy","eps",0,"asy");
-add_cus_dep("asy","pdf",0,"asy");
-add_cus_dep("asy","tex",0,"asy");
+## OLD simple method (taken from the documentation for V. 2.03 of
+## asymptote).  These definitions are simple, but they may not always
+## give the desired type of output file, and they do not ensure that
+## latexmk has dependency information about files imported from the
+## asy file.
+#OLD sub asy {return system("asy \"$_[0]\"");}
+#OLD add_cus_dep("asy","eps",0,"asy");
+#OLD add_cus_dep("asy","pdf",0,"asy");
+#OLD add_cus_dep("asy","tex",0,"asy");
+
+
+# The following definitions arrange to run asy with the correct output
+# file type.  They run asy in a verbose mode so that dependency
+# information on imported files can be extracted.  To avoid adding a
+# lot of extra printout on the screen of unimportant messages, the
+# output is sent to a log file.  Since this includes error messages,
+# which the user should see, latexmk types out error messages and the
+# like. These definitions need latexmk 4.48 or later.
+
+add_cus_dep("asy","eps",0,"asy2eps");
+add_cus_dep("asy","pdf",0,"asy2pdf");
+add_cus_dep("asy","tex",0,"asy2tex");
+
+sub asy2eps { return asy2x( $_[0], 'eps' ); }
+sub asy2pdf { return asy2x( $_[0], 'pdf' ); }
+sub asy2tex { return asy2x( $_[0], 'tex' ); }
+
+sub asy2x   {
+   my $ret = system("asy -vv -f '$_[1]' '$_[0]' >& '$_[0].log'");
+   my $FH = new FileHandle;
+   open $FH, "$_[0].log";
+   %imp = ();
+
+   while (<$FH>) {
+       if (/^(Including|Loading) .* from (.*)\s*$/) {
+          my $import = $2;
+	  $imp{$import} = 1;
+       }
+       elsif ( /^error/ || /^.*\.asy: \d/ ) {
+           warn "==Message from asy: $_";
+	   $ret = 1;
+       }
+       elsif ( /^kpsewhich / || /^Processing / || /^Using /
+               || /^Welcome / || /^Wrote /|| /^cd /|| /^gs /
+	     ) {
+       }
+       else {
+           warn "==Message from asy: $_";
+       }
+   }
+   close $FH;
+# For latexmk 4.48
+   rdb_set_source( $rule, keys %imp );
+   return $ret;
+}

Added: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/extra-scripts/README-latexmk-scripts
===================================================================
--- trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/extra-scripts/README-latexmk-scripts	                        (rev 0)
+++ trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/extra-scripts/README-latexmk-scripts	2016-10-15 22:55:38 UTC (rev 42272)
@@ -0,0 +1,147 @@
+Auxiliary scripts for latexmk
+=============================
+
+John Collins (collins at phys.psu.edu)
+23 Jun 2010
+
+Latexmk can be configured to use different programs than the standard
+ones to perform its tasks.  If a user finds that the default behavior
+is not what is desired, it is frequently possible to use a script
+replacing a standard program to acheive the desired effect.  It is
+also possible to have a script to run some other programs as well as
+latexmk to do certain tasks.  A certain amount of creativity works
+wonders. 
+
+In this directory are some scripts that you may find useful.  They
+have been provided by other users (who I thank) or by myself.  They
+were written to perform certain jobs desired by these users, so they
+may have some very special features that are not useful to everytone.
+You may well need to modify them for your own needs, and you will
+probably need to read through them in detail to understand what they
+do.  They can also be quite operating system specific.
+
+For all these scripts, the instructions assumes that the script is in
+the path for executables, and that you have done whatever your OS
+needs you to do to make the script executable.
+
+1.  startacroread
+
+    This is specific for UNIX/LINUX systems (script running under
+    bash).  It solves a problem that when acroread is used as a pdf
+    viewer and latexmk is used in preview-continuous mode, acroread
+    does not automatically update its display when the pdf file
+    changes.
+
+    Prerequisites:
+                    UNIX-style OS
+                    bash           (command shell)
+                    acroread
+                    pdfopen and pdfclose from the xpdfopen package
+                     (see http://www.tug.org/tex-archive/support/xpdfopen/)
+
+    To use:
+
+       Put the following lines in a startup file for latexmk
+
+              $pdf_previewer = "start startacrobat";
+              $pdf_update_method = "2";
+
+       This will, of course, only have an effect when latexmk will
+       have you view pdf files.
+
+    Advantage:
+
+       Use of acroread (under UNIX/LINUX) for viewing pdf files, with
+       automatic update when latexmk -pvc is used.
+
+    Disadvantage:
+
+       Acroread does not retain its page position; it returns to the
+       first page.  (Both gv and xpdf are better for this.)
+
+    Notes:
+
+       The viewer window disappears and then reappears as the
+       foreground window.
+
+       This solution cannot be easily adapted under MSWindows, since
+       the MSWindows version of acroread locks the pdf file, so that a
+       new version cannot be written.
+
+   Thanks: Thorsten Bonow
+
+
+
+2.  l1
+
+    For UNIX/LINUX, possibly cygwin, although I haven't tried.
+
+    It is a replacement for latex that brings up a window there are
+    errors.  It first runs latex to completion (without a stop if
+    there are errors).   Then if there are errors, it makes their
+    description (from the log file) into a dvi file, which it brings
+    up in a separate window.
+
+    Advantage:
+
+       Automatic display of log file, in middle of workflow when using
+       latexmk in preview-continuous mode.
+
+    Disadvantage:
+
+       Log files are verbose.  A single line error message in a latex
+       run is often easier to read.
+
+    Thanks:  Tom Schneider
+
+
+3.  l2
+
+    A version of l1 with command-line options for changing its
+    behavior.
+
+
+4.  kickxdvi
+
+    A script for making xdvi update its display.  Used by l1.
+
+5.  dvipdfm_call
+    dvipdfmx_call
+    dvipdfm_call.bat
+    dvipdfmx_call.bat
+
+    Scripts for using dvipdfm or dvipdfmx with the same command-line
+    syntax as dvipdf.
+
+    To get latexmk to use dvipdfm or dvipdfmx to convert dvi files to
+    pdf files, it USED to be necessary to configure latexmk to use one
+    of these scripts.  But since v. 4.01, latexmk has more flexible
+    configuration methods.  Currently, to use dvipdfm, just put the
+    following in one of latexmk's initialization files (e.g.,
+    ~/.latexmkrc):
+
+         $dvipdf = "dvipdfm %O -o %D %S";
+
+    (To use dvipdfmx, just change the string dvipdfm to dvipdfmx.)
+    The command specified here is used when latexmk is requested to
+    make pdf files by conversion from dvi files, e.g., by the
+    latexmk's command-line option -pdfdvi.
+
+    But I leave the scripts here.  For OLD versions of latexmk, you
+    would have used the configuration line 
+
+         $dvipdf = 'dvipdfm_call';     #OBSOLETE
+    or
+         $dvipdf = 'dvipdfmx_call';    #OBSOLETE
+    
+    These still work, but they are obsolete.    
+
+    For Unix-like systems, including linux and Mac OS-X, use the
+    scripts dvipdfm_call and dvipdfmx_call.
+    For MS-Windows systems use the batch files dvipdfm_call.bat and
+    dvipdfmx_call.bat.
+
+6.  completion.bash
+
+    Bash script by Christoph Junghans that implements a bash
+    completion function for latexmk.


Property changes on: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/extra-scripts/README-latexmk-scripts
___________________________________________________________________
Added: svn:eol-style
## -0,0 +1 ##
+native
\ No newline at end of property
Deleted: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/extra-scripts/README-scripts
===================================================================
--- trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/extra-scripts/README-scripts	2016-10-15 22:55:03 UTC (rev 42271)
+++ trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/extra-scripts/README-scripts	2016-10-15 22:55:38 UTC (rev 42272)
@@ -1,147 +0,0 @@
-Auxiliary scripts for latexmk
-=============================
-
-John Collins (collins at phys.psu.edu)
-23 Jun 2010
-
-Latexmk can be configured to use different programs than the standard
-ones to perform its tasks.  If a user finds that the default behavior
-is not what is desired, it is frequently possible to use a script
-replacing a standard program to acheive the desired effect.  It is
-also possible to have a script to run some other programs as well as
-latexmk to do certain tasks.  A certain amount of creativity works
-wonders. 
-
-In this directory are some scripts that you may find useful.  They
-have been provided by other users (who I thank) or by myself.  They
-were written to perform certain jobs desired by these users, so they
-may have some very special features that are not useful to everytone.
-You may well need to modify them for your own needs, and you will
-probably need to read through them in detail to understand what they
-do.  They can also be quite operating system specific.
-
-For all these scripts, the instructions assumes that the script is in
-the path for executables, and that you have done whatever your OS
-needs you to do to make the script executable.
-
-1.  startacroread
-
-    This is specific for UNIX/LINUX systems (script running under
-    bash).  It solves a problem that when acroread is used as a pdf
-    viewer and latexmk is used in preview-continuous mode, acroread
-    does not automatically update its display when the pdf file
-    changes.
-
-    Prerequisites:
-                    UNIX-style OS
-                    bash           (command shell)
-                    acroread
-                    pdfopen and pdfclose from the xpdfopen package
-                     (see http://www.tug.org/tex-archive/support/xpdfopen/)
-
-    To use:
-
-       Put the following lines in a startup file for latexmk
-
-              $pdf_previewer = "start startacrobat";
-              $pdf_update_method = "2";
-
-       This will, of course, only have an effect when latexmk will
-       have you view pdf files.
-
-    Advantage:
-
-       Use of acroread (under UNIX/LINUX) for viewing pdf files, with
-       automatic update when latexmk -pvc is used.
-
-    Disadvantage:
-
-       Acroread does not retain its page position; it returns to the
-       first page.  (Both gv and xpdf are better for this.)
-
-    Notes:
-
-       The viewer window disappears and then reappears as the
-       foreground window.
-
-       This solution cannot be easily adapted under MSWindows, since
-       the MSWindows version of acroread locks the pdf file, so that a
-       new version cannot be written.
-
-   Thanks: Thorsten Bonow
-
-
-
-2.  l1
-
-    For UNIX/LINUX, possibly cygwin, although I haven't tried.
-
-    It is a replacement for latex that brings up a window there are
-    errors.  It first runs latex to completion (without a stop if
-    there are errors).   Then if there are errors, it makes their
-    description (from the log file) into a dvi file, which it brings
-    up in a separate window.
-
-    Advantage:
-
-       Automatic display of log file, in middle of workflow when using
-       latexmk in preview-continuous mode.
-
-    Disadvantage:
-
-       Log files are verbose.  A single line error message in a latex
-       run is often easier to read.
-
-    Thanks:  Tom Schneider
-
-
-3.  l2
-
-    A version of l1 with command-line options for changing its
-    behavior.
-
-
-4.  kickxdvi
-
-    A script for making xdvi update its display.  Used by l1.
-
-5.  dvipdfm_call
-    dvipdfmx_call
-    dvipdfm_call.bat
-    dvipdfmx_call.bat
-
-    Scripts for using dvipdfm or dvipdfmx with the same command-line
-    syntax as dvipdf.
-
-    To get latexmk to use dvipdfm or dvipdfmx to convert dvi files to
-    pdf files, it USED to be necessary to configure latexmk to use one
-    of these scripts.  But since v. 4.01, latexmk has more flexible
-    configuration methods.  Currently, to use dvipdfm, just put the
-    following in one of latexmk's initialization files (e.g.,
-    ~/.latexmkrc):
-
-         $dvipdf = "dvipdfm %O -o %D %S";
-
-    (To use dvipdfmx, just change the string dvipdfm to dvipdfmx.)
-    The command specified here is used when latexmk is requested to
-    make pdf files by conversion from dvi files, e.g., by the
-    latexmk's command-line option -pdfdvi.
-
-    But I leave the scripts here.  For OLD versions of latexmk, you
-    would have used the configuration line 
-
-         $dvipdf = 'dvipdfm_call';     #OBSOLETE
-    or
-         $dvipdf = 'dvipdfmx_call';    #OBSOLETE
-    
-    These still work, but they are obsolete.    
-
-    For Unix-like systems, including linux and Mac OS-X, use the
-    scripts dvipdfm_call and dvipdfmx_call.
-    For MS-Windows systems use the batch files dvipdfm_call.bat and
-    dvipdfmx_call.bat.
-
-6.  completion.bash
-
-    Bash script by Christoph Junghans that implements a bash
-    completion function for latexmk.

Modified: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/extra-scripts/dvipdfm_call.bat
===================================================================
--- trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/extra-scripts/dvipdfm_call.bat	2016-10-15 22:55:03 UTC (rev 42271)
+++ trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/extra-scripts/dvipdfm_call.bat	2016-10-15 22:55:38 UTC (rev 42272)
@@ -1,19 +1,19 @@
- at echo off
-REM Run dvipdfm from dvipdf-style command-line
-REM Assume no options specified
-REM If this script is called from latexmk,
-REM    we have %1=source.dvi, %2=dest.pdf
-REM But for safety, let's handle correctly a one argument call,
-REM    i.e., %1=source, with no %2
-
-if "%2" == "" goto onearg
-
-:twoarg
-dvipdfm -o %2 %1
-goto done
-
-:onearg
-dvipdfm %1
-
-
+ at echo off
+REM Run dvipdfm from dvipdf-style command-line
+REM Assume no options specified
+REM If this script is called from latexmk,
+REM    we have %1=source.dvi, %2=dest.pdf
+REM But for safety, let's handle correctly a one argument call,
+REM    i.e., %1=source, with no %2
+
+if "%2" == "" goto onearg
+
+:twoarg
+dvipdfm -o %2 %1
+goto done
+
+:onearg
+dvipdfm %1
+
+
 :done
\ No newline at end of file

Modified: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/extra-scripts/dvipdfmx_call.bat
===================================================================
--- trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/extra-scripts/dvipdfmx_call.bat	2016-10-15 22:55:03 UTC (rev 42271)
+++ trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/extra-scripts/dvipdfmx_call.bat	2016-10-15 22:55:38 UTC (rev 42272)
@@ -1,19 +1,19 @@
- at echo off
-REM Run dvipdfmx from dvipdf-style command-line
-REM Assume no options specified
-REM If this script is called from latexmk,
-REM    we have %1=source.dvi, %2=dest.pdf
-REM But for safety, let's handle correctly a one argument call,
-REM    i.e., %1=source, with no %2
-
-if "%2" == "" goto onearg
-
-:twoarg
-dvipdfmx -o %2 %1
-goto done
-
-:onearg
-dvipdfmx %1
-
-
+ at echo off
+REM Run dvipdfmx from dvipdf-style command-line
+REM Assume no options specified
+REM If this script is called from latexmk,
+REM    we have %1=source.dvi, %2=dest.pdf
+REM But for safety, let's handle correctly a one argument call,
+REM    i.e., %1=source, with no %2
+
+if "%2" == "" goto onearg
+
+:twoarg
+dvipdfmx -o %2 %1
+goto done
+
+:onearg
+dvipdfmx %1
+
+
 :done
\ No newline at end of file

Modified: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/latexmk.pdf
===================================================================
(Binary files differ)

Modified: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/latexmk.txt
===================================================================
--- trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/latexmk.txt	2016-10-15 22:55:03 UTC (rev 42271)
+++ trunk/Master/texmf-dist/doc/support/latexmk/latexmk.txt	2016-10-15 22:55:38 UTC (rev 42272)
@@ -127,7 +127,7 @@
 
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                               2
+                               5 September 2016                              2
 
 
 
@@ -159,27 +159,30 @@
               able  in  the section "List of configuration variables usable in
               initialization files".
 
-       If a file is specified without an extension, then the ".tex"  extension
-       is automatically added, just as LaTeX does.  Thus, if you specify:
+              If a file is specified without an  extension,  then  the  ".tex"
+              extension  is automatically added, just as LaTeX does.  Thus, if
+              you specify:
 
-            latexmk foo
+                   latexmk foo
 
-       then latexmk will operate on the file "foo.tex".
+              then latexmk will operate on the file "foo.tex".
 
 
        -auxdir=FOO or -aux-directory=FOO
-
-              Sets  the  directory  for  auxiliary  output files of (pdf)latex
-              (.aux, .log etc).  This achieves its effect by  the  -aux-direc-
-              tory  option  of (pdf)latex, which currently is only implemented
+              Sets the directory for  auxiliary  output  files  of  (pdf)latex
+              (.aux,  .log  etc).  This achieves its effect by the -aux-direc-
+              tory option of (pdf)latex, which currently is  only  implemented
               on the MiKTeX version of (pdf)latex.
 
-              See  also  the  -outdir/-output-directory   options,   and   the
+              See   also   the   -outdir/-output-directory  options,  and  the
               $aux_dir,  $out_dir,  and  $search_path_separator  configuration
-              variables of latexmk.  In particular, see the  documentation  of
-              $out_dir  for  some  complications  on  what directory names are
+              variables  of  latexmk.  In particular, see the documentation of
+              $out_dir for some complications  on  what  directory  names  are
               suitable.
 
+              If you also use the -cd option, and the specified auxiliary out-
+              put directory is a relative path, then the path  is  interpreted
+              relative to the document directory.
 
 
        -bibtex
@@ -186,210 +189,240 @@
               When the source file uses bbl files for bibliography, run bibtex
               or biber as needed to regenerate the bbl files.
 
-              This  property can also be configured by setting the $bibtex_use
-              variable to 2 in a configuration file
+              This property can also be configured by setting the  $bibtex_use
 
-       -bibtex-
-              Never run bibtex or biber.
 
 
+                               5 September 2016                              3
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                               3
 
 
 
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
+              variable to 2 in a configuration file
 
 
-              A common use for this option is when a document  comes  from  an
-              external  source,  complete  with  its bbl file(s), and the user
-              does not have the corresponding bib files  available.   In  this
-              situation  use  of the -bibtex- option will prevent latexmk from
+       -bibtex-
+              Never run bibtex or biber.
+
+              A  common  use  for this option is when a document comes from an
+              external source, complete with its bbl  file(s),  and  the  user
+              does  not  have  the corresponding bib files available.  In this
+              situation use of the -bibtex- option will prevent  latexmk  from
               trying to run bibtex or biber, which would result in overwriting
               of the bbl files.
 
+
        -bibtex-cond
-              When  the source file uses bbl file(s) for the bibliography, run
-              bibtex or biber as needed to regenerate the bbl files, but  only
-              if  the relevant bib file(s) exist.  Thus when the bib files are
-              not available, bibtex or biber  is  not  run,  thereby  avoiding
+              When the source file uses bbl file(s) for the bibliography,  run
+              bibtex  or biber as needed to regenerate the bbl files, but only
+              if the relevant bib file(s) exist.  Thus when the bib files  are
+              not  available,  bibtex  or  biber  is not run, thereby avoiding
               overwriting of the bbl file(s).  This is the default setting.
 
-              (Note  that  it  is  possible for latexmk to decide that the bib
-              file does not exist, even though the bib  file  does  exist  and
-              bibtex  or biber finds it.  The problem is that the bib file may
-              not be in the current directory but in  some  search  path;  the
+              (Note that it is possible for latexmk to  decide  that  the  bib
+              file  does  not  exist,  even though the bib file does exist and
+              bibtex or biber finds it.  The problem is that the bib file  may
+              not  be  in  the  current directory but in some search path; the
               places latexmk and bibtex or biber cause to be searched need not
-              be identical.  On modern installations of TeX and  related  pro-
-              grams  this  problem  should  not  arise, since latexmk uses the
+              be  identical.   On modern installations of TeX and related pro-
+              grams this problem should not  arise,  since  latexmk  uses  the
               kpsewhich program to do the search, and kpsewhich should use the
-              same  search  path as bibtex and biber.  If this problem arises,
+              same search path as bibtex and biber.  If this  problem  arises,
               use the -bibtex option when invoking latexmk.)
 
+
        -bm <message>
-              A banner message to print diagonally across each page when  con-
-              verting  the dvi file to postscript.  The message must be a sin-
-              gle argument on the command line  so  be  careful  with  quoting
+              A  banner message to print diagonally across each page when con-
+              verting the dvi file to postscript.  The message must be a  sin-
+              gle  argument  on  the  command  line so be careful with quoting
               spaces and such.
 
-              Note  that  if  the  -bm  option is specified, the -ps option is
+              Note that if the -bm option is  specified,  the  -ps  option  is
               assumed.
 
+
        -bi <intensity>
-              How dark to print the banner message.  A decimal number  between
+              How  dark to print the banner message.  A decimal number between
               0 and 1.  0 is black and 1 is white.  The default is 0.95, which
               is OK unless your toner cartridge is getting low.
 
+
        -bs <scale>
-              A decimal number that specifies how  large  the  banner  message
-              will  be printed.  Experimentation is necessary to get the right
-              scale for your message, as a rule of thumb the scale  should  be
-              about  equal  to 1100 divided by the number of characters in the
-              message.  The default is 220.0 which is just right for 5 charac-
-              ter messages.
+              A  decimal  number  that  specifies how large the banner message
+              will be printed.  Experimentation is necessary to get the  right
+              scale  for  your message, as a rule of thumb the scale should be
+              about equal to 1100 divided by the number of characters  in  the
 
-       -commands
-              List the commands used by latexmk for processing files, and then
-              exit.
 
-       -c     Clean up (remove) all regeneratable files generated by latex and
-              bibtex or biber except dvi, postscript and pdf.  These files are
-              a combination of log files, aux files, latexmk's  database  file
-              of  source file information, and those with extensions specified
-              in the @generated_exts  configuration  variable.   In  addition,
 
+                               5 September 2016                              4
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                               4
 
 
 
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
+              message.  The default is 220.0 which is just right for 5 charac-
+              ter messages.
 
 
-              files  specified  by  the  $clean_ext configuration variable are
+       -commands
+              List the commands used by latexmk for processing files, and then
+              exit.
+
+
+       -c     Clean up (remove) all regeneratable files generated by latex and
+              bibtex or biber except dvi, postscript and pdf.  These files are
+              a  combination  of log files, aux files, latexmk's database file
+              of source file information, and those with extensions  specified
+              in  the  @generated_exts  configuration  variable.  In addition,
+              files specified by the  $clean_ext  configuration  variable  are
               removed.
 
-              This cleanup is instead of a regular make.  See the  -gg  option
+              This  cleanup  is instead of a regular make.  See the -gg option
               if you want to do a cleanup then a make.
 
-              If  $bibtex_use  is set to 0 or 1, bbl files are counted as non-
+              If $bibtex_use is set to 0 or 1, bbl files are counted  as  non-
               regeneratable.
 
-              If $cleanup_includes_cusdep_generated is nonzero,  regeneratable
-              files  are  considered  as  including  those generated by custom
-              dependencies and are also deleted.  Otherwise  these  files  are
+              If  $cleanup_includes_cusdep_generated is nonzero, regeneratable
+              files are considered as  including  those  generated  by  custom
+              dependencies  and  are  also deleted.  Otherwise these files are
               not deleted.
 
+
        -C     Clean up (remove) all regeneratable files generated by latex and
-              bibtex or biber.  This is the same as the  -c  option  with  the
-              addition  of  dvi, postscript and pdf files, and those specified
+              bibtex  or  biber.   This  is the same as the -c option with the
+              addition of dvi, postscript and pdf files, and  those  specified
               in the $clean_full_ext configuration variable.
 
-              This cleanup is instead of a regular make.  See the  -gg  option
+              This  cleanup  is instead of a regular make.  See the -gg option
               if you want to do a cleanup than a make.
 
-              If  $bibtex_use  is set to 0 or 1, bbl files are counted as non-
+              If $bibtex_use is set to 0 or 1, bbl files are counted  as  non-
               regeneratable.
 
-              If $cleanup_includes_cusdep_generated is nonzero,  regeneratable
-              files  are  considered  as  including  those generated by custom
-              dependencies and are also deleted.  Otherwise  these  files  are
+              If  $cleanup_includes_cusdep_generated is nonzero, regeneratable
+              files are considered as  including  those  generated  by  custom
+              dependencies  and  are  also deleted.  Otherwise these files are
               not deleted.
 
-       -CA    (Obsolete).   Now  equivalent to the -C option.  See that option
+
+       -CA    (Obsolete).  Now equivalent to the -C option.  See  that  option
               for details.
 
-       -cd    Change to the directory containing the main source  file  before
-              processing  it.   Then  all  the generated files (aux, log, dvi,
+
+       -cd    Change  to  the directory containing the main source file before
+              processing it.  Then all the generated  files  (aux,  log,  dvi,
               pdf, etc) will be relative to the source file.
 
-              This option is particularly useful when latexmk is invoked  from
-              a  GUI configured to invoke latexmk with a full pathname for the
-              source file.
 
-       -cd-   Do NOT change to the directory containing the main  source  file
-              before  processing  it.  Then all the generated files (aux, log,
-              dvi, pdf, etc) will be relative to the current directory  rather
-              than the source file.
 
-              This  is the default behavior and corresponds to the behavior of
-              the latex and pdflatex programs.  However, it is  not  desirable
-              behavior  when  latexmk is invoked by a GUI configured to invoke
-              latexmk with a full pathname for the source file.  See  the  -cd
-              option.
 
-       -CF    Remove  the file containing the database of source file informa-
-              tion, before doing the other actions requested.
+                               5 September 2016                              5
 
-       -d     Set draft mode.  This prints the banner message  "DRAFT"  across
-              your  page when converting the dvi file to postscript.  Size and
 
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                               5
 
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
+              This  option is particularly useful when latexmk is invoked from
+              a GUI configured to invoke latexmk with a full pathname for  the
+              source file.
 
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
+       -cd-   Do  NOT  change to the directory containing the main source file
+              before processing it.  Then all the generated files  (aux,  log,
+              dvi,  pdf, etc) will be relative to the current directory rather
+              than the source file.
 
+              This is the default behavior and corresponds to the behavior  of
+              the  latex  and pdflatex programs.  However, it is not desirable
+              behavior when latexmk is invoked by a GUI configured  to  invoke
+              latexmk  with  a full pathname for the source file.  See the -cd
+              option.
 
+
+       -CF    Remove the file containing the database of source file  informa-
+              tion, before doing the other actions requested.
+
+
+       -d     Set  draft  mode.  This prints the banner message "DRAFT" across
+              your page when converting the dvi file to postscript.  Size  and
               intensity can be modified with the -bs and -bi options.  The -bm
-              option  will override this option as this is really just a short
+              option will override this option as this is really just a  short
               way of specifying:
 
                    latexmk -bm DRAFT
 
-              Note that if the -d option  is  specified,  the  -ps  option  is
+              Note  that  if  the  -d  option  is specified, the -ps option is
               assumed.
 
+
        -deps  Show a list of dependent files after processing.  This is in the
-              form of a dependency list of the form used by the make  program,
+              form  of a dependency list of the form used by the make program,
               and it is therefore suitable for use in a Makefile.  It gives an
               overall view of the files without listing intermediate files, as
               well as latexmk can determine them.
 
-              By  default the list of dependent files is sent to stdout (i.e.,
-              normally to the screen unless you've redirected  latexmk's  out-
+              By default the list of dependent files is sent to stdout  (i.e.,
+              normally  to  the screen unless you've redirected latexmk's out-
               put). But you can set the filename where the list is sent by the
               -deps-out= option.
 
-              See the section "USING latexmk WITH make" for an example of  how
+              See  the section "USING latexmk WITH make" for an example of how
               to use a dependency list with make.
 
-              Users  familiar  with  GNU  automake  and gcc will find that the
-              -deps option is very similar in its purpose and results  to  the
-              -M  option  to gcc.  (In fact, latexmk also has options -M, -MF,
+              Users familiar with GNU automake and  gcc  will  find  that  the
+              -deps  option  is very similar in its purpose and results to the
+              -M option to gcc.  (In fact, latexmk also has options  -M,  -MF,
               and -MP options that behave like those of gcc.)
 
+
        -dependents
               Equivalent to -deps.
 
-       -deps- Do not show a list of dependent files after  processing.   (This
+
+
+
+                               5 September 2016                              6
+
+
+
+
+
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
+
+
+       -deps- Do  not  show a list of dependent files after processing.  (This
               is the default.)
 
+
        -dependents-
               Equivalent to -deps-.
 
+
        -deps-out=FILENAME
-              Set  the  filename to which the list of dependent files is writ-
-              ten.  If the FILENAME argument is omitted or set  to  "-",  then
+              Set the filename to which the list of dependent files  is  writ-
+              ten.   If  the  FILENAME argument is omitted or set to "-", then
               the output is sent to stdout.
 
-              Use  of  this  option  also  turns  on the output of the list of
+              Use of this option also turns on  the  output  of  the  list  of
               dependent files after processing.
 
-       -dF    Dvi file filtering.  The argument to this  option  is  a  filter
-              which  will  generate  a  filtered  dvi  file with the extension
-              ".dviF".  All extra processing (e.g. conversion  to  postscript,
-              preview,  printing)  will then be performed on this filtered dvi
+
+       -dF    Dvi  file  filtering.   The  argument to this option is a filter
+              which will generate a  filtered  dvi  file  with  the  extension
+              ".dviF".   All  extra processing (e.g. conversion to postscript,
+              preview, printing) will then be performed on this  filtered  dvi
               file.
 
               Example usage: To use dviselect to select only the even pages of
@@ -397,62 +430,66 @@
 
                    latexmk -dF "dviselect even" foo.tex
 
+
        -diagnostics
-              Print  detailed  diagnostics  during  a  run.  This may help for
-              debugging  problems  or  to  understand  latexmk's  behavior  in
+              Print detailed diagnostics during a  run.   This  may  help  for
+              debugging problems or to understand latexmk's behavior in diffi-
+              cult situations.
 
 
+       -dvi   Generate dvi version of document.
 
-                                 22 April 2016                               6
 
+       -dvi-  Turn off generation of dvi version of document.  (This  may  get
+              overridden,  if  some other file is made (e.g., a .ps file) that
+              is generated from the dvi file, or if no generated file  at  all
+              is requested.)
 
 
+       -e <code>
+              Execute  the  specified  initialization  code before processing.
+              The code is Perl code of the same form as is used  in  latexmk's
+              initialization files -- for more details, see the information on
+              the -r option, and the section about  "Configuration/initializa-
+              tion  (RC)  files".  The code is typically a sequence of assign-
+              ment statements separated by semicolons.
 
+              The code is executed when the -e option  is  encountered  during
+              latexmk's  parsing of its command line.  See the -r option for a
+              way of executing initialization code  from  a  file.   An  error
+              results  in  latexmk stopping.  Multiple instances of the -r and
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-              difficult situations.
+                               5 September 2016                              7
 
-       -dvi   Generate dvi version of document.
 
-       -dvi-  Turn  off  generation of dvi version of document.  (This may get
-              overridden, if some other file is made (e.g., a .ps  file)  that
-              is  generated  from the dvi file, or if no generated file at all
-              is requested.)
 
-       -e <code>
-              Execute the specified  initialization  code  before  processing.
-              The  code  is Perl code of the same form as is used in latexmk's
-              initialization files -- for more details, see the information on
-              the  -r option, and the section about "Configuration/initializa-
-              tion (RC) files".  The code is typically a sequence  of  assign-
-              ment statements separated by semicolons.
 
-              The  code  is  executed when the -e option is encountered during
-              latexmk's parsing of its command line.  See the -r option for  a
-              way  of  executing  initialization  code  from a file.  An error
-              results in latexmk stopping.  Multiple instances of the  -r  and
-              -e  options can be used, and they are executed in the order they
+
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
+
+
+              -e options can be used, and they are executed in the order  they
               appear on the command line.
 
               Some care is needed to deal with proper quoting of special char-
-              acters  in  the  code on the command line.  For example, suppose
-              you want to set the  latex  command  to  use  its  -shell-escape
+              acters in the code on the command line.   For  example,  suppose
+              you  want  to  set  the  latex  command to use its -shell-escape
               option, then under UNIX/LINUX you could use the line
 
                    latexmk -e '$latex=q/latex %O -shell-escape %S/' file.tex
 
-              Note  that  the  single  quotes  block normal UNIX/LINUX command
-              shells from treating the characters inside the  quotes  as  spe-
-              cial.   (In  this  example, the q/.../ construct is a Perl idiom
-              equivalent to using single quotes.  This  avoids  the  complica-
-              tions  of  getting  a  quote  character inside an already quoted
-              string in a way that is independent of both the  shell  and  the
+              Note that the single  quotes  block  normal  UNIX/LINUX  command
+              shells  from  treating  the characters inside the quotes as spe-
+              cial.  (In this example, the q/.../ construct is  a  Perl  idiom
+              equivalent  to  using  single quotes.  This avoids the complica-
+              tions of getting a quote  character  inside  an  already  quoted
+              string  in  a  way that is independent of both the shell and the
               operating-system.)
 
-              The  above  command  line  will  NOT  work under MS-Windows with
-              cmd.exe or command.com or 4nt.exe.  For  MS-Windows  with  these
+              The above command line  will  NOT  work  under  MS-Windows  with
+              cmd.exe  or  command.com  or 4nt.exe.  For MS-Windows with these
               command shells you could use
 
                    latexmk -e "$latex=q/latex %O -shell-escape %S/" file.tex
@@ -461,162 +498,174 @@
 
                    latexmk -e "$latex='latex %O -shell-escape %S'" file.tex
 
-              The  last  two  examples  will  NOT work with UNIX/LINUX command
+              The last two examples will  NOT  work  with  UNIX/LINUX  command
               shells.
 
-       -f     Force latexmk to continue document  processing  despite  errors.
+
+       -f     Force  latexmk  to  continue document processing despite errors.
               Normally, when latexmk detects that LaTeX or another program has
               found an error which will not be resolved by further processing,
               no further processing is carried out.
 
-              Note:  "Further  processing" means the running of other programs
-              or the rerunning of latex (etc) that would be done if no  errors
+              Note: "Further processing" means the running of  other  programs
+              or  the rerunning of latex (etc) that would be done if no errors
+              had occurred.  If instead, or additionally, you want  the  latex
+              (etc)  program  not  to pause for user input after an error, you
+              should arrange this by an option that is passed to the  program,
+              e.g., by latexmk's option -interaction=nonstopmode.
 
 
+       -f-    Turn off the forced processing-past-errors such as is set by the
+              -f option.  This could be used to override a setting in  a  con-
+              figuration file.
 
-                                 22 April 2016                               7
 
+       -g     Force  latexmk  to process document fully, even under situations
+              where latexmk would normally  decide  that  no  changes  in  the
+              source  files have occurred since the previous run.  This option
+              is useful, for example, if you change some options and  wish  to
+              reprocess the files.
 
 
 
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
+                               5 September 2016                              8
 
 
-              had  occurred.   If instead, or additionally, you want the latex
-              (etc) program not to pause for user input after  an  error,  you
-              should  arrange this by an option that is passed to the program,
-              e.g., by latexmk's option -interaction=nonstopmode.
 
 
-       -f-    Turn off the forced processing-past-errors such as is set by the
-              -f  option.   This could be used to override a setting in a con-
-              figuration file.
 
-       -g     Force latexmk to process document fully, even  under  situations
-              where  latexmk  would  normally  decide  that  no changes in the
-              source files have occurred since the previous run.  This  option
-              is  useful,  for example, if you change some options and wish to
-              reprocess the files.
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
+
        -g-    Turn off -g.
 
+
        -gg    "Super go mode" or "clean make": clean out generated files as if
               -C had been given, and then do a regular make.
 
+
        -h, -help
               Print help information.
 
+
        -jobname=STRING
-              Set  the  basename  of output files(s) to STRING, instead of the
+              Set the basename of output files(s) to STRING,  instead  of  the
               default, which is the basename of the specified TeX file.
 
-              This is like the same option for current implementations of  the
-              latex,  pdflatex,  etc,  and the passing of this option to these
+              This  is like the same option for current implementations of the
+              latex, pdflatex, etc, and the passing of this  option  to  these
               programs is part of latexmk's implementation of -jobname.
 
 
        -l     Run in landscape mode, using the landscape mode for the preview-
-              ers  and  the  dvi to postscript converters.  This option is not
-              normally needed  nowadays,  since  current  previewers  normally
+              ers and the dvi to postscript converters.  This  option  is  not
+              normally  needed  nowadays,  since  current  previewers normally
               determine this information automatically.
 
+
        -l-    Turn off -l.
 
+
        -latex="COMMAND"
               This sets the string specifying the command to run latex, and is
-              typically used to add desired options.  Since  the  string  nor-
+              typically  used  to  add desired options.  Since the string nor-
               mally contains spaces, it should be quoted, e.g.,
 
                    latexmk -latex="latex --shell-escape %O %S"  foo.tex
 
-              The  specification of the contents of the string are the same as
-              for the $latex configuration variable.  Depending on your  oper-
-              ating  system  and the command-line shell you are using, you may
-              need to change the single quotes to double quotes (or  something
+              The specification of the contents of the string are the same  as
+              for  the $latex configuration variable.  Depending on your oper-
+              ating system and the command-line shell you are using,  you  may
+              need  to change the single quotes to double quotes (or something
               else).
 
               To set the command for running pdflatex (rather than the command
               for latex) see the -pdflatex option.
 
-              Note that the effect of this option  can  also  be  achieved  by
+              Note  that  the  effect  of  this option can also be achieved by
               using the -e option with a suitable line of Perl code to set the
               $latex variable.  See the explanation of the -e option.
 
 
+       -lualatex
+              Use  lualatex.   That  is,  use  lualatex  to process the source
+              file(s) to pdf (in place of pdflatex).  This option  is  exactly
+              equivalent to specifying the following sequence of options:
 
-                                 22 April 2016                               8
+                   -pdflatex="lualatex %O %S" -pdf -dvi- -ps-
 
 
 
+                               5 September 2016                              9
 
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-       -lualatex
-              Use lualatex.  That is,  use  lualatex  to  process  the  source
-              file(s)  to  pdf (in place of pdflatex).  This option is exactly
-              equivalent to specifying the following sequence of options:
 
-                   -pdflatex="lualatex %O %S" -pdf -dvi- -ps-
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-       -M     Show list of dependent files after processing.  This is  equiva-
+       -M     Show  list of dependent files after processing.  This is equiva-
               lent to the -deps option.
 
+
        -MF file
-              If  a  list of dependents is made, the -MF specifies the file to
+              If a list of dependents is made, the -MF specifies the  file  to
               write it to.
 
-       -MP    If a list of dependents is made, includes phony target for  each
-              source  file.  If you use the dependents list in a Makefile, the
-              dummy rules work around errors make gives if you  remove  header
+
+       -MP    If  a list of dependents is made, includes phony target for each
+              source file.  If you use the dependents list in a Makefile,  the
+              dummy  rules  work around errors make gives if you remove header
               files without updating the Makefile to match.
 
+
        -new-viewer
-              When  in  continuous-preview  mode, always start a new viewer to
-              view the generated file.  By default, latexmk will, in  continu-
-              ous-preview  mode,  test  for a previously running previewer for
+              When in continuous-preview mode, always start a  new  viewer  to
+              view  the generated file.  By default, latexmk will, in continu-
+              ous-preview mode, test for a previously  running  previewer  for
               the same file and not start a new one if a previous previewer is
               running.  However, its test sometimes fails (notably if there is
-              an already-running previewer that is viewing a file of the  same
-              name  as  the current file, but in a different directory).  This
+              an  already-running previewer that is viewing a file of the same
+              name as the current file, but in a different  directory).   This
               option turns off the default behavior.
 
+
        -new-viewer-
-              The inverse of the -new-viewer option.  It puts latexmk  in  its
+              The  inverse  of the -new-viewer option.  It puts latexmk in its
               normal behavior that in preview-continuous mode it checks for an
               already-running previewer.
 
+
        -nobibtex
               Never run bibtex or biber.
 
-              A common use for this option is when a document  comes  from  an
-              external  source,  complete  with  its bbl file(s), and the user
-              does not have the corresponding bib files  available.   In  this
-              situation  use of the -nobibtex option will prevent latexmk from
+              A  common  use  for this option is when a document comes from an
+              external source, complete with its bbl  file(s),  and  the  user
+              does  not  have  the corresponding bib files available.  In this
+              situation use of the -nobibtex option will prevent latexmk  from
               trying to run bibtex or biber, which would result in overwriting
               of the bbl files.
 
+
        -norc  Turn off the automatic reading of initialization (rc) files.
 
-              N.B.  Normally the initialization files are read and obeyed, and
-              then command line options are  obeyed  in  the  order  they  are
-              encountered.   But  -norc  is  an  exception to this rule: it is
+              N.B. Normally the initialization files are read and obeyed,  and
+              then  command  line  options  are  obeyed  in the order they are
+              encountered.  But -norc is an exception  to  this  rule:  it  is
               acted on first, no matter where it occurs on the command line.
 
 
        -outdir=FOO or -output-directory=FOO
 
-              Sets the directory for the output  files  of  (pdf)latex.   This
-              achieves   its   effect   by  the  -output-directory  option  of
+              Sets  the  directory  for  the output files of (pdf)latex.  This
+              achieves  its  effect  by  the   -output-directory   option   of
               (pdf)latex, which currently (Dec. 2011 and later) is implemented
-              on  the common versions of (pdf)latex, i.e., MiKTeX and TeXLive.
 
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                               9
+                               5 September 2016                             10
 
 
 
@@ -625,28 +674,32 @@
 LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
+              on the common versions of (pdf)latex, i.e., MiKTeX and  TeXLive.
               It may not be present in other versions.
 
-              See also the -auxdir/-aux-directory options, and  the  $aux_dir,
-              $out_dir,  and $search_path_separator configuration variables of
-              latexmk.  In particular, see the documentation of  $out_dir  for
+              See  also  the -auxdir/-aux-directory options, and the $aux_dir,
+              $out_dir, and $search_path_separator configuration variables  of
+              latexmk.   In  particular, see the documentation of $out_dir for
               some complications on what directory names are suitable.
 
+              If you also use the -cd option, and the specified output  direc-
+              tory  is  a relative path, then the path is interpreted relative
+              to the document directory.
 
 
-       -p     Print  out  the  document.  By default the file to be printed is
-              the first in the list postscript, pdf, dvi that is  being  made.
+       -p     Print out the document.  By default the file to  be  printed  is
+              the  first  in the list postscript, pdf, dvi that is being made.
               But you can use the -print=... option to change the type of file
               to be printed, and you can configure this in a start up file (by
               setting the $print_type variable).
 
-              However,  printing  is  enabled by default only under UNIX/LINUX
+              However, printing is enabled by default  only  under  UNIX/LINUX
               systems, where the default is to use the lpr command and only on
               postscript files.  In general, the correct behavior for printing
-              very much depends on your  system's  software.   In  particular,
-              under  MS-Windows  you  must have suitable program(s) available,
+              very  much  depends  on  your system's software.  In particular,
+              under MS-Windows you must have  suitable  program(s)  available,
               and you must have configured the print commands used by latexmk.
-              This  can  be  non-trivial.   See the documentation on the $lpr,
+              This can be non-trivial.  See the  documentation  on  the  $lpr,
               $lpr_dvi, and $lpr_pdf configuration variables to see how to set
               the commands for printing.
 
@@ -654,49 +707,52 @@
               turns them off.
 
 
-       -pdf   Generate pdf version of document using pdflatex.  (If  you  wish
+       -pdf   Generate  pdf  version of document using pdflatex.  (If you wish
               to use lualatex or xelatex, you can use whichever of the options
-              -lualatex or -xelatex applies.)  To configure  latexmk  to  have
+              -lualatex  or  -xelatex  applies.)  To configure latexmk to have
               such behavior by default, see the section on "Configuration/ini-
               tialization (rc) files".
 
 
        -pdfdvi
-              Generate pdf version of document from the dvi file,  by  default
+              Generate  pdf  version of document from the dvi file, by default
               using dvipdf.
 
-       -pdfps Generate  pdf  version  of document from the ps file, by default
+
+       -pdfps Generate pdf version of document from the ps  file,  by  default
               using ps2pdf.
 
-       -pdf-  Turn off generation of pdf version of document.   (This  can  be
-              used  to override a setting in a configuration file.  It may get
+
+       -pdf-  Turn  off  generation  of pdf version of document.  (This can be
+              used to override a setting in a configuration file.  It may  get
               overridden if some other option requires the generation of a pdf
               file.)
 
+
        -pdflatex="COMMAND"
               This sets the string specifying the command to run pdflatex, and
-              is typically used to add desired options.  Since the string nor-
-              mally contains spaces, it should be quoted, e.g.,
+              is  typically  used  to  add  desired options.  Since the string
 
-                   latexmk  -pdf  -pdflatex="pdflatex  --shell-escape  %O  %S"
-              foo.tex
 
-              The specification of the contents of the string are the same  as
-              for  the  $pdflatex  configuration  variable.  Depending on your
-              operating system and the command-line shell you are  using,  you
 
+                               5 September 2016                             11
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              10
 
 
 
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
+              normally contains spaces, it should be quoted, e.g.,
 
+                   latexmk  -pdf  -pdflatex="pdflatex  --shell-escape  %O  %S"
+              foo.tex
 
-              may  need to change the single quotes to double quotes (or some-
+              The  specification of the contents of the string are the same as
+              for the $pdflatex configuration  variable.   Depending  on  your
+              operating  system  and the command-line shell you are using, you
+              may need to change the single quotes to double quotes (or  some-
               thing else).
 
               This option can also be used to set a program to be used instead
@@ -710,31 +766,35 @@
 
               to use xelatex.
 
-              To  set  the  command for running latex (rather than the command
+              To set the command for running latex (rather  than  the  command
               for pdflatex) see the -latex option.
 
-              Note that the effect of this option  can  also  be  achieved  by
+              Note  that  the  effect  of  this option can also be achieved by
               using the -e option with a suitable line of Perl code to set the
               $pdflatex variable. See the explanation of the -e option.
 
+
        -print=dvi, -print=ps, -print=pdf, -print=auto,
-              Define which kind of file is printed.  This option also  ensures
+              Define  which kind of file is printed.  This option also ensures
               that the requisite file is made, and turns on printing.
 
               The (default) case -print=auto determines the kind of print file
-              automatically from the set of files that  is  being  made.   The
-              first  in  the list postscript, pdf, dvi that is among the files
+              automatically  from  the  set  of files that is being made.  The
+              first in the list postscript, pdf, dvi that is among  the  files
               to be made is the one used for print out.
 
+
        -ps    Generate postscript version of document.
 
+
        -ps-   Turn off generation of postscript version of document.  This can
-              be  used to override a setting in a configuration file.  (It may
-              get overridden by some other option that requires  a  postscript
+              be used to override a setting in a configuration file.  (It  may
+              get  overridden  by some other option that requires a postscript
               file, for example a request for printing.)
 
-       -pF    Postscript  file  filtering.   The  argument to this option is a
-              filter which will generate a filtered postscript file  with  the
+
+       -pF    Postscript file filtering.  The argument to  this  option  is  a
+              filter  which  will generate a filtered postscript file with the
               extension ".psF".  All extra processing (e.g. preview, printing)
               will then be performed on this filtered postscript file.
 
@@ -742,173 +802,184 @@
 
                    latexmk -ps -pF 'psnup -2' foo.tex
 
-              or
 
-                   latexmk -ps -pF "psnup -2" foo.tex
 
-              Whether to use single or double quotes round the "psnup -2" will
-              depend  on  your  command interpreter, as used by the particular
-              version of perl and the operating system on your computer.
 
-       -pv    Run file previewer.  If the -view  option  is  used,  this  will
-              select  the kind of file to be previewed (dvi, ps or pdf).  Oth-
-              erwise the viewer views the "highest" kind of file selected,  by
-              the  -dvi,  -ps, -pdf, -pdfps options, in the order dvi, ps, pdf
-              (low to high).  If no file  type  has  been  selected,  the  dvi
+                               5 September 2016                             12
 
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              11
 
 
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
+              or
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
+                   latexmk -ps -pF "psnup -2" foo.tex
 
+              Whether to use single or double quotes round the "psnup -2" will
+              depend on your command interpreter, as used  by  the  particular
+              version of perl and the operating system on your computer.
 
-              previewer will be used.  This option is incompatible with the -p
+
+       -pv    Run  file  previewer.   If  the  -view option is used, this will
+              select the kind of file to be previewed (dvi, ps or pdf).   Oth-
+              erwise  the viewer views the "highest" kind of file selected, by
+              the -dvi, -ps, -pdf, -pdfps options, in the order dvi,  ps,  pdf
+              (low  to high).  If no file type has been selected, the dvi pre-
+              viewer will be used.  This option is incompatible  with  the  -p
               and -pvc options, so it turns them off.
 
+
        -pv-   Turn off -pv.
 
-       -pvc   Run a file previewer  and  continually  update  the  .dvi,  .ps,
+
+       -pvc   Run  a  file  previewer  and  continually  update the .dvi, .ps,
               and/or .pdf files whenever changes are made to source files (see
-              the Description above).  Which of these files is  generated  and
-              which  is  viewed  is  governed by the other options, and is the
-              same as for the -pv option.  The preview-continuous option  -pvc
-              can  only work with one file.  So in this case you will normally
-              only specify one filename on  the  command  line.   It  is  also
-              incompatible  with  the  -p  and  -pv options, so it turns these
+              the  Description  above).  Which of these files is generated and
+              which is viewed is governed by the other  options,  and  is  the
+              same  as for the -pv option.  The preview-continuous option -pvc
+              can only work with one file.  So in this case you will  normally
+              only  specify  one  filename  on  the  command line.  It is also
+              incompatible with the -p and -pv  options,  so  it  turns  these
               options off.
 
-              The -pvc option also turns off force mode (-f), as  is  normally
-              best  for  continuous  preview  mode.   If you really want force
+              The  -pvc  option also turns off force mode (-f), as is normally
+              best for continuous preview mode.   If  you  really  want  force
               mode, use the options in the order -pvc -f.
 
               With a good previewer the display will be automatically updated.
-              (Under  some but not all versions of UNIX/Linux "gv -watch" does
-              this for postscript files; this can be set  by  a  configuration
-              variable.   This  would  also  work  for pdf files except for an
-              apparent bug in gv that causes an error when the  newly  updated
-              pdf  file  is  read.)   Many other previewers will need a manual
+              (Under some but not all versions of UNIX/Linux "gv -watch"  does
+              this  for  postscript  files; this can be set by a configuration
+              variable.  This would also work for  pdf  files  except  for  an
+              apparent  bug  in gv that causes an error when the newly updated
+              pdf file is read.)  Many other previewers  will  need  a  manual
               update.
 
               Important note: the acroread program on MS-Windows locks the pdf
-              file,  and  prevents  new versions being written, so it is a bad
-              idea to use acroread to view  pdf  files  in  preview-continuous
-              mode.   It  is  better to use a different viewer: SumatraPDF and
+              file, and prevents new versions being written, so it  is  a  bad
+              idea  to  use  acroread  to view pdf files in preview-continuous
+              mode.  It is better to use a different  viewer:  SumatraPDF  and
               gsview are good possibilities.
 
-              There are some other methods for arranging  an  update,  notably
-              useful  for  many versions of xdvi and xpdf.  These are best set
+              There  are  some  other methods for arranging an update, notably
+              useful for many versions of xdvi and xpdf.  These are  best  set
               in latexmk's configuration; see below.
 
-              Note that if latexmk  dies  or  is  stopped  by  the  user,  the
+              Note  that  if  latexmk  dies  or  is  stopped  by the user, the
               "forked" previewer will continue to run.  Successive invocations
-              with the -pvc option will not fork new previewers,  but  latexmk
-              will  normally  use the existing previewer.  (At least this will
-              happen when latexmk is running under an operating  system  where
-              it  knows how to determine whether an existing previewer is run-
-              ning.)
+              with  the  -pvc option will not fork new previewers, but latexmk
+              will normally use the existing previewer.  (At least  this  will
+              happen  when  latexmk is running under an operating system where
 
-       -pvc-  Turn off -pvc.
 
-       -quiet Same as -silent
 
-       -r <rcfile>
-              Read the specified initialization file ("RC file")  before  pro-
-              cessing.
+                               5 September 2016                             13
 
-              Be careful about the ordering: (1) Standard initialization files
-              -- see the section below on  "Configuration/initialization  (RC)
-              files"  --  are read first.  (2) Then the options on the command
-              line are acted on in the order they are given.  Therefore if  an
-              initialization  file  is  specified by the -r option, it is read
-              during this second step.  Thus an initialization file  specified
 
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              12
 
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
+              it knows how to determine whether an existing previewer is  run-
+              ning.)
 
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
+       -pvc-  Turn off -pvc.
 
 
+       -quiet Same as -silent
+
+
+       -r <rcfile>
+              Read  the  specified initialization file ("RC file") before pro-
+              cessing.
+
+              Be careful about the ordering: (1) Standard initialization files
+              --  see  the section below on "Configuration/initialization (RC)
+              files" -- are read first.  (2) Then the options on  the  command
+              line  are acted on in the order they are given.  Therefore if an
+              initialization file is specified by the -r option,  it  is  read
+              during  this second step.  Thus an initialization file specified
               with the -r option can override both the standard initialization
               files and previously specified options.  But all of these can be
               overridden by later options.
 
               The contents of the RC file just comprise a piece of code in the
-              Perl programming language (typically a  sequence  of  assignment
+              Perl  programming  language  (typically a sequence of assignment
               statements); they are executed when the -r option is encountered
               during latexmk's parsing of its command line.  See the -e option
-              for  a  way  of giving initialization code directly on latexmk's
-              command line.  An error results in latexmk  stopping.   Multiple
-              instances  of  the  -r  and -e options can be used, and they are
+              for a way of giving initialization code  directly  on  latexmk's
+              command  line.   An error results in latexmk stopping.  Multiple
+              instances of the -r and -e options can be  used,  and  they  are
               executed in the order they appear on the command line.
 
+
        -recorder
-              Use the -recorder option with latex  and  pdflatex.   In  (most)
-              modern  versions  of  these  programs, this results in a file of
-              extension .fls containing a list of the files  that  these  pro-
+              Use  the  -recorder  option  with latex and pdflatex.  In (most)
+              modern versions of these programs, this results  in  a  file  of
+              extension  .fls  containing  a list of the files that these pro-
               grams have read and written.  Latexmk will then use this file to
-              improve its detection of source files and generated files  after
+              improve  its detection of source files and generated files after
               a run of latex or pdflatex.
 
               For further information, see the documentation for the $recorder
               configuration variable.
 
+
        -recorder-
               Do not use the -recorder option with latex and pdflatex.
 
+
        -rules Show a list of latemk's rules and dependencies after processing.
 
+
        -rules-
-              Do  not  show  a  list of latexmk's rules and dependencies after
+              Do not show a list of latexmk's  rules  and  dependencies  after
               processing.  (This is the default.)
 
-       -showextraoptions
-              Show the list of extra latex and pdflatex options  that  latexmk
-              recognizes.   These  are options for the latex and pdflatex that
-              latexmk recognizes, but simply passes through to these  programs
-              when  they are run.  These options are (currently) a combination
-              of those allowed by the TeXLive and MiKTeX implementations.  (If
-              a  particular  option  is given to latexmk but is not handled by
-              the particular implementation of latex or pdflatex that is being
-              used,  that program will probably give an error message.)  These
-              options are very numerous, but are not listed in this documenta-
-              tion because they have no effect on latexmk's actions.
 
-              There  are  a  few  options (-includedirectory=dir, -initialize,
-              -ini) that are not recognized, either  because  they  don't  fit
-              with latexmk's intended operations, or because they need special
-              processing by latexmk that  isn't  implemented  (at  least,  not
-              yet).
 
-              There  are  also  options  that  are  accepted by latex etc, but
-              instead trigger actions by latexmk: -help, -version.
 
-              Finally, there are certain options for latex and pdflatex (e.g.,
-              -recorder)  that  trigger special actions or behavior by latexmk
-              itself as well as being passed in some form to the called  latex
-              and  pdflatex  program,  or  that affect other programs as well.
-              These options do have  entries  in  this  documentation.   These
 
+                               5 September 2016                             14
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              13
 
 
 
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
+       -showextraoptions
+              Show  the  list of extra latex and pdflatex options that latexmk
+              recognizes.  These are options for the latex and  pdflatex  that
+              latexmk  recognizes, but simply passes through to these programs
+              when they are run.  These options are (currently) a  combination
+              of those allowed by the TeXLive and MiKTeX implementations.  (If
+              a particular option is given to latexmk but is  not  handled  by
+              the particular implementation of latex or pdflatex that is being
+              used, that program will probably give an error message.)   These
+              options are very numerous, but are not listed in this documenta-
+              tion because they have no effect on latexmk's actions.
 
+              There are a  few  options  (-includedirectory=dir,  -initialize,
+              -ini)  that  are  not  recognized, either because they don't fit
+              with latexmk's intended operations, or because they need special
+              processing  by  latexmk  that  isn't  implemented (at least, not
+              yet).
 
+              There are also options that  are  accepted  by  latex  etc,  but
+              instead trigger actions by latexmk: -help, -version.
+
+              Finally, there are certain options for latex and pdflatex (e.g.,
+              -recorder) that trigger special actions or behavior  by  latexmk
+              itself  as well as being passed in some form to the called latex
+              and pdflatex program, or that affect  other  programs  as  well.
+              These  options  do  have  entries  in this documentation.  These
               options are: -jobname=STRING, -aux-directory=dir, -output-direc-
               tory=DIR, -quiet, and -recorder.
 
@@ -915,7 +986,7 @@
 
        -logfilewarninglist
               -logfilewarnings After a run of (pdf)latex, give a list of warn-
-              ings  about  undefined  citations  and references (unless silent
+              ings about undefined citations  and  references  (unless  silent
               mode is on).
 
               See also the $silence_logfile_warnings configuration variable.
@@ -922,7 +993,7 @@
 
 
        -logfilewarninglist-
-              -logfilewarnings- After a run of (pdf)latex, do not give a  list
+              -logfilewarnings-  After a run of (pdf)latex, do not give a list
               of warnings about undefined citations and references.  (Default)
 
               See also the $silence_logfile_warnings configuration variable.
@@ -930,89 +1001,106 @@
 
        -silent
               Run commands silently, i.e., with options that reduce the amount
-              of  diagnostics  generated.   For example, with the default set-
-              tings, the command "latex -interaction=batchmode"  is  used  for
+              of diagnostics generated.  For example, with  the  default  set-
+              tings,  the  command  "latex -interaction=batchmode" is used for
               latex.
 
-              See   also   the  -logfilewarninglist  and  -logfilewarninglist-
+              See  also  the  -logfilewarninglist   and   -logfilewarninglist-
               options.
 
-              Also reduce the number of informational  messages  that  latexmk
+              Also  reduce  the  number of informational messages that latexmk
               generates.
 
-              To  change  the  options used to make the commands run silently,
+              To change the options used to make the  commands  run  silently,
+
+
+
+                               5 September 2016                             15
+
+
+
+
+
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
+
+
               you need to configure latexmk with changed values of its config-
-              uration    variables,    the    relevant    ones   being   $bib-
-              tex_silent_switch, $biber_silent_switch,  $dvipdf_silent_switch,
+              uration   variables,   the    relevant    ones    being    $bib-
+              tex_silent_switch,  $biber_silent_switch, $dvipdf_silent_switch,
               $dvips_silent_switch,       $latex_silent_switch,       $makein-
               dex_silent_switch, and $pdflatex_silent_switch.
 
+
        -use-make
-              When after a run of latex or pdflatex, there are warnings  about
+              When  after a run of latex or pdflatex, there are warnings about
               missing files (e.g., as requested by the LaTeX \input, \include,
-              and \includgraphics), latexmk tries to make  them  by  a  custom
+              and  \includgraphics),  latexmk  tries  to make them by a custom
               dependency. If no relevant custom dependency with an appropriate
-              source file is found, and if the -use-make option is  set,  then
-              latexmk  will  try  as a resort using the make program to try to
+              source  file  is found, and if the -use-make option is set, then
+              latexmk will try as a resort using the make program  to  try  to
               make the missing files.
 
-              Note that the filename may be specified  without  an  extension,
-              e.g.,  by  \includegraphics{drawing}  in  a LaTeX file.  In that
-              case, latexmk will try making drawing.ext with ext set  in  turn
-              to  the  possible  extensions that are relevant for latex (or as
+              Note  that  the  filename may be specified without an extension,
+              e.g., by \includegraphics{drawing} in a  LaTeX  file.   In  that
+              case,  latexmk  will try making drawing.ext with ext set in turn
+              to the possible extensions that are relevant for  latex  (or  as
               appropriate pdflatex).
 
-              See also the documentation for  the  $use_make_for_missing_files
+              See  also  the documentation for the $use_make_for_missing_files
               configuration variable.
 
+
        -use-make-
-              Do  not  use  the  make  program  to  try to make missing files.
+              Do not use the make  program  to  try  to  make  missing  files.
               (Default.)
 
 
-
-                                 22 April 2016                              14
-
-
-
-
-
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
-
-
        -v, -version
               Print version number of latexmk.
 
+
        -verbose
               Opposite of -silent.  This is the default setting.
 
+
        -view=default, -view=dvi, -view=ps, -view=pdf, -view=none
               Set the kind of file used when previewing is requested (e.g., by
               the -pv or -pvc switches).  The default is to view the "highest"
               kind of requested file (in the order dvi, ps, pdf).
 
-              Note the possibility -view=none where no  viewer  is  opened  at
-              all.   One  example  of  is  use is in conjunction with the -pvc
-              option, when you want latexmk to do a compilation  automatically
-              whenever  source  file(s)  change, but do want a previewer to be
+              Note  the  possibility  -view=none  where no viewer is opened at
+              all.  One example of is use is  in  conjunction  with  the  -pvc
+              option,  when you want latexmk to do a compilation automatically
+              whenever source file(s) change, but do want a  previewer  to  be
               opened.
 
 
        -xelatex
               Use xelatex.  That is, use xelatex to process the source file(s)
-              to  pdf  (in place of pdflatex).  This option is exactly equiva-
+              to pdf (in place of pdflatex).  This option is  exactly  equiva-
               lent to specifying the following sequence of options:
 
                    -pdflatex="xelatex %O %S" -pdf -dvi- -ps-
 
 
+
+
+                               5 September 2016                             16
+
+
+
+
+
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
+
+
        Compatibility between options
 
-       The preview-continuous option -pvc can only work with one file.  So  in
-       this  case  you  will normally only specify one filename on the command
+       The  preview-continuous option -pvc can only work with one file.  So in
+       this case you will normally only specify one filename  on  the  command
        line.
 
-       Options -p, -pv and -pvc are mutually  exclusive.   So  each  of  these
+       Options  -p,  -pv  and  -pvc  are mutually exclusive.  So each of these
        options turns the others off.
 
 
@@ -1040,90 +1128,80 @@
 DEALING WITH ERRORS, PROBLEMS, ETC
        Some possibilities:
 
+       a. If you get a strange error, do look carefully at the output that  is
+       on  the  screen  and in log files.  While there is much that is notori-
+       ously verbose in the output of latex (and that is added to by latexmk),
+       the  verbosity  is  there  for a reason: to enable the user to diagnose
+       problems.  Latexmk does repeat some messages at the end of a  run  that
+       it  thinks  would otherwise be easy to miss in the middle of other out-
+       put.
 
+       b. Generally, remember that latexmk does its work by running other pro-
+       grams.  Your first priority in dealing with errors should be to examine
+       what went wrong with the individual programs.  Then you need to correct
+       the  causes of errors in the runs of these programs.  (Often these come
+       from errors in the source document, but they could also be about  miss-
+       ing LaTeX packages, etc.)
 
+       c. If latexmk doesn't run the programs the way you would like, then you
+       need to look in this documentation at the list of command line  options
+       and  then at the sections on configuration/initialization files.  A lot
+       of latexmk's behavior is configurable to deal  with  particular  situa-
+       tions.  (But there is a lot of reading!)
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              15
+       The  remainder  of  these notes consists of ideas for dealing with more
+       difficult situations.
 
 
 
 
+                               5 September 2016                             17
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-       a.  If you get a strange error, do look carefully at the output that is
-       on the screen and in log files.  While there is much  that  is  notori-
-       ously verbose in the output of latex (and that is added to by latexmk),
-       the verbosity is there for a reason: to enable  the  user  to  diagnose
-       problems.   Latexmk  does repeat some messages at the end of a run that
-       it thinks would otherwise be easy to miss in the middle of  other  out-
-       put.
 
-       b. Generally, remember that latexmk does its work by running other pro-
-       grams.  Your first priority in dealing with errors should be to examine
-       what went wrong with the individual programs.  Then you need to correct
-       the causes of errors in the runs of these programs.  (Often these  come
-       from  errors in the source document, but they could also be about miss-
-       ing LaTeX packages, etc.)
 
-       c. If latexmk doesn't run the programs the way you would like, then you
-       need  to look in this documentation at the list of command line options
-       and then at the sections on configuration/initialization files.  A  lot
-       of  latexmk's  behavior  is configurable to deal with particular situa-
-       tions.  (But there is a lot of reading!)
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
-       The remainder of these notes consists of ideas for  dealing  with  more
-       difficult situations.
 
-       d.  Further  tricks  can  involve  replacing the standard commands that
+       d. Further tricks can involve  replacing  the  standard  commands  that
        latexmk by other commands or scripts.
 
-       e. For possible examples of code for use in an RC file, see the  direc-
-       tory   example_rcfiles   in  the  distribution  of  latexmk  (e.g.,  at
-       http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles).  Even
-       if  these  examples  don't  do what you want, they may provide suitable
-       inspiration.
+       e.  For possible examples of code for use in an RC file, see the direc-
+       tory  example_rcfiles  in  the  distribution  of  latexmk   (e.g.,   at
+       http://mirror.ctan.org/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles).  Even if these
+       examples don't do what you want, they may provide suitable inspiration.
 
-       f. There's a useful trick that  can  be  used  when  you  use  lualatex
-       instead  of  pdflatex (and in some related situations).  The problem is
-       that latexmk won't notice a dependency on a file, bar.baz say, that  is
-       input  by  the  lua code in your document instead of by the LaTeX part.
-       (Thus if you change bar.baz and rerun latexmk, then latexmk will  think
-       no  files  have  changed  and  not  rerun  lualatex, whereas if you had
-       '\input{bar.baz}' in the LaTeX part  of  the  document,  latexmk  would
-       notice  the  change.)   One solution is just to put the following some-
+       f.  There's  a  useful  trick  that  can  be used when you use lualatex
+       instead of pdflatex (and in some related situations).  The  problem  is
+       that  latexmk won't notice a dependency on a file, bar.baz say, that is
+       input by the lua code in your document instead of by  the  LaTeX  part.
+       (Thus  if you change bar.baz and rerun latexmk, then latexmk will think
+       no files have changed and  not  rerun  lualatex,  whereas  if  you  had
+       '\input{bar.baz}'  in  the  LaTeX  part  of the document, latexmk would
+       notice the change.)  One solution is just to put  the  following  some-
        where in the LaTeX part of the document:
 
                      \typeout{(bar.baz)}
 
-       This puts a line in the log file that latexmk will  treat  as  implying
-       that  the  file  bar.baz  was  read.  (At present I don't know a way of
-       doing this automatically.)  Of course, if  the  file  has  a  different
+       This  puts  a  line in the log file that latexmk will treat as implying
+       that the file bar.baz was read.  (At present I  don't  know  a  way  of
+       doing  this  automatically.)   Of  course,  if the file has a different
        name, change bar.baz to the name of your file.
 
        g. See also the section ADVANCED CONFIGURATION: Some extra resources.
 
-       g.    Look   on   tex.stackexchange,   i.e.,   at   http://tex.stackex-
-       change.com/questions/tagged/latexmk  Someone may  have  already  solved
+       g.   Look   on   tex.stackexchange,   i.e.,   at    http://tex.stackex-
+       change.com/questions/tagged/latexmk   Someone  may  have already solved
        your problem.
 
        h. Ask a question at tex.stackexchange.com.
 
-       i.  Or ask me (the author of latexmk).  My e-mail is at the end of this
+       i. Or ask me (the author of latexmk).  My e-mail is at the end of  this
        documentation.
 
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              16
-
-
-
-
-
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
-
-
 CONFIGURATION/INITIALIZATION (RC) FILES
        Latexmk can be customized using initialization files, which are read at
        startup in the following order:
@@ -1135,50 +1213,77 @@
           "/usr/local/share/latexmk/LatexMk",
           "/usr/local/lib/latexmk/LatexMk".
           On a MS-WINDOWS system it looks for "C:\latexmk\LatexMk".
-          On a cygwin system (i.e., a MS-Windows system in which Perl is  that
+          On  a cygwin system (i.e., a MS-Windows system in which Perl is that
        of cygwin), latexmk reads for the first it finds of
           "/cygdrive/c/latexmk/LatexMk",
           "/opt/local/share/latexmk/LatexMk",
           "/usr/local/share/latexmk/LatexMk",
           "/usr/local/lib/latexmk/LatexMk".
-          In  addition,  it then tries the same set of locations, but with the
+          In addition, it then tries the same set of locations, but  with  the
        file name replaced "LatexMk" replaced by "latexmkrc".
 
-       2) The user's RC file, "$HOME/.latexmkrc", if it exists.  Here $HOME is
-       the  user's home directory.  [Latexmk determines the user's home direc-
-       tory as follows:  It is the value of the environment variable HOME,  if
-       this  variable  exists, which normally is the case on UNIX-like systems
-       (including LINUX and OS-X).  Otherwise the environment  variable  USER-
-       PROFILE is used, if it exists, which normally is the case on MS-Windows
-       systems. Otherwise a blank string is used instead of $HOME.]
 
-       3) The RC file in the current working  directory.   This  file  can  be
-       named  either "latexmkrc" or ".latexmkrc", and the first of these to be
+
+
+                               5 September 2016                             18
+
+
+
+
+
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
+
+
+       2) The user's RC file, if it exists.  This can be in one of two places.
+       The traditional one is ".latexmkrc" in the user's home directory.   The
+       other  possibility  is "latexmk/latexmkrc" in the user's XDG configura-
+       tion home directory.  The actual file read is the first  of  "$XDG_CON-
+       FIG_HOME/latexmk/latexmkrc"  or  "$HOME/.latexmkrc" which exists.  (See
+       https://specifications.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/basedir-spec-lat-
+       est.html for details on the XDG Base Directory Specification.)
+
+       Here  $HOME  is  the  user's  home  directory.  [Latexmk determines the
+       user's home directory as follows:  It is the value of  the  environment
+       variable  HOME,  if this variable exists, which normally is the case on
+       UNIX-like systems (including LINUX and OS-X).  Otherwise  the  environ-
+       ment  variable USERPROFILE is used, if it exists, which normally is the
+       case on MS-Windows systems. Otherwise a blank string is used instead of
+       $HOME, in which case latexmk does not look for an RC file in it.]
+
+       $XDG_CONFIG_HOME  is  the  value  of  the environment variable XDG_CON-
+       FIG_HOME if it exists.  If this environment variable  does  not  exist,
+       but  $HOME  is  non-blank,  then $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is set to the default
+       value of  $HOME/.config.   Otherwise  $XDG_CONFIG_HOME  is  blank,  and
+       latexmk does not look for an RC file under it.
+
+
+       3)  The  RC  file  in  the current working directory.  This file can be
+       named either "latexmkrc" or ".latexmkrc", and the first of these to  be
        found is used, if any.
 
        4) Any RC file(s) specified on the command line with the -r option.
 
        Each RC file is a sequence of Perl commands.  Naturally, a user can use
-       this  in  creative  ways.   But  for  most  purposes, one simply uses a
-       sequence of assignment statements that override some  of  the  built-in
-       settings  of  Latexmk.   Straightforward  cases  can be handled without
-       knowledge of the Perl language by using the examples in  this  document
+       this in creative ways.  But  for  most  purposes,  one  simply  uses  a
+       sequence  of  assignment  statements that override some of the built-in
+       settings of Latexmk.  Straightforward  cases  can  be  handled  without
+       knowledge  of  the Perl language by using the examples in this document
        as templates.  Comment lines are introduced by the "#" character.
 
-       Note  that  command  line options are obeyed in the order in which they
+       Note that command line options are obeyed in the order  in  which  they
        are written; thus any RC file specified on the command line with the -r
-       option  can  override  previous options but can be itself overridden by
-       later options on the command line.  There is also the -e option,  which
+       option can override previous options but can be  itself  overridden  by
+       later  options on the command line.  There is also the -e option, which
        allows initialization code to be specified in latexmk's command line.
 
-         For  possible  examples  of code for in an RC file, see the directory
-       example_rcfiles   in   the   distribution   of   latexmk   (e.g.,    at
-       http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles).
+        For possible examples of code for in an RC  file,  see  the  directory
+       example_rcfiles  in  the  distribution of latexmk (e.g., at http://mir-
+       ror.ctan.org/support/latexmk/example_rcfiles).
 
 
 HOW TO SET VARIABLES IN INITIALIZATION FILES
-       The  important  variables  that  can be configured are described in the
-       section "List  of  configuration  variables  usable  in  initialization
+       The important variables that can be configured  are  described  in  the
+       section  "List  of  configuration  variables  usable  in initialization
        files".  Syntax for setting these variables is of the following forms:
 
                            $bibtex = 'bibtex %O %B';
@@ -1185,39 +1290,40 @@
 
        for the setting of a string variable,
 
+                           $preview_mode = 1;
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              17
 
 
+                               5 September 2016                             19
 
 
 
+
+
 LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-                           $preview_mode = 1;
-
        for the setting of a numeric variable, and
 
                            @default_files = ('paper', 'paper1');
 
-       for  the  setting  of an array of strings.  It is possible to append an
+       for the setting of an array of strings.  It is possible  to  append  an
        item to an array variable as follows:
 
                            push @default_files, 'paper2';
 
-       Note that simple "scalar" variables have names  that  begin  with  a  $
+       Note  that  simple  "scalar"  variables  have names that begin with a $
        character and array variables have names that begin with a @ character.
        Each statement ends with a semicolon.
 
-       Strings should be enclosed in single quotes.   (You  could  use  double
-       quotes,  as  in many programming languages.  But then the Perl program-
-       ming language brings into play some  special  rules  for  interpolating
-       variables  into  strings.  People not fluent in Perl will want to avoid
+       Strings  should  be  enclosed  in single quotes.  (You could use double
+       quotes, as in many programming languages.  But then the  Perl  program-
+       ming  language  brings  into  play some special rules for interpolating
+       variables into strings.  People not fluent in Perl will want  to  avoid
        these complications.)
 
-       You can do much more complicated things, but for this you will need  to
+       You  can do much more complicated things, but for this you will need to
        consult a manual for the Perl programming language.
 
 
@@ -1224,32 +1330,32 @@
 
 
 FORMAT OF COMMAND SPECIFICATIONS
-       Some  of  the variables set the commands that latexmk uses for carrying
-       out its work, for example to generate a dvi file from a tex file or  to
+       Some of the variables set the commands that latexmk uses  for  carrying
+       out  its work, for example to generate a dvi file from a tex file or to
        view a postscript file.  This section describes some important features
        of how the commands are specified.
 
        Placeholders:  Supposed you wanted latexmk to use the command elatex in
-       place  of  the  regular  latex  command,  and suppose moreover that you
-       wanted to give it the option "--shell-escape".  You could  do  this  by
+       place of the regular latex  command,  and  suppose  moreover  that  you
+       wanted  to  give  it the option "--shell-escape".  You could do this by
        the following setting:
 
             $latex = 'elatex --shell-escape %O %S';
 
-       The  two  items  starting with the % character are placeholders.  These
-       are substituted by appropriate values before the command is run.   Thus
-       %S  will be replaced by the source file that elatex will be applied to,
-       and %O will be replaced by any options that latexmk has decided to  use
-       for  this  command.   (E.g.,  if  you  used the -silent option it would
+       The two items starting with the % character  are  placeholders.   These
+       are  substituted by appropriate values before the command is run.  Thus
+       %S will be replaced by the source file that elatex will be applied  to,
+       and  %O will be replaced by any options that latexmk has decided to use
+       for this command.  (E.g., if you  used  the  -silent  option  it  would
        replace %O by "-interaction=batchmode".)
 
        The available placeholders are:
 
-       %B     base of filename for current command.   E.g.,  if  a  postscript
-              file  document.ps  is being made from the dvi file document.dvi,
+       %B     base  of  filename  for  current command.  E.g., if a postscript
+              file document.ps is being made from the dvi  file  document.dvi,
               then the basename is document.
 
-       %D     destination file (e.g., the name of  the  postscript  file  when
+       %D     destination  file  (e.g.,  the  name of the postscript file when
               converting a dvi file to postscript).
 
        %O     options
@@ -1259,7 +1365,7 @@
 
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              18
+                               5 September 2016                             20
 
 
 
@@ -1268,7 +1374,7 @@
 LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-       %S     source  file  (e.g.,  the name of the dvi file when converting a
+       %S     source file (e.g., the name of the dvi file  when  converting  a
               dvi file to ps).
 
        %T     The name of the primary tex file.
@@ -1279,59 +1385,57 @@
               able character, with suitable characters being those appropriate
               to UNIX and MS-Windows, i.e., ':', '/' and '\'.
 
-       %Z     Name of directory for output files (see the configuration  vari-
-              able  $out_dir).   A  directory  separation  character  ('/') is
+       %Z     Name  of directory for output files (see the configuration vari-
+              able $out_dir).   A  directory  separation  character  ('/')  is
               appended if $out_dir is non-empty and does not end in a suitable
-              character,  with  suitable characters being those appropriate to
+              character, with suitable characters being those  appropriate  to
               UNIX and MS-Windows, i.e., ':', '/' and '\'.
 
-       If for some reason you need a literal % character in  your  string  not
-       subject  to the above rules, use a pair of these characters.  Thus with
-       the command specification $ps_previewer =  'latex  -ad=%%Sfile.ad  %S',
+       If  for  some  reason you need a literal % character in your string not
+       subject to the above rules, use a pair of these characters.  Thus  with
+       the  command  specification  $ps_previewer = 'latex -ad=%%Sfile.ad %S',
        the %%S will become %S when the command is executed, but the %S will be
-       replaced by the source filename, which in this case would be  the  name
+       replaced  by  the source filename, which in this case would be the name
        of a postscript file to be viewed.
 
-       Appropriate  quoting  will be applied to the filename substitutions, so
-       you mustn't supply them yourself even if the names of your  files  have
+       Appropriate quoting will be applied to the filename  substitutions,  so
+       you  mustn't  supply them yourself even if the names of your files have
        spaces in them.  (But if your TeX filenames have spaces in them, beware
        that many versions of the TeX program cannot correctly handle filenames
-       containing  spaces.)  In case latexmk's quoting does not work correctly
-       on your system, you can turn it off -- see the  documentation  for  the
+       containing spaces.)  In case latexmk's quoting does not work  correctly
+       on  your  system,  you can turn it off -- see the documentation for the
        variable $quote_filenames.
 
-       The  distinction  between %B and %R needs a bit of care, since they are
-       often the same, but not always.  For example on a simple document,  the
+       The distinction between %B and %R needs a bit of care, since  they  are
+       often  the same, but not always.  For example on a simple document, the
        basename of a bibtex run is the same as for the texfile.  But in a doc-
-       ument with several bibliographies, the bibliography files will  have  a
-       variety  of  names.   Since  bibtex is invoked with the basename of the
-       bibliography file, the setting for the bibtex command should  therefore
+       ument  with  several bibliographies, the bibliography files will have a
+       variety of names.  Since bibtex is invoked with  the  basename  of  the
+       bibliography  file, the setting for the bibtex command should therefore
        be
 
             $bibtex = 'bibtex %O %B';
 
-       Generally,  you  should use %B rather than %R.  Similarly for most pur-
-       poses, the name %T of the primary texfile is not a useful  placeholder.
+       Generally, you should use %B rather than %R.  Similarly for  most  pur-
+       poses,  the name %T of the primary texfile is not a useful placeholder.
 
-       See  the default values in the section "List of configuration variables
+       See the default values in the section "List of configuration  variables
        usable in initialization files" for what is normally the most appropri-
        ate usage.
 
        If you omit to supply any placeholders whatever in the specification of
-       a command, latexmk will supply what its author thinks  are  appropriate
+       a  command,  latexmk will supply what its author thinks are appropriate
        defaults.  This gives compatibility with configuration files for previ-
        ous versions of latexmk, which didn't use placeholders.
 
-       "Detaching" a command: Normally when latexmk runs a command,  it  waits
+       "Detaching"  a  command: Normally when latexmk runs a command, it waits
        for the command to run to completion.  This is appropriate for commands
        like latex, of course.  But for previewers, the command should normally
-       run  detached,  so  that  latexmk  gets  the previewer running and then
-       returns to its next task (or exits if there is nothing else to do).  To
-       achieve  this  effect  of  detaching a command, you need to precede the
+       run detached, so that latexmk  gets  the  previewer  running  and  then
 
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              19
+                               5 September 2016                             21
 
 
 
@@ -1340,26 +1444,28 @@
 LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
+       returns to its next task (or exits if there is nothing else to do).  To
+       achieve this effect of detaching a command, you  need  to  precede  the
        command name with "start ", as in
 
             $dvi_previewer = 'start xdvi %O %S';
 
-       This will be translated to whatever is appropriate for  your  operating
+       This  will  be translated to whatever is appropriate for your operating
        system.
 
-       Notes:  (1)  In  some  circumstances, latexmk will always run a command
+       Notes: (1) In some circumstances, latexmk will  always  run  a  command
        detached.  This is the case for a previewer in preview continuous mode,
-       since  otherwise previewing continuously makes no sense.  (2) This pre-
-       cludes the possibility of running a command named start.   (3)  If  the
-       word  start  occurs  more  than  once  at  the beginning of the command
-       string, that is equivalent to having just one.  (4) Under cygwin,  some
-       complications  happen, since cygwin amounts to a complicated merging of
-       UNIX and MS-Windows.  See the source code  for  how  I've  handled  the
+       since otherwise previewing continuously makes no sense.  (2) This  pre-
+       cludes  the  possibility  of running a command named start.  (3) If the
+       word start occurs more than  once  at  the  beginning  of  the  command
+       string,  that is equivalent to having just one.  (4) Under cygwin, some
+       complications happen, since cygwin amounts to a complicated merging  of
+       UNIX  and  MS-Windows.   See  the  source code for how I've handled the
        problem.
 
        Command names containing spaces: Under MS-Windows it is common that the
        name of a command includes spaces, since software is often installed in
-       a  subdirectory  of  "C:\Program  Files".  Such command names should be
+       a subdirectory of "C:\Program Files".  Such  command  names  should  be
        enclosed in double quotes, as in
 
             $lpr_pdf  =  '"c:/Program  Files/Ghostgum/gsview/gsview32.exe"  /p
@@ -1366,26 +1472,26 @@
        %S';
             $pdf_previewer   =   'start   "c:/Program   Files/SumatraPDF/Suma-
        traPDF.exe" %O %S';
-            $pdf_previewer = 'start "c:/Program  Files/SumatraPDF  (x86)/Suma-
+            $pdf_previewer  =  'start "c:/Program Files/SumatraPDF (x86)/Suma-
        traPDF.exe" %O %S';
 
 
-       (Note  about the above example: Forward slashes are equivalent to back-
-       slashes in filenames under MS-Windows, provided that  the  filename  is
-       inside  double quotes.  It is easier to use forward slashes in examples
-       like the one above, since then one does not have  to  worry  about  the
-       rules  for  dealing  with  forward  slashes in strings in the Perl lan-
+       (Note about the above example: Forward slashes are equivalent to  back-
+       slashes  in  filenames  under MS-Windows, provided that the filename is
+       inside double quotes.  It is easier to use forward slashes in  examples
+       like  the  one  above,  since then one does not have to worry about the
+       rules for dealing with forward slashes in  strings  in  the  Perl  lan-
        guage.)
 
-       Command names under Cygwin: If latexmk is executed  by  Cygwin's  Perl,
+       Command  names  under  Cygwin: If latexmk is executed by Cygwin's Perl,
        be particularly certain that pathnames in commands have forward slashes
-       not the usual backslashes for the  separator  of  pathname  components.
-       See  the  above  examples.  Backslashes often get misinterpreted by the
+       not  the  usual  backslashes  for the separator of pathname components.
+       See the above examples.  Backslashes often get  misinterpreted  by  the
        Unix shell used by Cygwin's Perl to execute external commands.  Forward
        slashes don't suffer from this problem, and (when quoted, as above) are
        equally acceptable to MS-Windows.
 
-       Using MS-Windows file associations: A useful trick  under  modern  ver-
+       Using  MS-Windows  file  associations: A useful trick under modern ver-
        sions of MS-Windows (e.g., WinXP) is to use just the command 'start' by
        itself:
 
@@ -1392,43 +1498,43 @@
             $dvi_previewer = 'start %S';
 
        Under recent versions of MS-Windows, this will cause to be run whatever
-       program  the  system  has associated with dvi files.  (The same applies
+       program the system has associated with dvi files.   (The  same  applies
        for a postscript viewer and a pdf viewer.)  But note that this trick is
-       not  always  suitable for the pdf previwer, if your system has acroread
+       not always suitable for the pdf previwer, if your system  has  acroread
        for the default pdf viewer.  As explained elsewhere, acroread under MS-
-       Windows  does  not  work  well with latex and latexmk, because acroread
-       locks the pdf file.
 
-       Not using a certain command: If a command is not to be run, the command
 
 
+                               5 September 2016                             22
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              20
 
 
 
 
-
 LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
+       Windows does not work well with latex  and  latexmk,  because  acroread
+       locks the pdf file.
+
+       Not using a certain command: If a command is not to be run, the command
        name NONE is used, as in
 
             $lpr  = 'NONE lpr';
 
-       This  typically  is  used when an appropriate command does not exist on
+       This typically is used when an appropriate command does  not  exist  on
        your system.  The string after the "NONE" is effectively a comment.
 
        Options to commands: Setting the name of a command can be used not only
        for changing the name of the command called, but also to add options to
-       command.  Suppose you want latexmk to use latex  with  source  specials
-       enabled.   Then  you  might use the following line in an initialization
+       command.   Suppose  you  want latexmk to use latex with source specials
+       enabled.  Then you might use the following line  in  an  initialization
        file:
 
             $latex = 'latex --src-specials %O %S';
 
 
-       Running a subroutine instead of an external command: Use  a  specifica-
+       Running  a  subroutine instead of an external command: Use a specifica-
        tion starting with "internal", as in
 
             $latex = 'internal mylatex %O %S';
@@ -1438,52 +1544,52 @@
                 return system 'latex', @args;
             }
 
-       For  some  of the more exotic possibilities that then become available,
-       see the section  "ADVANCED  CONFIGURATION:  Some  extra  resources  and
-       advanced  tricks". Also see some of the examples in the directory exam-
+       For some of the more exotic possibilities that then  become  available,
+       see  the  section  "ADVANCED  CONFIGURATION:  Some  extra resources and
+       advanced tricks". Also see some of the examples in the directory  exam-
        ple_rcfiles in the latexmk distribution.
 
-       Advanced tricks: Normally one specifies a single command for  the  com-
-       mands  invoked  by  latexmk.   Naturally,  if there is some complicated
+       Advanced  tricks:  Normally one specifies a single command for the com-
+       mands invoked by latexmk.  Naturally,  if  there  is  some  complicated
        additional processing you need to do in your special situation, you can
        write a script (or batch file) to do the processing, and then configure
        latexmk to use your script in place of the standard program.
 
-       You can also use a Perl subroutine instead of a script  --  see  above.
+       You  can  also  use a Perl subroutine instead of a script -- see above.
        This is generally the most flexible and portable solution.
 
        It is also possible to configure latexmk to run multiple commands.  For
-       example, if when running pdflatex to generate a pdf  file  from  a  tex
-       file  you  need  to  run another program after pdflatex to perform some
+       example,  if  when  running  pdflatex to generate a pdf file from a tex
+       file you need to run another program after  pdflatex  to  perform  some
        extra processing, you could do something like:
 
-            $pdflatex = 'pdflatex --shell-escape  %O  %S;  pst2pdf_for_latexmk
+            $pdflatex  =  'pdflatex  --shell-escape %O %S; pst2pdf_for_latexmk
        %B';
 
-       This  definition  assumes  you  are  using  a  UNIX-like  system (which
-       includes Linux and OS-X), so that the two commands to be run are  sepa-
+       This definition  assumes  you  are  using  a  UNIX-like  system  (which
+       includes  Linux and OS-X), so that the two commands to be run are sepa-
        rated by the semicolon in the middle of the string.
 
        If you are using MS-Windows, you would replace the above line by
 
-          $pdflatex = 'cmd /c pdflatex --shell-escape %O %S'
-                      . '&& pst2pdf_for_latexmk %B';
 
-       Here,  the  UNIX  command  separator ; is replaced by &&.  In addition,
-       there is a problem that some versions of Perl on MS-Windows do not obey
-       the  command separator; this problem is overcome by explicitly invoking
 
 
+                               5 September 2016                             23
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              21
 
 
 
 
-
 LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
+          $pdflatex = 'cmd /c pdflatex --shell-escape %O %S'
+                      . '&& pst2pdf_for_latexmk %B';
+
+       Here, the UNIX command separator ; is replaced  by  &&.   In  addition,
+       there is a problem that some versions of Perl on MS-Windows do not obey
+       the command separator; this problem is overcome by explicitly  invoking
        the MS-Windows command-line processor cmd.exe.
 
 
@@ -1492,75 +1598,79 @@
 
        $always_view_file_via_temporary [0]
               Whether ps and pdf files are initially to be made in a temporary
-              directory  and  then moved to the final location.  (This applies
+              directory and then moved to the final location.   (This  applies
               to dvips, dvipdf, and ps2pdf operations, and the filtering oper-
-              ators  on  dvi  and  ps  files.   It does not apply to pdflatex,
+              ators on dvi and ps files.   It  does  not  apply  to  pdflatex,
               unfortunately.)
 
               This use of a temporary file solves a problem that the making of
-              these  files  can  occupy  a substantial time.  If a viewer sees
-              that the file has changed, it reads the new file, and  this  can
+              these files can occupy a substantial time.   If  a  viewer  sees
+              that  the  file has changed, it reads the new file, and this can
               cause havoc if the program writing the file has not yet finished
               its work.
 
               See the $pvc_view_file_via_temporary variable for a setting that
-              applies  only  if preview-continuous mode (-pvc option) is used.
+              applies only if preview-continuous mode (-pvc option)  is  used.
               See $tmpdir for the setting of the directory where the temporary
               file is created.
 
 
        $auto_rc_use [1]
-              Whether  to  automatically read the standard initialization (rc)
+              Whether to automatically read the standard  initialization  (rc)
               files, which are the system RC file, the user's RC file, and the
               RC file in the current directory.  The command line option -norc
-              can be used to turn this setting off.  Each RC file  could  also
-              turn  this  setting off, i.e., it could set $auto_rc_use to zero
+              can  be  used to turn this setting off.  Each RC file could also
+              turn this setting off, i.e., it could set $auto_rc_use  to  zero
               to prevent automatic reading of the later RC files.
 
-              This variable does not affect the reading of RC files  specified
+              This  variable does not affect the reading of RC files specified
               on the command line by the -r option.
 
 
        $aux_dir [""]
               The directory in which auxiliary files (aux, log, etc) are to be
-              written by a run of (pdf)latex.  If this variable  is  not  set,
-              but  $out_dir is set, then $aux_dir is set to $out_dir, which is
+              written  by  a  run of (pdf)latex.  If this variable is not set,
+              but $out_dir is set, then $aux_dir is set to $out_dir, which  is
               the directory to which general output files are to be written.
 
-              Important note:  The  effect  of  $aux_dir,  if  different  from
-              $out_dir,  is  achieved by giving (pdf)latex the -aux-directory.
-              Currently (Dec. 2011 and later) this only works  on  the  MiKTeX
+              Important  note:   The  effect  of  $aux_dir,  if different from
+              $out_dir, is achieved by giving (pdf)latex  the  -aux-directory.
+              Currently  (Dec.  2011  and later) this only works on the MiKTeX
               version of (pdf)latex.
 
               See also the documentation of $out_dir for some complications on
               what directory names are suitable.
 
+              If  you  also  use  the  -cd  option, and $out_dir (or $aux_dir)
 
-       $banner [0]
-              If nonzero, the banner message is printed across each page  when
-              converting  the  dvi  file to postscript.  Without modifying the
-              variable $banner_message, this is equivalent to  specifying  the
-              -d option.
 
-              Note that if $banner is nonzero, the $postscript_mode is assumed
-              and the postscript file is always generated, even if it is newer
 
+                               5 September 2016                             24
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              22
 
 
 
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
+              contains a relative path, then the path is interpreted  relative
+              to the document directory.
 
 
+       $banner [0]
+              If  nonzero, the banner message is printed across each page when
+              converting the dvi file to postscript.   Without  modifying  the
+              variable  $banner_message,  this is equivalent to specifying the
+              -d option.
+
+              Note that if $banner is nonzero, the $postscript_mode is assumed
+              and the postscript file is always generated, even if it is newer
               than the dvi file.
 
        $banner_intensity [0.95]
               Equivalent to the -bi option, this is a decimal number between 0
-              and 1 that specifies how dark to print the banner message. 0  is
+              and  1 that specifies how dark to print the banner message. 0 is
               black, 1 is white.  The default is just right if your toner car-
               tridge isn't running too low.
 
@@ -1569,19 +1679,19 @@
               dvi file to postscript.  This is equivalent to the -bm option.
 
        $banner_scale [220.0]
-              A  decimal  number  that  specifies how large the banner message
-              will be printed.  Experimentation is necessary to get the  right
-              scale  for  your message, as a rule of thumb the scale should be
-              about equal to 1100 divided by the number of characters  in  the
-              message.   The  Default  is just right for 5 character messages.
+              A decimal number that specifies how  large  the  banner  message
+              will  be printed.  Experimentation is necessary to get the right
+              scale for your message, as a rule of thumb the scale  should  be
+              about  equal  to 1100 divided by the number of characters in the
+              message.  The Default is just right for  5  character  messages.
               This is equivalent to the -bs option.
 
        @BIBINPUTS
-              This is an array variable, now mostly obsolete,  that  specifies
-              directories  where  latexmk  should  look  for  .bib  files.  By
+              This  is  an array variable, now mostly obsolete, that specifies
+              directories where  latexmk  should  look  for  .bib  files.   By
               default it is set from the BIBINPUTS environment variable of the
-              operating  system.   If  that environment variable is not set, a
-              single element list consisting of the current directory is  set.
+              operating system.  If that environment variable is  not  set,  a
+              single  element list consisting of the current directory is set.
               The format of the directory names depends on your operating sys-
               tem, of course.  Examples for setting this variable are:
 
@@ -1591,23 +1701,34 @@
                       @BIBINPUTS = ( ".", "//server/bibfiles" );
                       @BIBINPUTS = ( ".", "/usr/local/texmf/bibtex/bib" );
 
-              Note that under MS Windows, either a  forward  slash  "/"  or  a
-              backward  slash "\" can be used to separate pathname components,
-              so the first two and the second  two  examples  are  equivalent.
-              Each  backward slash should be doubled to avoid running afoul of
+              Note  that  under  MS  Windows,  either a forward slash "/" or a
+              backward slash "\" can be used to separate pathname  components,
+              so  the  first  two  and the second two examples are equivalent.
+              Each backward slash should be doubled to avoid running afoul  of
               Perl's rules for writing strings.
 
               Important note: This variable is now mostly obsolete in the cur-
               rent version of latexmk, since it has a better method of search-
-              ing for files using the kpsewhich  command.   However,  if  your
-              system  is an unusual one without the kpsewhich command, you may
+              ing  for  files  using  the kpsewhich command.  However, if your
+              system is an unusual one without the kpsewhich command, you  may
               need to set the variable @BIBINPUTS.
 
+
+
+                               5 September 2016                             25
+
+
+
+
+
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
+
+
        $biber ["biber %O %S"]
               The biber processing program.
 
        $biber_silent_switch ["--onlylog"]
-              Switch(es) for the biber processing program when silent mode  is
+              Switch(es)  for the biber processing program when silent mode is
               on.
 
        $bibtex ["bibtex %O %S"]
@@ -1617,165 +1738,154 @@
               Switch(es) for the BibTeX processing program when silent mode is
               on.
 
-
-
-                                 22 April 2016                              23
-
-
-
-
-
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
-
-
        $bibtex_use [1]
               Under what conditions to run BibTeX or biber.  When latexmk dis-
-              covers  from the log file that one (or more) BibTeX/biber-gener-
-              ated bibliographies are used, it can run BibTeX or  biber  when-
-              ever  it  appears  necessary  to regenerate the bbl file(s) from
+              covers from the log file that one (or more)  BibTeX/biber-gener-
+              ated  bibliographies  are used, it can run BibTeX or biber when-
+              ever it appears necessary to regenerate  the  bbl  file(s)  from
               their source bib database file(s).
 
-              But sometimes, the bib file(s) are not available  (e.g.,  for  a
-              document  obtained  from an external archive), but the bbl files
-              are provided.  In that case use of BibTeX or biber  will  result
-              in  incorrect  overwriting of the precious bbl files.  The vari-
-              able $bibtex_use controls whether this  happens.   Its  possible
+              But  sometimes,  the  bib file(s) are not available (e.g., for a
+              document obtained from an external archive), but the  bbl  files
+              are  provided.   In that case use of BibTeX or biber will result
+              in incorrect overwriting of the precious bbl files.   The  vari-
+              able  $bibtex_use  controls  whether this happens.  Its possible
               values are: 0: never use BibTeX or biber.  1: only use BibTeX or
-              biber if the bib files exist.  2: run BibTeX or  biber  whenever
-              it  appears  necessary  to update the bbl files, without testing
+              biber  if  the bib files exist.  2: run BibTeX or biber whenever
+              it appears necessary to update the bbl  files,  without  testing
               for the existence of the bib files.
 
        $cleanup_includes_cusdep_generated [0]
-              If nonzero, specifies that cleanup also deletes files  that  are
+              If  nonzero,  specifies that cleanup also deletes files that are
               generated by custom dependencies.  (When doing a clean up, e.g.,
               by use of the -C option, custom dependencies are those listed in
               the .fdb_latexmk file from a previous run.)
 
        $cleanup_includes_generated [0]
-              If  nonzero,  specifies that cleanup also deletes files that are
-              detected in log file as being generated (see the \openout  lines
-              in  the  log  file).  It will also include files made from these
+              If nonzero, specifies that cleanup also deletes files  that  are
+              detected  in log file as being generated (see the \openout lines
+              in the log file).  It will also include files  made  from  these
               first generation generated files.
 
        $cleanup_mode [0]
-              If nonzero, specifies cleanup mode: 1 for full  cleanup,  2  for
-              cleanup  except  for dvi, ps and pdf files, 3 for cleanup except
-              for dep and aux files.  (There is also extra cleaning as  speci-
-              fied  by  the  $clean_ext,  $clean_full_ext  and @generated_exts
+              If  nonzero,  specifies  cleanup mode: 1 for full cleanup, 2 for
+              cleanup except for dvi, ps and pdf files, 3 for  cleanup  except
+              for  dep and aux files.  (There is also extra cleaning as speci-
+              fied by  the  $clean_ext,  $clean_full_ext  and  @generated_exts
               variables.)
 
-              This variable is equivalent to specifying one of the  -c  or  -C
-              options.   But there should be no need to set this variable from
+              This  variable  is  equivalent to specifying one of the -c or -C
+              options.  But there should be no need to set this variable  from
               an RC file.
 
        $clean_ext [""]
-              Extra extensions of files for latexmk to remove when any of  the
-              clean-up  options  (-c  or  -C)  is selected.  The value of this
-              variable is a string  containing  the  extensions  separated  by
-              spaces.
+              Extra  extensions of files for latexmk to remove when any of the
+              clean-up options (-c or -C) is  selected.   The  value  of  this
+              variable  is  a  string  containing  the extensions separated by
 
-              It is also possible to specify a more general pattern of file to
-              be deleted, by using the place holder %R, as in commands, and it
-              is also possible to use wildcards.  Thus setting
 
-                 $clean_ext = "out %R-blx.bib %R-figures*.log";
 
-              in an initialization file will imply that when a clean-up opera-
-              tion is specified,  not  only  is  the  standard  set  of  files
-              deleted,  but  also  files of the form FOO.out, FOO-blx.bib, and
-              %R-figures*.log, where FOO stands for the basename of  the  file
-              being processed (as in FOO.tex).
+                               5 September 2016                             26
 
 
-       $clean_full_ext [""]
-              Extra  extensions  of  files  for  latexmk to remove when the -C
-              option is selected, i.e., extensions of files to remove when the
 
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              24
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
+              spaces.
 
+              It is also possible to specify a more general pattern of file to
+              be deleted, by using the place holder %R, as in commands, and it
+              is also possible to use wildcards.  Thus setting
 
+                 $clean_ext = "out %R-blx.bib %R-figures*.log";
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
+              in an initialization file will imply that when a clean-up opera-
+              tion  is  specified,  not  only  is  the  standard  set of files
+              deleted, but also files of the form  FOO.out,  FOO-blx.bib,  and
+              %R-figures*.log,  where  FOO stands for the basename of the file
+              being processed (as in FOO.tex).
 
 
+       $clean_full_ext [""]
+              Extra extensions of files for latexmk  to  remove  when  the  -C
+              option is selected, i.e., extensions of files to remove when the
               .dvi, etc files are to be cleaned-up.
 
               More general patterns are allowed, as for $clean_ext.
 
 
-       $compiling_cmd   [undefined],  $failure_cmd  [undefined],  $success_cmd
+       $compiling_cmd  [undefined],  $failure_cmd  [undefined],   $success_cmd
        [undefined]
 
-              These  variables  specify  commands that are executed at certain
-              points of  compilations  during  preview-continuous  mode.   One
-              motivation  for  their  existance  is to allow convenient visual
+              These variables specify commands that are  executed  at  certain
+              points  of  compilations  during  preview-continuous  mode.  One
+              motivation for their existance is  to  allow  convenient  visual
               indications of compilation status even when the window receiving
               the screen output of the compilation is hidden.
 
-              The  commands  are  executed  at  the following points: $compil-
-              ing_cmd at the start of compilation, $success_cmd at the end  of
-              a  successful  compilation,  and  $failure_cmd  at the end of an
-              unsuccessful compilation.  If any of above  variables  is  unde-
-              fined  (the  default situation) or blank, then the corresponding
+              The commands are executed  at  the  following  points:  $compil-
+              ing_cmd  at the start of compilation, $success_cmd at the end of
+              a successful compilation, and $failure_cmd  at  the  end  of  an
+              unsuccessful  compilation.   If  any of above variables is unde-
+              fined (the default situation) or blank, then  the  corresponding
               command is not executed.
 
               An example of a typical setting of these variables is as follows
 
-                  $compiling_cmd  =  "xdotool  search --name \"%D\" set_window
+                  $compiling_cmd = "xdotool search  --name  \"%D\"  set_window
               --name \"%D compiling\"";
-                  $success_cmd   = "xdotool search  --name  \"%D\"  set_window
+                  $success_cmd    =  "xdotool  search --name \"%D\" set_window
               --name \"%D OK\"";
-                  $failure_cmd    =  "xdotool  search --name \"%D\" set_window
+                  $failure_cmd   = "xdotool search  --name  \"%D\"  set_window
               --name \"%D FAILURE\"";
 
-              These assume that the program xdotool  is  installed,  that  the
-              previewer  is using an X-Window system for display, and that the
-              title of the window contains the name of the displayed file,  as
-              it  normally  does.   When the commands are executed, the place-
-              holder string %D is replaced by  the  name  of  the  destination
+              These  assume  that  the  program xdotool is installed, that the
+              previewer is using an X-Window system for display, and that  the
+              title  of the window contains the name of the displayed file, as
+              it normally does.  When the commands are  executed,  the  place-
+              holder  string  %D  is  replaced  by the name of the destination
               file, which is the previewed file.  The above commands result in
               an appropriate string being appended to the filename in the win-
               dow title: " compiling", " OK", or " FAILURE".
 
-              Other  placeholders that can be used are %S, %T, and %R, with %S
-              and %T normally being identical. These can be useful for a  com-
-              mand  changing  the title of the edit window. The visual indica-
-              tion in a window title can useful, since the user does not  have
-              to  keep shifting attention to the (possibly hidden) compilation
-              window to know the status of the compilation.
+              Other placeholders that can be used are %S, %T, and %R, with  %S
 
 
-       @cus_dep_list [()]
-              Custom dependency list -- see section on "Custom  Dependencies".
 
+                               5 September 2016                             27
 
-       @default_excluded_files [()]
-              When  latexmk  is invoked with no files specified on the command
-              line, then, by default, it will process all files in the current
-              directory with the extension .tex.  (In general, it will process
-              the files specified in the @default_files variable.)
 
-              But sometimes you want to exclude  particular  files  from  this
-              default  list.   In that case you can specify the excluded files
-              in the array @default_excluded_files.  For example if you wanted
-              to  process  all  .tex  files  with the exception of common.tex,
-              which is a not a standard alone LaTeX file but a file  input  by
 
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              25
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
+              and  %T normally being identical. These can be useful for a com-
+              mand changing the title of the edit window. The  visual  indica-
+              tion  in a window title can useful, since the user does not have
+              to keep shifting attention to the (possibly hidden)  compilation
+              window to know the status of the compilation.
 
 
+       @cus_dep_list [()]
+              Custom  dependency list -- see section on "Custom Dependencies".
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
+       @default_excluded_files [()]
+              When latexmk is invoked with no files specified on  the  command
+              line, then, by default, it will process all files in the current
+              directory with the extension .tex.  (In general, it will process
+              the files specified in the @default_files variable.)
 
+              But  sometimes  you  want  to exclude particular files from this
+              default list.  In that case you can specify the  excluded  files
+              in the array @default_excluded_files.  For example if you wanted
+              to process all .tex files  with  the  exception  of  common.tex,
+              which  is  a not a standard alone LaTeX file but a file input by
               some or all of the others, you could do
 
                    @default_files = ("*.tex");
@@ -1783,11 +1893,11 @@
                    @default_excluded_files = ("common.tex");
 
               If you have a variable or large number of files to be processed,
-              this method saves you from having to  list  them  in  detail  in
-              @default_files  and  having  to  update  the list every time you
+              this  method  saves  you  from  having to list them in detail in
+              @default_files and having to update  the  list  every  time  you
               change the set of files to be processed.
 
-              Notes: 1. This variable has no effect except when no  files  are
+              Notes:  1.  This variable has no effect except when no files are
               specified on the latexmk command line.  2. Wildcards are allowed
               in @default_excluded_files.
 
@@ -1795,16 +1905,16 @@
        @default_files [("*.tex")]
               Default list of files to be processed.
 
-              If no filenames are specified on the command line, latexmk  pro-
-              cesses  all  tex files specified in the @default_files variable,
-              which by default is set to all tex files ("*.tex") in  the  cur-
-              rent  directory.  This is a convenience: just run latexmk and it
-              will process an appropriate set of  files.   But  sometimes  you
+              If  no filenames are specified on the command line, latexmk pro-
+              cesses all tex files specified in the  @default_files  variable,
+              which  by  default is set to all tex files ("*.tex") in the cur-
+              rent directory.  This is a convenience: just run latexmk and  it
+              will  process  an  appropriate  set of files.  But sometimes you
               want only some of these files to be processed.  In this case you
-              can list the files to be processed by setting @default_files  in
-              an  initialization  file (e.g., the file "latexmkrc" in the cur-
-              rent directory).  Then if no files are specified on the  command
-              line  then  the  files you specify by setting @default_files are
+              can  list the files to be processed by setting @default_files in
+              an initialization file (e.g., the file "latexmkrc" in  the  cur-
+              rent  directory).  Then if no files are specified on the command
+              line then the files you specify by  setting  @default_files  are
               processed.
 
               Three examples:
@@ -1813,82 +1923,93 @@
 
                    @default_files = ("paper1", "paper2.tex");
 
+
+
+                               5 September 2016                             28
+
+
+
+
+
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
+
+
                    @default_files = ("*.tex", "*.dtx");
 
-              Note that more than file may be  given,  and  that  the  default
-              extension  is  ".tex".  Wild cards are allowed.  The parentheses
+              Note  that  more  than  file  may be given, and that the default
+              extension is ".tex".  Wild cards are allowed.   The  parentheses
               are  because  @default_files  is  an  array  variable,  i.e.,  a
               sequence of filename specifications is possible.
 
-              If  you want latexmk to process all .tex files with a few excep-
+              If you want latexmk to process all .tex files with a few  excep-
               tions, see the @default_excluded_files array variable.
 
 
        $dependents_phony [0]
-              If a list of dependencies is output,  this  variable  determines
-              whether  to include a phony target for each source file.  If you
-              use the dependents list in a  Makefile,  the  dummy  rules  work
-              around  errors  make  gives  if  you remove header files without
+              If  a  list  of dependencies is output, this variable determines
+              whether to include a phony target for each source file.  If  you
+              use  the  dependents  list  in  a Makefile, the dummy rules work
+              around errors make gives if  you  remove  header  files  without
               updating the Makefile to match.
 
        $dependents_list [0]
-              Whether to display a list(s) of dependencies at  the  end  of  a
+              Whether  to  display  a  list(s) of dependencies at the end of a
               run.
 
        $deps_file ["-"]
-              Name  of file to receive list(s) of dependencies at the end of a
-              run, to be used if $dependesnt_list is set.  If the filename  is
-
-
-
-                                 22 April 2016                              26
-
-
-
-
-
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
-
-
-              "-",  then  the dependency list is set to stdout (i.e., normally
+              Name of file to receive list(s) of dependencies at the end of  a
+              run,  to be used if $dependesnt_list is set.  If the filename is
+              "-", then the dependency list is set to stdout  (i.e.,  normally
               the screen).
 
        $do_cd [0]
-              Whether to change working directory to the  directory  specified
-              for  the  main  source  file  before processing it.  The default
+              Whether  to  change working directory to the directory specified
+              for the main source file  before  processing  it.   The  default
               behavior is not to do this, which is the same as the behavior of
-              latex  and  pdflatex  programs.  This variable is set by the -cd
+              latex and pdflatex programs.  This variable is set  by  the  -cd
               and -cd- options on latexmk's command line.
 
        $dvi_filter [empty]
-              The dvi file filter to be run on the  newly  produced  dvi  file
-              before  other  processing.   Equivalent  to  specifying  the -dF
+              The  dvi  file  filter  to be run on the newly produced dvi file
+              before other  processing.   Equivalent  to  specifying  the  -dF
               option.
 
        $dvi_mode [See below for default]
-              If nonzero, generate a dvi version of the document.   Equivalent
+              If  nonzero, generate a dvi version of the document.  Equivalent
               to the -dvi option.
 
-              The  variable  $dvi_mode  defaults  to  0,  but  if  no explicit
-              requests are made for other types  of  file  (postscript,  pdf),
-              then  $dvi_mode will be set to 1.  In addition, if a request for
-              a file for which a .dvi file is a prerequisite,  then  $dvi_mode
+              The variable  $dvi_mode  defaults  to  0,  but  if  no  explicit
+              requests  are  made  for  other types of file (postscript, pdf),
+              then $dvi_mode will be set to 1.  In addition, if a request  for
+              a  file  for which a .dvi file is a prerequisite, then $dvi_mode
               will be set to 1.
 
        $dvi_previewer ["start xdvi %O %S" under UNIX]
-              The  command  to  invoke  a  dvi-previewer.  [Default is "start"
-              under MS-WINDOWS; under more recent versions  of  Windows,  this
-              will  cause to be run whatever command the system has associated
+              The command to invoke  a  dvi-previewer.   [Default  is  "start"
+              under  MS-WINDOWS;  under  more recent versions of Windows, this
+              will cause to be run whatever command the system has  associated
               with .dvi files.]
 
-              Important note: Normally you will want to have a  previewer  run
-              detached, so that latexmk doesn't wait for the previewer to ter-
-              minate before continuing its work.  So normally you should  pre-
-              fix  the  command  by  "start  ", which flags to latexmk that it
-              should do the detaching of the  previewer  itself  (by  whatever
-              method  is  appropriate to the operating system).  But sometimes
+              Important  note:  Normally you will want to have a previewer run
+              detached, so that latexmk doesn't  wait  for  the  previewer  to
+
+
+
+                               5 September 2016                             29
+
+
+
+
+
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
+
+
+              terminate  before  continuing  its work.  So normally you should
+              prefix the command by "start ", which flags to latexmk  that  it
+              should  do  the  detaching  of the previewer itself (by whatever
+              method is appropriate to the operating system).   But  sometimes
               letting latexmk do the detaching is not appropriate (for a vari-
-              ety  of non-trivial reasons), so you should put the "start " bit
+              ety of non-trivial reasons), so you should put the "start "  bit
               in yourself, whenever it is needed.
 
 
@@ -1895,54 +2016,42 @@
        $dvi_previewer_landscape ["start xdvi %O %S"]
               The  command  to  invoke  a  dvi-previewer  in  landscape  mode.
               [Default is "start" under MS-WINDOWS; under more recent versions
-              of Windows, this will cause to be run whatever command the  sys-
+              of  Windows, this will cause to be run whatever command the sys-
               tem has associated with .dvi files.]
 
        $dvipdf ["dvipdf %O %S %D"]
               Command to convert dvi to pdf file.  A common reconfiguration is
-              to use the dvipdfm command, which needs its arguments in a  dif-
+              to  use the dvipdfm command, which needs its arguments in a dif-
               ferent order:
 
                    $dvipdf = "dvipdfm %O -o %D %S";
 
-              WARNING:  The  default  dvipdf  script  generates pdf files with
+              WARNING: The default dvipdf  script  generates  pdf  files  with
               bitmapped fonts, which do not look good when viewed by acroread.
-              That  script  should  be  modified to give dvips the options "-P
+              That script should be modified to give  dvips  the  options  "-P
               pdf" to ensure that type 1 fonts are used in the pdf file.
 
        $dvipdf_silent_switch ["-q"]
               Switch(es) for dvipdf program when silent mode is on.
 
-
-
-
-                                 22 April 2016                              27
-
-
-
-
-
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
-
-
-              N.B. The standard dvipdf program runs silently,  so  adding  the
-              silent  switch has no effect, but is actually innocuous.  But if
-              an alternative program is used, e.g., dvipdfmx, then the  silent
-              switch  has  an  effect.   The  default  setting  is correct for
+              N.B.  The  standard  dvipdf program runs silently, so adding the
+              silent switch has no effect, but is actually innocuous.  But  if
+              an  alternative program is used, e.g., dvipdfmx, then the silent
+              switch has an  effect.   The  default  setting  is  correct  for
               dvipdfm and dvipdfmx.
 
        $dvips ["dvips %O -o %D %S"]
-              The program to used as a filter to convert a .dvi file to a  .ps
-              file.   If pdf is going to be generated from pdf, then the value
+              The  program to used as a filter to convert a .dvi file to a .ps
+              file.  If pdf is going to be generated from pdf, then the  value
               of the $dvips_pdf_switch -- see below -- will be included in the
               options substituted for "%O".
 
        $dvips_landscape ["dvips -tlandscape %O -o %D %S"]
-              The  program to used as a filter to convert a .dvi file to a .ps
+              The program to used as a filter to convert a .dvi file to a  .ps
               file in landscape mode.
 
        $dvips_pdf_switch ["-P pdf"]
-              Switch(es) for dvips program when pdf file is  to  be  generated
+              Switch(es)  for  dvips  program when pdf file is to be generated
               from ps file.
 
        $dvips_silent_switch ["-q"]
@@ -1949,35 +2058,47 @@
               Switch(es) for dvips program when silent mode is on.
 
        $dvi_update_command [""]
-              When  the  dvi  previewer is set to be updated by running a com-
-              mand, this is the command that is run.  See the information  for
+              When the dvi previewer is set to be updated by  running  a  com-
+              mand,  this is the command that is run.  See the information for
               the variable $dvi_update_method for further information, and see
-              information on the variable $pdf_update_method  for  an  example
+              information  on  the  variable $pdf_update_method for an example
+
+
+
+                               5 September 2016                             30
+
+
+
+
+
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
+
+
               for the analogous case of a pdf previewer.
 
        $dvi_update_method [2 under UNIX, 1 under MS-Windows]
-              How  the  dvi  viewer  updates its display when the dvi file has
-              changed.    The   values   here    apply    equally    to    the
+              How the dvi viewer updates its display when  the  dvi  file  has
+              changed.     The    values    here    apply   equally   to   the
               $pdf_update_method and to the $ps_update_method variables.
                   0 => update is automatic,
                   1=> manual update by user, which may only mean a mouse click
               on the viewer's window or may mean a more serious action.
-                  2 => Send the  signal,  whose  number  is  in  the  variable
-              $dvi_update_signal.   The  default  value under UNIX is suitable
+                  2  =>  Send  the  signal,  whose  number  is in the variable
+              $dvi_update_signal.  The default value under  UNIX  is  suitable
               for xdvi.
-                  3 => Viewer cannot do an update, because it locks the  file.
+                  3  => Viewer cannot do an update, because it locks the file.
               (As with acroread under MS-Windows.)
-                  4  => run a command to do the update.  The command is speci-
+                  4 => run a command to do the update.  The command is  speci-
               fied by the variable $dvi_update_command.
 
-              See information on the variable $pdf_update_method for an  exam-
+              See  information on the variable $pdf_update_method for an exam-
               ple of updating by command.
 
-       $dvi_update_signal  [Under  UNIX:  SIGUSR1, which is a system-dependent
+       $dvi_update_signal [Under UNIX: SIGUSR1, which  is  a  system-dependent
        value]
-              The  number of the signal that is sent to the dvi viewer when it
-              is updated by sending a signal -- see  the  information  on  the
-              variable  $dvi_update_method.   The  default  value  is  the one
+              The number of the signal that is sent to the dvi viewer when  it
+              is  updated  by  sending  a signal -- see the information on the
+              variable $dvi_update_method.   The  default  value  is  the  one
               appropriate for xdvi on a UNIX system.
 
        $failure_cmd [undefined]
@@ -1984,74 +2105,74 @@
               See the documentation for $compiling_cmd.
 
        $fdb_ext ["fdb_latexmk"]
-              The extension of the file which latexmk generates to  contain  a
-              database  of information on source files.  You will not normally
+              The  extension  of the file which latexmk generates to contain a
+              database of information on source files.  You will not  normally
               need to change this.
 
+       $force_mode [0]
+              If  nonzero, continue processing past minor latex errors includ-
+              ing unrecognized cross references.  Equivalent to specifying the
+              -f option.
 
+       @generated_exts  [(  aux  ,  bbl  , idx , ind , lof , lot , out , toc ,
+       $fdb_ext )]
+              This  contains a list of extensions for files that are generated
+              during a LaTeX run and that are read in by LaTeX in later  runs,
+              either directly or indirectly.
 
+              This  list  has  two  uses:  (a)  to set the kinds of file to be
+              deleted in a cleanup operation (with the -c, -C, -CA, -g and -gg
+              options),  and  (b)  in  the determination of whether a rerun of
+              (pdf)LaTeX is needed after a run that gives an error.
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              28
+              (Normally, a change of a source file during a run should provoke
+              a  rerun.  This includes a file generated by LaTeX, e.g., an aux
+              file, that is read in on subsequent runs.  But after a run  that
+              results  in  an error, a new run should occur until the user has
+              made a change in the files.  But the user may have corrected  an
+              error in a source .tex file during the run.  So latexmk needs to
+              distinguish user-generated and automatically generated files; it
 
 
 
+                               5 September 2016                             31
 
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-       $force_mode [0]
-              If nonzero, continue processing past minor latex errors  includ-
-              ing unrecognized cross references.  Equivalent to specifying the
-              -f option.
 
-       @generated_exts [( aux , bbl , idx , ind , lof , lot  ,  out  ,  toc  ,
-       $fdb_ext )]
-              This contains a list of extensions for files that are  generated
-              during  a LaTeX run and that are read in by LaTeX in later runs,
-              either directly or indirectly.
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
-              This list has two uses: (a) to set  the  kinds  of  file  to  be
-              deleted in a cleanup operation (with the -c, -C, -CA, -g and -gg
-              options), and (b) in the determination of  whether  a  rerun  of
-              (pdf)LaTeX is needed after a run that gives an error.
 
-              (Normally, a change of a source file during a run should provoke
-              a rerun.  This includes a file generated by LaTeX, e.g., an  aux
-              file,  that is read in on subsequent runs.  But after a run that
-              results in an error, a new run should occur until the  user  has
-              made  a change in the files.  But the user may have corrected an
-              error in a source .tex file during the run.  So latexmk needs to
-              distinguish user-generated and automatically generated files; it
-              determines the  automatically  generated  files  as  those  with
+              determines  the  automatically  generated  files  as  those with
               extensions in the list in @generated_exts.)
 
-              A  convenient way to add an extra extension to the list, without
-              losing the already defined ones is to use a push command in  the
+              A convenient way to add an extra extension to the list,  without
+              losing  the already defined ones is to use a push command in the
               line in an RC file.  E.g.,
 
                               push @generated_exts, "end";
 
-              adds  the  extension  "end"  to the list of predefined generated
-              extensions.  (This extension is used by the RevTeX package,  for
+              adds the extension "end" to the  list  of  predefined  generated
+              extensions.   (This extension is used by the RevTeX package, for
               example.)
 
        $go_mode [0]
-              If  nonzero, process files regardless of timestamps, and is then
+              If nonzero, process files regardless of timestamps, and is  then
               equivalent to the -g option.
 
        %hash_calc_ignore_pattern
               !!!This variable is for experts only!!!
 
-              The general rule latexmk uses for determining when an extra  run
-              of  some  program  is needed is that one of the source files has
-              changed.  But consider for example a latex package  that  causes
-              an  encapsulated postscript file (an "eps" file) to be made that
-              is to be read in on the next run.  The file contains  a  comment
-              line  giving  its  creation  date and time.  On the next run the
-              time changes, latex sees that the  eps  file  has  changed,  and
-              therefore  reruns  latex.  This causes an infinite loop, that is
-              only terminated because latexmk has a limit  on  the  number  of
+              The  general rule latexmk uses for determining when an extra run
+              of some program is needed is that one of the  source  files  has
+              changed.   But  consider for example a latex package that causes
+              an encapsulated postscript file (an "eps" file) to be made  that
+              is  to  be read in on the next run.  The file contains a comment
+              line giving its creation date and time.  On  the  next  run  the
+              time  changes,  latex  sees  that  the eps file has changed, and
+              therefore reruns latex.  This causes an infinite loop,  that  is
+              only  terminated  because  latexmk  has a limit on the number of
               runs to guard against pathological situations.
 
               But the changing line has no real effect, since it is a comment.
@@ -2060,42 +2181,41 @@
                  $hash_calc_ignore_pattern{'eps'} = '^%%CreationDate: ';
 
               This creates a rule for files with extension .eps about lines to
-              ignore.   The left-hand side is a Perl idiom for setting an item
-              in a hash.  Note that the file extension is specified without  a
-              period.   The  value,  on  the  right-hand  side,  is  a  string
+              ignore.  The left-hand side is a Perl idiom for setting an  item
+              in  a hash.  Note that the file extension is specified without a
+              period.  The value, on the right-hand side, is a string contain-
+              ing  a  regular expresssion.  (See documentation on Perl for how
+              they are to be specified in general.)  This  particular  regular
+              expression  specifies that lines beginning with "%%CreationDate:
+              " are to be ignored in deciding whether  a  file  of  the  given
+              extension .eps has changed.
 
+              There  is  only one regular expression available for each exten-
+              sion.  If you need more one pattern to specify lines to  ignore,
+              then  you  need  to  combine  the patterns into a single regular
+              expression.  The simplest method is separate the different  sim-
+              ple  patterns  by a vertical bar character (indicating "alterna-
+              tion" in the jargon of regular expressions).  For example,
 
+                 $hash_calc_ignore_pattern{'eps'}     =      '^%%CreationDate:
+              |^%%Title: ';
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              29
+              causes   lines  starting  with  either  "^%%CreationDate:  "  or
+              "^%%Title: " to be ignored.
 
 
 
+                               5 September 2016                             32
 
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-              containing a regular expresssion.  (See  documentation  on  Perl
-              for  how  they are to be specified in general.)  This particular
-              regular expression specifies that lines beginning  with  "%%Cre-
-              ationDate: " are to be ignored in deciding whether a file of the
-              given extension .eps has changed.
 
-              There is only one regular expression available for  each  exten-
-              sion.   If you need more one pattern to specify lines to ignore,
-              then you need to combine the  patterns  into  a  single  regular
-              expression.   The simplest method is separate the different sim-
-              ple patterns by a vertical bar character  (indicating  "alterna-
-              tion" in the jargon of regular expressions).  For example,
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
-                 $hash_calc_ignore_pattern{'eps'}      =     '^%%CreationDate:
-              |^%%Title: ';
 
-              causes  lines  starting  with  either  "^%%CreationDate:  "   or
-              "^%%Title: " to be ignored.
-
-              It  may happen that a pattern to be ignored is specified in, for
-              example, in a system or user initialization file, and  you  wish
+              It may happen that a pattern to be ignored is specified in,  for
+              example,  in  a system or user initialization file, and you wish
               to remove this in a file read later.  To do this, you use Perl's
               delete function, e.g.,
 
@@ -2103,80 +2223,81 @@
 
 
        $kpsewhich ["kpsewhich %S"]
-              The program called to locate a source file when the  name  alone
-              is  not  sufficient.  Most filenames used by latexmk have suffi-
-              cient path information to be  found  directly.   But  sometimes,
-              notably  when .bib files are found from the log file of a bibtex
-              or biber run, the name of the file, but not its path  is  known.
+              The  program  called to locate a source file when the name alone
+              is not sufficient.  Most filenames used by latexmk  have  suffi-
+              cient  path  information  to  be found directly.  But sometimes,
+              notably when .bib files are found from the log file of a  bibtex
+              or  biber  run, the name of the file, but not its path is known.
               The program specified by $kpsewhich is used to find it.
 
-              See  also  the  @BIBINPUTS variable for another way that latexmk
+              See also the @BIBINPUTS variable for another  way  that  latexmk
               also uses to try to locate files; it applies only in the case of
               .bib files.
 
        $landscape_mode [0]
               If nonzero, run in landscape mode, using the landscape mode pre-
-              viewers and dvi to postscript converters.  Equivalent to the  -l
+              viewers  and dvi to postscript converters.  Equivalent to the -l
               option.  Normally not needed with current previewers.
 
        $latex ["latex %O %S"]
               The LaTeX processing program.  Note that as with other programs,
-              you can use this variable not just to change  the  name  of  the
+              you  can  use  this  variable not just to change the name of the
               program used, but also specify options to the program.  E.g.,
 
                                   $latex = "latex --src-specials";
 
        %latex_input_extensions
-              This  variable specifies the extensions tried by latexmk when it
-              finds that a LaTeX run resulted in an error that a file has  not
-              been  found,  and  the file is given without an extension.  This
-              typically happens when LaTeX commands of the  form  \input{file}
-              or  \includegraphics{figure}, when the relevant source file does
+              This variable specifies the extensions tried by latexmk when  it
+              finds  that a LaTeX run resulted in an error that a file has not
+              been found, and the file is given without  an  extension.   This
+              typically  happens  when LaTeX commands of the form \input{file}
+              or \includegraphics{figure}, when the relevant source file  does
               not exist.
 
-              In this situation, latexmk searches for custom  dependencies  to
-              make  the  missing  file(s),  but restricts it to the extensions
-              specified by the variable %latex_input_extensions.  The  default
+              In  this  situation, latexmk searches for custom dependencies to
+              make the missing file(s), but restricts  it  to  the  extensions
+              specified  by the variable %latex_input_extensions.  The default
               extensions are 'tex' and 'eps'.
 
+              (For Perl experts: %latex_input_extensions is a hash whose  keys
+              are  the  extensions.   The values are irrelevant.)  Two subrou-
+              tines are provided for manipulating this and the  related  vari-
+              able      %pdflatex_input_extensions,      add_input_ext     and
+              remove_input_ext.  They are used as in  the  following  examples
+              are possible lines in an initialization file:
 
+                  remove_input_ext( 'latex', 'tex' );
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              30
+              removes the extension 'tex' from latex_input_extensions
 
+                  add_input_ext( 'latex', 'asdf' );
 
 
 
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
+                               5 September 2016                             33
 
 
-              (For  Perl experts: %latex_input_extensions is a hash whose keys
-              are the extensions.  The values are  irrelevant.)   Two  subrou-
-              tines  are  provided for manipulating this and the related vari-
-              able     %pdflatex_input_extensions,      add_input_ext      and
-              remove_input_ext.   They  are  used as in the following examples
-              are possible lines in an initialization file:
 
-                  remove_input_ext( 'latex', 'tex' );
 
-              removes the extension 'tex' from latex_input_extensions
 
-                  add_input_ext( 'latex', 'asdf' );
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
-              add the extension 'asdf to  latex_input_extensions.   (Naturally
+
+              add  the  extension 'asdf to latex_input_extensions.  (Naturally
               with such an extension, you should have made an appropriate cus-
               tom dependency for latexmk, and should also have done the appro-
-              priate  programming  in the LaTeX source file to enable the file
-              to be read.  The standard extensions are handled  by  LaTeX  and
+              priate programming in the LaTeX source file to enable  the  file
+              to  be  read.   The standard extensions are handled by LaTeX and
               its graphics/graphicx packages.
 
 
        $latex_silent_switch ["-interaction=batchmode"]
-              Switch(es)  for the LaTeX processing program when silent mode is
+              Switch(es) for the LaTeX processing program when silent mode  is
               on.
 
-              If you use MikTeX, you may prefer the results if  you  configure
-              the  options  to include -c-style-errors, e.g., by the following
+              If  you  use MikTeX, you may prefer the results if you configure
+              the options to include -c-style-errors, e.g., by  the  following
               line in an initialization file
 
                 $latex_silent_switch   =   "-interaction=batchmode   -c-style-
@@ -2186,7 +2307,7 @@
        $lpr ["lpr %O %S" under UNIX/LINUX, "NONE lpr" under MS-WINDOWS]
               The command to print postscript files.
 
-              Under  MS-Windows (unlike UNIX/LINUX), there is no standard pro-
+              Under MS-Windows (unlike UNIX/LINUX), there is no standard  pro-
               gram for printing files.  But there are ways you can do it.  For
               example, if you have gsview installed, you could use it with the
               option "/p":
@@ -2193,12 +2314,12 @@
 
                   $lpr = '"c:/Program Files/Ghostgum/gsview/gsview32.exe" /p';
 
-              If  gsview  is installed in a different directory, you will need
-              to make the appropriate change.  Note the combination of  single
-              and  double  quotes  around the name.  The single quotes specify
-              that this is a string to be assigned to the configuration  vari-
-              able  $lpr.   The double quotes are part of the string passed to
-              the operating system to get the command obeyed; this  is  neces-
+              If gsview is installed in a different directory, you  will  need
+              to  make the appropriate change.  Note the combination of single
+              and double quotes around the name.  The  single  quotes  specify
+              that  this is a string to be assigned to the configuration vari-
+              able $lpr.  The double quotes are part of the string  passed  to
+              the  operating  system to get the command obeyed; this is neces-
               sary because one part of the command name ("Program Files") con-
               tains a space which would otherwise be misinterpreted.
 
@@ -2208,131 +2329,130 @@
        $lpr_pdf ["NONE lpr_pdf"]
               The printing program to print pdf files.
 
-              Under MS-Windows you could set this to  use  gsview,  if  it  is
+              Under  MS-Windows  you  could  set  this to use gsview, if it is
               installed, e.g.,
 
                   $lpr = '"c:/Program Files/Ghostgum/gsview/gsview32.exe" /p';
 
+              If  gsview  is installed in a different directory, you will need
+              to make the appropriate change.  Note the double  quotes  around
+              the name: this is necessary because one part of the command name
+              ("Program Files") contains a space which would otherwise be mis-
+              interpreted.
 
 
+       $make ["make"]
+              The make processing program.
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              31
 
 
 
+                               5 September 2016                             34
 
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-              If gsview is installed in a different directory, you  will  need
-              to  make  the appropriate change.  Note the double quotes around
-              the name: this is necessary because one part of the command name
-              ("Program Files") contains a space which would otherwise be mis-
-              interpreted.
 
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
-       $make ["make"]
-              The make processing program.
 
-
        $makeindex ["makeindex %O -o %D %S"]
               The index processing program.
 
        $makeindex_silent_switch ["-q"]
-              Switch(es) for the index processing program when silent mode  is
+              Switch(es)  for the index processing program when silent mode is
               on.
 
        $max_repeat [5]
-              The  maximum  number  of  times  latexmk will run latex/pdflatex
-              before deciding that there may be an infinite loop and  that  it
+              The maximum number of  times  latexmk  will  run  latex/pdflatex
+              before  deciding  that there may be an infinite loop and that it
               needs to bail out, rather than rerunning latex/pdflatex again to
-              resolve cross-references, etc.  The  default  value  covers  all
+              resolve  cross-references,  etc.   The  default value covers all
               normal cases.
 
-              (Note  that  the  "etc"  covers  a lot of cases where one run of
+              (Note that the "etc" covers a lot of  cases  where  one  run  of
               latex/pdflatex generates files to be read in on a later run.)
 
        $MSWin_back_slash [1]
-              This configuration variable only has an effect when  latexmk  is
+              This  configuration  variable only has an effect when latexmk is
               running under MS-Windows.  It determines whether, when a command
-              is executed under MS-Windows, there should  be  substituted  "\"
-              for  the  separator  character between components of a directory
-              name.  Internally, latexmk uses "/" for the directory  separator
+              is  executed  under  MS-Windows, there should be substituted "\"
+              for the separator character between components  of  a  directory
+              name.   Internally, latexmk uses "/" for the directory separator
               character, which is the character used by Unix-like systems.
 
               For many programs under MS-Windows, both "\" and "/" are accept-
-              able as the directory separator character.   But  some  programs
-              only  accept "\".  So for safety latexmk makes a translation, by
-              default.  It is conceivable that under certain  situations  this
-              is  undesirable, so the configuration can be changed.  (A possi-
-              ble example might be when some of the  software  is  implemented
+              able  as  the  directory separator character.  But some programs
+              only accept "\".  So for safety latexmk makes a translation,  by
+              default.   It  is conceivable that under certain situations this
+              is undesirable, so the configuration can be changed.  (A  possi-
+              ble  example  might  be when some of the software is implemented
               using Cygwin, which provides an Unix-like environment inside MS-
               Windows.)
 
 
        $new_viewer_always [0]
-              This variable applies  to  latexmk  only  in  continuous-preview
+              This  variable  applies  to  latexmk  only in continuous-preview
               mode.  If $new_viewer_always is 0, latexmk will check for a pre-
-              viously running previewer on the same file, and if one  is  run-
-              ning  will  not  start a new one.  If $new_viewer_always is non-
-              zero, this check will be skipped, and latexmk will behave as  if
+              viously  running  previewer on the same file, and if one is run-
+              ning will not start a new one.  If  $new_viewer_always  is  non-
+              zero,  this check will be skipped, and latexmk will behave as if
               no viewer is running.
 
 
        $out_dir [""]
-              If  non-blank,  this  variable  specifies the directory in which
+              If non-blank, this variable specifies  the  directory  in  which
               output files are to be written by a run of (pdf)latex.  See also
               the variable $aux_dir.
 
-              The  effect  of  this  variable  (when non-blank) is achieved by
-              using the -output-directory option of (pdf)latex.   This  exists
-              in  the  usual  current (Dec. 2011 and later) implementations of
+              The effect of this variable  (when  non-blank)  is  achieved  by
+              using  the  -output-directory option of (pdf)latex.  This exists
+              in the usual current (Dec. 2011 and  later)  implementations  of
+              TeX,  i.e.,  MiKTeX  and  TeXLive.  But it may not be present in
+              other versions.
 
+              If you also use the -cd option, and $out_dir (or $aux_dir)  con-
+              tains  a relative path, then the path is interpreted relative to
+              the document directory.
 
+              Commonly,  the  directory  specified  for  output  files  is   a
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              32
 
 
+                               5 September 2016                             35
 
 
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-              TeX, i.e., MiKTeX and TeXLive. But it  may  not  be  present  in
-              other versions.
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
-              If  you also use the -cd option, and $out_dir (or $aux_dir) con-
-              tains a relative path, then the path is interpreted relative  to
-              the document directory.
 
-              Commonly,  the  directory specified for output files is a subdi-
-              rectory of the current working directory.  However, if you spec-
-              ify  some  other  directory, e.g., "/tmp/foo" or "../output", be
-              aware that this could cause problems, e.g.,  with  makeindex  or
-              bibtex.   This  is because modern versions of these programs, by
-              default, will refuse to work when they find that they are  asked
-              to  write  to  a  file in a directory that appears not to be the
+              subdirectory  of the current working directory.  However, if you
+              specify some other directory, e.g., "/tmp/foo"  or  "../output",
+              be aware that this could cause problems, e.g., with makeindex or
+              bibtex.  This is because modern versions of these  programs,  by
+              default,  will refuse to work when they find that they are asked
+              to write to a file in a directory that appears  not  to  be  the
               current working directory or one of its subdirectories.  This is
-              part  of  security  measures by the whole TeX system that try to
+              part of security measures by the whole TeX system  that  try  to
               prevent malicious or errant TeX documents from incorrectly mess-
               ing with a user's files.  If for $out_dir or $aux_dir you really
-              do need to specify an absolute pathname (e.g., "/tmp/foo") or  a
+              do  need to specify an absolute pathname (e.g., "/tmp/foo") or a
               path (e.g., "../output") that includes a higher-level directory,
-              and you need to use makeindex or bibtex, then you need  to  dis-
-              able  the  security measures (and assume any risks).  One way of
+              and  you  need to use makeindex or bibtex, then you need to dis-
+              able the security measures (and assume any risks).  One  way  of
               doing this is to temporarily set an operating system environment
-              variable  openout_any  to  "a"  (as  in  "all"), to override the
+              variable openout_any to "a"  (as  in  "all"),  to  override  the
               default "paranoid" setting.
 
 
        $pdf_mode [0]
-              If zero, do NOT generate a pdf  version  of  the  document.   If
-              equal  to 1, generate a pdf version of the document using pdfla-
+              If  zero,  do  NOT  generate  a pdf version of the document.  If
+              equal to 1, generate a pdf version of the document using  pdfla-
               tex.  If equal to 2, generate a pdf version of the document from
               the ps file, by using the command specified by the $ps2pdf vari-
-              able.  If equal to 3, generate a pdf  version  of  the  document
+              able.   If  equal  to  3, generate a pdf version of the document
               from the dvi file, by using the command specified by the $dvipdf
               variable.
 
@@ -2340,14 +2460,14 @@
 
 
        $pdflatex ["pdflatex %O %S"]
-              The LaTeX processing program in a version that makes a pdf  file
+              The  LaTeX processing program in a version that makes a pdf file
               instead of a dvi file.
 
-              An  example of the use of this variable is to arrange for luala-
-              tex, xelatex or some similar  program  to  be  used  instead  of
-              pdflatex.   Note  that  lualatex  and  xelatex only produce .pdf
-              files (and not .dvi), so to use them you will also need to  turn
-              on  production  of .pdf files, and to turn off the production of
+              An example of the use of this variable is to arrange for  luala-
+              tex,  xelatex  or  some  similar  program  to be used instead of
+              pdflatex.  Note that lualatex  and  xelatex  only  produce  .pdf
+              files  (and not .dvi), so to use them you will also need to turn
+              on production of .pdf files, and to turn off the  production  of
               .dvi (and .ps) files, either by command line options or by suit-
               able settings in a configuration file. Thus to use lualatex, the
               following settings are appropriate:
@@ -2360,43 +2480,43 @@
                    $pdflatex = "xelatex %O %S";
                    $pdf_mode = 1; $postscript_mode = $dvi_mode = 0;
 
-              Another use of the same variable is to add  certain  options  to
+              Another  use  of  the same variable is to add certain options to
               the command line for the program, e.g.,
 
+                   $pdflatex = "pdflatex --shell-escape %O %S";
 
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              33
+       %pdflatex_input_extensions
+              This variable specifies the extensions tried by latexmk when  it
+              finds  that  a pdflatex run resulted in an error that a file has
 
 
 
+                               5 September 2016                             36
 
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-                   $pdflatex = "pdflatex --shell-escape %O %S";
 
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-       %pdflatex_input_extensions
-              This  variable specifies the extensions tried by latexmk when it
-              finds that a pdflatex run resulted in an error that a  file  has
-              not  been  found,  and  the  file is given without an extension.
-              This  typically  happens  when  LaTeX  commands  of   the   form
+              not been found, and the file  is  given  without  an  extension.
+              This   typically   happens  when  LaTeX  commands  of  the  form
               \input{file}  or  \includegraphics{figure},  when  the  relevant
               source file does not exist.
 
-              In this situation, latexmk searches for custom  dependencies  to
-              make  the  missing  file(s),  but restricts it to the extensions
-              specified  by  the  variable  %pdflatex_input_extensions.    The
+              In  this  situation, latexmk searches for custom dependencies to
+              make the missing file(s), but restricts  it  to  the  extensions
+              specified   by  the  variable  %pdflatex_input_extensions.   The
               default extensions are 'tex', 'pdf', 'jpg, and 'png'.
 
-              (For  Perl  experts:  %pdflatex_input_extensions is a hash whose
-              keys are the extensions.  The values are irrelevant.)  Two  sub-
-              routines  are  provided  for  manipulating  this and the related
-              variable     %latex_input_extensions,     add_input_ext      and
-              remove_input_ext.   They  are  used as in the following examples
+              (For Perl experts: %pdflatex_input_extensions is  a  hash  whose
+              keys  are the extensions.  The values are irrelevant.)  Two sub-
+              routines are provided for  manipulating  this  and  the  related
+              variable      %latex_input_extensions,     add_input_ext     and
+              remove_input_ext.  They are used as in  the  following  examples
               are possible lines in an initialization file:
 
                   remove_input_ext( 'pdflatex', 'tex' );
@@ -2405,20 +2525,20 @@
 
                   add_input_ext( 'pdflatex', 'asdf' );
 
-              add the extension 'asdf  to  pdflatex_input_extensions.   (Natu-
-              rally  with such an extension, you should have made an appropri-
+              add  the  extension  'asdf to pdflatex_input_extensions.  (Natu-
+              rally with such an extension, you should have made an  appropri-
               ate custom dependency for latexmk, and should also have done the
-              appropriate  programming  in the LaTeX source file to enable the
-              file to be read.  The standard extensions are handled by  pdfla-
+              appropriate programming in the LaTeX source file to  enable  the
+              file  to be read.  The standard extensions are handled by pdfla-
               tex and its graphics/graphicx packages.)
 
 
        $pdflatex_silent_switch ["-interaction=batchmode"]
-              Switch(es)  for  the pdflatex program (specified in the variable
+              Switch(es) for the pdflatex program (specified in  the  variable
               $pdflatex when silent mode is on.
 
-              If you use MikTeX, you may prefer the results if  you  configure
-              the  options  to include -c-style-errors, e.g., by the following
+              If  you  use MikTeX, you may prefer the results if you configure
+              the options to include -c-style-errors, e.g., by  the  following
               line in an initialization file
 
                 $latex_silent_switch   =   "-interaction=batchmode   -c-style-
@@ -2428,58 +2548,59 @@
        $pdf_previewer ["start acroread %O %S"]
               The command to invoke a pdf-previewer.
 
-              On  MS-WINDOWS,  the  default  is  changed to "cmd /c start """;
+              On MS-WINDOWS, the default is changed  to  "cmd  /c  start  """;
               under more recent versions of Windows, this will cause to be run
               whatever command the system has associated with .pdf files.  But
-              this may be undesirable if this association is  to  acroread  --
+              this  may  be  undesirable if this association is to acroread --
               see the notes in the explanation of the -pvc option.]
 
-              On  OS-X  the  default is changed to "open %S", which results in
-              OS-X starting up (and detaching) the viewer associated with  the
-              file.   By  default, for pdf files this association is to OS-X's
+              On OS-X the default is changed to "open %S",  which  results  in
+              OS-X  starting up (and detaching) the viewer associated with the
+              file.  By default, for pdf files this association is  to  OS-X's
               preview, which is quite satisfactory.
 
+              WARNING:   Problem  under MS-Windows: if acroread is used as the
+              pdf previewer, and it is actually viewing a pdf  file,  the  pdf
+              file  cannot  be  updated.   Thus makes acroread a bad choice of
+              previewer if you use latexmk's previous-continuous mode  (option
+              -pvc)  under  MS-windows.   This  problem does not occur if, for
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              34
 
+                               5 September 2016                             37
 
 
 
 
+
 LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-              WARNING:  Problem under MS-Windows: if acroread is used  as  the
-              pdf  previewer,  and  it is actually viewing a pdf file, the pdf
-              file cannot be updated.  Thus makes acroread  a  bad  choice  of
-              previewer  if you use latexmk's previous-continuous mode (option
-              -pvc) under MS-windows.  This problem does  not  occur  if,  for
               example, SumatraPDF or gsview is used to view pdf files.
 
-              Important  note:  Normally you will want to have a previewer run
+              Important note: Normally you will want to have a  previewer  run
               detached, so that latexmk doesn't wait for the previewer to ter-
-              minate  before continuing its work.  So normally you should pre-
-              fix the command by "start ", which  flags  to  latexmk  that  it
-              should  do  the  detaching  of the previewer itself (by whatever
-              method is appropriate to the operating system).   But  sometimes
+              minate before continuing its work.  So normally you should  pre-
+              fix  the  command  by  "start  ", which flags to latexmk that it
+              should do the detaching of the  previewer  itself  (by  whatever
+              method  is  appropriate to the operating system).  But sometimes
               letting latexmk do the detaching is not appropriate (for a vari-
-              ety of non-trivial reasons), so you should put the "start "  bit
+              ety  of non-trivial reasons), so you should put the "start " bit
               in yourself, whenever it is needed.
 
 
        $pdf_update_command [""]
-              When  the  pdf  previewer is set to be updated by running a com-
-              mand, this is the command that is run.  See the information  for
+              When the pdf previewer is set to be updated by  running  a  com-
+              mand,  this is the command that is run.  See the information for
               the variable $pdf_update_method.
 
        $pdf_update_method [1 under UNIX, 3 under MS-Windows]
-              How  the  pdf  viewer  updates its display when the pdf file has
-              changed. See the information on the variable  $dvi_update_method
+              How the pdf viewer updates its display when  the  pdf  file  has
+              changed.  See the information on the variable $dvi_update_method
               for the codes.  (Note that information needs be changed slightly
-              so that for the value 4, to run a command to do the update,  the
-              command  is  specified  by the variable $pdf_update_command, and
-              for the value 2, to specify update  by  signal,  the  signal  is
+              so  that for the value 4, to run a command to do the update, the
+              command is specified by the  variable  $pdf_update_command,  and
+              for  the  value  2,  to  specify update by signal, the signal is
               specified by $pdf_update_signal.)
 
               Note that acroread under MS-Windows (but not UNIX) locks the pdf
@@ -2492,72 +2613,72 @@
                   $pdf_update_method = 4;
                   $pdf_update_command = "xpdf -remote %R -reload";
 
-              The  first  setting  arranges for the xpdf program to be used in
-              its "remote server mode", with the server name specified as  the
-              rootname  of  the  TeX  file.   The  second setting arranges for
+              The first setting arranges for the xpdf program to  be  used  in
+              its  "remote server mode", with the server name specified as the
+              rootname of the TeX  file.   The  second  setting  arranges  for
               updating to be done in response to a command, and the third set-
               ting sets the update command.
 
 
-       $pdf_update_signal  [Under  UNIX:  SIGHUP,  which is a system-dependent
+       $pdf_update_signal [Under UNIX: SIGHUP,  which  is  a  system-dependent
        value]
-              The  number of the signal that is sent to the pdf viewer when it
-              is updated by sending a signal -- see  the  information  on  the
-              variable  $pdf_update_method.   The  default  value  is  the one
+              The number of the signal that is sent to the pdf viewer when  it
+              is  updated  by  sending  a signal -- see the information on the
+              variable $pdf_update_method.   The  default  value  is  the  one
               appropriate for gv on a UNIX system.
 
        $pid_position[1 under UNIX, -1 under MS-Windows]
-              The variable $pid_position is used  to  specify  which  word  in
-              lines  of  the output from $pscmd corresponds to the process ID.
-              The first word in the line is numbered 0.  The default value  of
+              The  variable  $pid_position  is  used  to specify which word in
+              lines of the output from $pscmd corresponds to the  process  ID.
+              The  first word in the line is numbered 0.  The default value of
               1 (2nd word in line) is correct for Solaris 2.6 and Linux.  Set-
-              ting the variable to -1 is used to indicate that $pscmd  is  not
+              ting  the  variable to -1 is used to indicate that $pscmd is not
               to be used.
 
+       $postscript_mode [0]
+              If nonzero, generate  a  postscript  version  of  the  document.
+              Equivalent to the -ps option.
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              35
 
+                               5 September 2016                             38
 
 
 
 
+
 LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-       $postscript_mode [0]
-              If  nonzero,  generate  a  postscript  version  of the document.
-              Equivalent to the -ps option.
-
-              If some other request is made for which  a  postscript  file  is
+              If  some  other  request  is made for which a postscript file is
               needed, then $postscript_mode will be set to 1.
 
        $preview_continuous_mode [0]
-              If  nonzero,  run a previewer to view the document, and continue
+              If nonzero, run a previewer to view the document,  and  continue
               running latexmk to keep .dvi up-to-date.  Equivalent to the -pvc
-              option.   Which  previewer is run depends on the other settings,
+              option.  Which previewer is run depends on the  other  settings,
               see the command line options -view=, and the variable $view.
 
        $preview_mode [0]
               If nonzero, run a previewer to preview the document.  Equivalent
-              to  the -pv option.  Which previewer is run depends on the other
-              settings, see the command line options -view=, and the  variable
+              to the -pv option.  Which previewer is run depends on the  other
+              settings,  see the command line options -view=, and the variable
               $view.
 
        $printout_mode [0]
-              If  nonzero, print the document using lpr.  Equivalent to the -p
+              If nonzero, print the document using lpr.  Equivalent to the  -p
               option.  This is recommended not to be set from an RC file, oth-
               erwise you could waste lots of paper.
 
        $print_type = ["auto"]
-              Type  of  file  to  printout:  possibilities  are "auto", "dvi",
+              Type of file  to  printout:  possibilities  are  "auto",  "dvi",
               "none", "pdf", or "ps".   See the option -print= for the meaning
               of the "auto" value.
 
        $pscmd Command used to get all the processes currently run by the user.
-              The -pvc option uses  the  command  specified  by  the  variable
-              $pscmd  to  determine  if there is an already running previewer,
-              and to find the process ID (needed if latexmk  needs  to  signal
+              The  -pvc  option  uses  the  command  specified by the variable
+              $pscmd to determine if there is an  already  running  previewer,
+              and  to  find  the process ID (needed if latexmk needs to signal
               the previewer about file changes).
 
               Each line of the output of this command is assumed to correspond
@@ -2564,11 +2685,11 @@
               to one process.  See the $pid_position variable for how the pro-
               cess number is determined.
 
-              The  default  for  pscmd  is  "NONE" under MS-Windows and cygwin
+              The default for pscmd is  "NONE"  under  MS-Windows  and  cygwin
               (i.e.,  the  command  is  not  used),  "ps  --width  200  -f  -u
-              $ENV{USER}"  under  linux,  "ps  -ww -u $ENV{USER}" under darwin
-              (Macintosh OS-X), and "ps -f -u $ENV{USER}" under other  operat-
-              ing  systems (including other flavors of UNIX).  In these speci-
+              $ENV{USER}" under linux, "ps -ww  -u  $ENV{USER}"  under  darwin
+              (Macintosh  OS-X), and "ps -f -u $ENV{USER}" under other operat-
+              ing systems (including other flavors of UNIX).  In these  speci-
               fications "$ENV{USER}" is substituted by the username.
 
        $ps2pdf ["ps2pdf %O %S %D"]
@@ -2575,71 +2696,71 @@
               Command to convert ps to pdf file.
 
        $ps_filter [empty]
-              The postscript file filter to  be  run  on  the  newly  produced
+              The  postscript  file  filter  to  be  run on the newly produced
               postscript file before other processing.  Equivalent to specify-
               ing the -pF option.
 
        $ps_previewer ["start gv %O %S", but start %O %S under MS-WINDOWS]
-              The command to invoke a ps-previewer.  (The  default  under  MS-
-              WINDOWS  will  cause  to  be run whatever command the system has
+              The  command  to  invoke a ps-previewer.  (The default under MS-
+              WINDOWS will cause to be run whatever  command  the  system  has
               associated with .ps files.)
 
-              Note that gv could be used with the -watch  option  updates  its
-              display  whenever the postscript file changes, whereas ghostview
-              does not.  However, different versions of gv have slightly  dif-
-              ferent  ways  of  writing  this  option.  You can configure this
+              Note  that  gv  could be used with the -watch option updates its
+              display whenever the postscript file changes, whereas  ghostview
+              does  not.  However, different versions of gv have slightly dif-
+              ferent ways of writing this  option.   You  can  configure  this
+              variable appropriately.
 
+              WARNING: Linux systems may have installed one (or more) versions
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              36
 
+                               5 September 2016                             39
 
 
 
 
+
 LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-              variable appropriately.
-
-              WARNING: Linux systems may have installed one (or more) versions
-              of  gv  under  different  names, e.g., ggv, kghostview, etc, but
+              of gv under different names, e.g.,  ggv,  kghostview,  etc,  but
               perhaps not one called gv.
 
-              Important note: Normally you will want to have a  previewer  run
+              Important  note:  Normally you will want to have a previewer run
               detached, so that latexmk doesn't wait for the previewer to ter-
-              minate before continuing its work.  So normally you should  pre-
-              fix  the  command  by  "start  ", which flags to latexmk that it
-              should do the detaching of the  previewer  itself  (by  whatever
-              method  is  appropriate to the operating system).  But sometimes
+              minate  before continuing its work.  So normally you should pre-
+              fix the command by "start ", which  flags  to  latexmk  that  it
+              should  do  the  detaching  of the previewer itself (by whatever
+              method is appropriate to the operating system).   But  sometimes
               letting latexmk do the detaching is not appropriate (for a vari-
-              ety  of non-trivial reasons), so you should put the "start " bit
+              ety of non-trivial reasons), so you should put the "start "  bit
               in yourself, whenever it is needed.
 
 
-       $ps_previewer_landscape ["start gv -swap %O %S", but start %O %S  under
+       $ps_previewer_landscape  ["start gv -swap %O %S", but start %O %S under
        MS-WINDOWS]
               The command to invoke a ps-previewer in landscape mode.
 
        $ps_update_command [""]
-              When the postscript previewer is set to be updated by running  a
-              command,  this  is the command that is run.  See the information
+              When  the postscript previewer is set to be updated by running a
+              command, this is the command that is run.  See  the  information
               for the variable $ps_update_method.
 
        $ps_update_method [0 under UNIX, 1 under MS-Windows]
-              How the postscript viewer updates its display when the  ps  file
-              has    changed.    See   the   information   on   the   variable
-              $dvi_update_method for the codes.  (Note that information  needs
+              How  the  postscript viewer updates its display when the ps file
+              has   changed.   See   the   information   on    the    variable
+              $dvi_update_method  for the codes.  (Note that information needs
               be changed slightly so that for the value 4, to run a command to
               do  the  update,  the  command  is  specified  by  the  variable
-              $ps_update_command,  and  for  the value 2, to specify update by
+              $ps_update_command, and for the value 2, to  specify  update  by
               signal, the signal is specified by $ps_update_signal.)
 
 
-       $ps_update_signal [Under UNIX:  SIGHUP,  which  is  a  system-dependent
+       $ps_update_signal  [Under  UNIX:  SIGHUP,  which  is a system-dependent
        value]
-              The number of the signal that is sent to the pdf viewer when  it
-              is  updated  by  sending a signal -- see $ps_update_method.  The
+              The  number of the signal that is sent to the pdf viewer when it
+              is updated by sending a signal --  see  $ps_update_method.   The
               default value is the one appropriate for gv on a UNIX system.
 
 
@@ -2651,22 +2772,25 @@
        $quote_filenames [1]
               This specifies whether substitutions for placeholders in command
               specifications  (as  in  $pdflatex)  are  surrounded  by  double
-              quotes.   If this variable is 1 (or any other value Perl regards
+              quotes.  If this variable is 1 (or any other value Perl  regards
               as true), then quoting is done.  Otherwise quoting is omitted.
 
-              The quoting method used by latexmk is tested to  work  correctly
-              under  UNIX systems (including Linux and Mac OS-X) and under MS-
-              Windows.  It allows the  use  of  filenames  containing  special
-              characters,  notably  spaces.   (But  note that many versions of
-              LaTeX and PdfLaTeX cannot correctly deal with  TeX  files  whose
-              names  contain spaces.  Latexmk's quoting only ensures that such
+              The  quoting  method used by latexmk is tested to work correctly
+              under UNIX systems (including Linux and Mac OS-X) and under  MS-
+              Windows.   It  allows  the  use  of filenames containing special
+              characters, notably spaces.  (But note  that  many  versions  of
+              LaTeX  and  PdfLaTeX  cannot correctly deal with TeX files whose
+              names contain spaces.  Latexmk's quoting only ensures that  such
               filenames are correctly treated by the operating system in pass-
               ing arguments to programs.)
 
+       $recorder [1]
+              Whether to use the -recorder option to latex and  pdflatex.  Use
+              of  this option results in a file of extension .fls containing a
 
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              37
+                               5 September 2016                             40
 
 
 
@@ -2675,101 +2799,98 @@
 LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-       $recorder [0]
-              Whether  to  use the -recorder option to latex and pdflatex. Use
-              of this option results in a file of extension .fls containing  a
-              list  of  the  files  that these programs have read and written.
-              Latexmk will then use this file  to  improve  its  detection  of
-              source  files and generated files after a run of latex or pdfla-
+              list of the files that these programs  have  read  and  written.
+              Latexmk  will  then  use  this  file to improve its detection of
+              source files and generated files after a run of latex or  pdfla-
               tex.
 
-              It is generally recommended to use this option (or to  configure
-              the  $recorder  variable  to  be  on.)   But  it  only  works if
+              It  is generally recommended to use this option (or to configure
+              the $recorder  variable  to  be  on.)   But  it  only  works  if
               (pdf)latex supports the -recorder option, which is true for most
               current implementations
 
-              Note  about  the  name of the .fls file: Most implementations of
-              (pdf)latex produce an .fls file with the same  basename  as  the
-              main  document's LaTeX, e.g., for Document.tex, the .fls file is
-              Document.fls.  However,  some  implementations  instead  produce
-              files  named  for  the program, i.e., latex.fls or pdflatex.fls.
-              In this second case, latexmk  copies  the  latex.fls  or  pdfla-
-              tex.fls  to a file with the basename of the main LaTeX document,
+              Note about the name of the .fls file:  Most  implementations  of
+              (pdf)latex  produce  an  .fls file with the same basename as the
+              main document's LaTeX, e.g., for Document.tex, the .fls file  is
+              Document.fls.   However,  some  implementations  instead produce
+              files named for the program, i.e.,  latex.fls  or  pdflatex.fls.
+              In  this  second  case,  latexmk  copies the latex.fls or pdfla-
+              tex.fls to a file with the basename of the main LaTeX  document,
               e.g., Document.fls.
 
 
        $search_path_separator [See below for default]
               The character separating paths in the environment variables TEX-
-              INPUTS,  BIBINPUTS, and BSTINPUTS.  This variable is mainly used
-              by latexmk when the -outdir, -output-directory, -auxdir,  and/or
-              -aux-directory  options are used.  In that case latexmk needs to
-              communicate appropriately  modified  search  paths  to  $bibtex,
+              INPUTS, BIBINPUTS, and BSTINPUTS.  This variable is mainly  used
+              by  latexmk when the -outdir, -output-directory, -auxdir, and/or
+              -aux-directory options are used.  In that case latexmk needs  to
+              communicate  appropriately  modified  search  paths  to $bibtex,
               dvipdf, dvips, and (pdf)latex.
 
-              [Comment  to technically savvy readers: (pdf)latex doesn't actu-
-              ally need the modified  search  path,  because  it  corrects  it
-              internally.   But,  surprisingly,  dvipdf  and dvips do, because
-              sometimes graphics files get generated  in  the  output  or  aux
+              [Comment to technically savvy readers: (pdf)latex doesn't  actu-
+              ally  need  the  modified  search  path,  because it corrects it
+              internally.  But, surprisingly, dvipdf  and  dvips  do,  because
+              sometimes  graphics  files  get  generated  in the output or aux
               directories.]
 
-              The  default  under  MSWin and Cygwin is ';' and under UNIX-like
-              operating systems (including Linux and OS-X) is  ':'.   Normally
-              the  defaults give correct behavior.  But there can be difficul-
-              ties if your operating system is of one kind, but some  of  your
-              software  is  running  under  an  emulator for the other kind of
-              operating system; in that case you'll need to find out  what  is
-              needed,  and  set  $search_path_separator explicitly.  (The same
-              goes, of course, for unusual operating systems that are  not  in
+              The default under MSWin and Cygwin is ';'  and  under  UNIX-like
+              operating  systems  (including Linux and OS-X) is ':'.  Normally
+              the defaults give correct behavior.  But there can be  difficul-
+              ties  if  your operating system is of one kind, but some of your
+              software is running under an emulator  for  the  other  kind  of
+              operating  system;  in that case you'll need to find out what is
+              needed, and set $search_path_separator  explicitly.   (The  same
+              goes,  of  course, for unusual operating systems that are not in
               the MSWin, Linux, OS-X, Unix collection.)
 
 
        $silence_logfile_warnings [0]
-              Whether  after  a run of (pdf)latex to summarize warnings in the
-              log file about  undefined  citations  and  references.   Setting
-              $silence_logfile_warnings=0  gives the summary of warnings (pro-
-              vided silent mode isn't also set), and this is useful to  locate
+              Whether after a run of (pdf)latex to summarize warnings  in  the
+              log  file  about  undefined  citations  and references.  Setting
+              $silence_logfile_warnings=0 gives the summary of warnings  (pro-
+              vided  silent mode isn't also set), and this is useful to locate
               undefined citations and references without searching through the
-              much more verbose log file or the screen output  of  (pdf)latex.
-              But  the  summary can also be excessively annoying.  The default
-              is not  to  give  these  warnings.   The  command  line  options
+              much  more  verbose log file or the screen output of (pdf)latex.
+              But the summary can also be excessively annoying.   The  default
+              is  not  to  give  these  warnings.   The  command  line options
               -silence_logfile_warning_list and -silence_logfile_warning_list-
               also set this variable.
 
-              Note that multiple occurrences for the same undefined object  on
+              Note  that multiple occurrences for the same undefined object on
               the same page and same line will be compressed to a single warn-
               ing.
 
 
+       $silent [0]
+              Whether  to  run  silently.   Setting  $silent to 1 has the same
+              effect as the -quiet of -silent options on the command line.
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              38
 
 
+                               5 September 2016                             41
 
 
 
-LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-       $silent [0]
-              Whether to run silently.  Setting $silent  to  1  has  the  same
-              effect as the -quiet of -silent options on the command line.
+LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
        $sleep_time [2]
-              The  time to sleep (in seconds) between checking for source file
+              The time to sleep (in seconds) between checking for source  file
               changes when running with the -pvc option.  This is subject to a
-              minimum  of  one  second  delay,  except that zero delay is also
+              minimum of one second delay, except  that  zero  delay  is  also
               allowed.
 
-              A value of exactly 0 gives no delay, and  typically  results  in
+              A  value  of  exactly 0 gives no delay, and typically results in
               100% CPU usage, which may not be desirable.
 
        $texfile_search [""]
-              This  is  an  obsolete  variable, replaced by the @default_files
+              This is an obsolete variable,  replaced  by  the  @default_files
               variable.
 
-              For  backward  compatibility,  if  you  choose  to   set   $tex-
-              file_search,  it  is  a string of space-separated filenames, and
+              For   backward   compatibility,  if  you  choose  to  set  $tex-
+              file_search, it is a string of  space-separated  filenames,  and
               then latexmk replaces @default_files with the filenames in $tex-
               file_search to which is added "*.tex".
 
@@ -2779,60 +2900,60 @@
 
 
        $tmpdir [See below for default]
-              Directory  to  store  temporary  files that latexmk may generate
+              Directory to store temporary files  that  latexmk  may  generate
               while running.
 
-              The default  under  MSWindows  (including  cygwin),  is  to  set
-              $tmpdir  to  the  value  of the first of whichever of the system
-              environment variables TMPDIR or TEMP exists,  otherwise  to  the
-              current  directory.   Under other operating systems (expected to
-              be UNIX/Linux, including OS-X), the default is the value of  the
-              system  environment  variable  TMPDIR  if  it  exists, otherwise
+              The  default  under  MSWindows  (including  cygwin),  is  to set
+              $tmpdir to the value of the first of  whichever  of  the  system
+              environment  variables  TMPDIR  or TEMP exists, otherwise to the
+              current directory.  Under other operating systems  (expected  to
+              be  UNIX/Linux, including OS-X), the default is the value of the
+              system environment  variable  TMPDIR  if  it  exists,  otherwise
               "/tmp".
 
        $use_make_for_missing_files [0]
               Whether to use make to try and make files that are missing after
-              a  run  of  latex or pdflatex, and for which a custom dependency
-              has not been found.  This is generally useful only when  latexmk
-              is  used as part of a bigger project which is built by using the
+              a run of latex or pdflatex, and for which  a  custom  dependency
+              has  not been found.  This is generally useful only when latexmk
+              is used as part of a bigger project which is built by using  the
               make program.
 
               Note that once a missing file has been made, no further calls to
-              make  will  be made on a subsequent run of latexmk to update the
-              file.  Handling this problem is the job of  a  suitably  defined
-              Makefile.   See the section "USING latexmk WITH make" for how to
-              do this.  The intent of calling make from latexmk is  merely  to
+              make will be made on a subsequent run of latexmk to  update  the
+              file.   Handling  this  problem is the job of a suitably defined
+              Makefile.  See the section "USING latexmk WITH make" for how  to
+              do  this.   The intent of calling make from latexmk is merely to
               detect dependencies.
 
        $view ["default"]
-              Which  kind  of  file is to be previewed if a previewer is used.
-              The possible values are  "default",  "dvi",  "ps",  "pdf".   The
+              Which kind of file is to be previewed if a  previewer  is  used.
+              The  possible  values  are  "default",  "dvi", "ps", "pdf".  The
               value of "default" means that the "highest" of the kinds of file
               generated is to be used (among dvi, ps and pdf).
 
 
 CUSTOM DEPENDENCIES
-       In any RC file a set of custom dependencies can be set up to convert  a
+       In  any RC file a set of custom dependencies can be set up to convert a
        file with one extension to a file with another.  An example use of this
+       would be to allow latexmk to convert a .fig file to .eps to be included
+       in the .tex file.
 
+       The old method of configuring latexmk was to  directly  manipulate  the
+       @cus_dep_list  array  that  contains  information  defining  the custom
+       dependencies.  This method still works.  But now there are  subroutines
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              39
 
+                               5 September 2016                             42
 
 
 
 
+
 LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-       would be to allow latexmk to convert a .fig file to .eps to be included
-       in the .tex file.
-
-       The  old  method  of configuring latexmk was to directly manipulate the
-       @cus_dep_list array  that  contains  information  defining  the  custom
-       dependencies.   This method still works.  But now there are subroutines
-       that allow convenient manipulations  of  the  custom  dependency  list.
+       that  allow  convenient  manipulations  of  the custom dependency list.
        These are
 
            add_cus_dep( fromextension, toextension, must, subroutine )
@@ -2843,7 +2964,7 @@
        follow:
 
        from extension:
-              The extension of the file we are converting from  (e.g.  "fig").
+              The  extension  of the file we are converting from (e.g. "fig").
               It is specified without a period.
 
        to extension:
@@ -2850,36 +2971,36 @@
               The extension of the file we are converting to (e.g. "eps").  It
               is specified without a period.
 
-       must:  If non-zero, the file from which we are converting  must  exist,
-              if  it doesn't exist latexmk will give an error message and exit
+       must:  If  non-zero,  the file from which we are converting must exist,
+              if it doesn't exist latexmk will give an error message and  exit
               unless the -f option is specified.  If must is zero and the file
               we are converting from doesn't exist, then no action is taken.
 
        function:
-              The  name  of the subroutine that latexmk should call to perform
-              the file conversion.  The first argument to  the  subroutine  is
+              The name of the subroutine that latexmk should call  to  perform
+              the  file  conversion.   The first argument to the subroutine is
               the base name of the file to be converted without any extension.
-              The subroutines are declared in the syntax of Perl.   The  func-
-              tion  should  return 0 if it was successful and a nonzero number
+              The  subroutines  are declared in the syntax of Perl.  The func-
+              tion should return 0 if it was successful and a  nonzero  number
               if it failed.
 
-       It is invoked whenever latexmk detects that  a  run  of  latex/pdflatex
-       needs  to read a file, like a graphics file, whose extension is the to-
+       It  is  invoked  whenever  latexmk detects that a run of latex/pdflatex
+       needs to read a file, like a graphics file, whose extension is the  to-
        extension of a custom dependency.  Then latexmk examines whether a file
-       exists  with  the same name, but with the corresponding from-extension,
-       as specified in the custom-dependency rule.  If it does, then  whenever
-       the  destination  file  (the  one with the to-extension) is out-of-date
+       exists with the same name, but with the  corresponding  from-extension,
+       as  specified in the custom-dependency rule.  If it does, then whenever
+       the destination file (the one with  the  to-extension)  is  out-of-date
        with respect to the corresponding source file.
 
-       To make the new destination file, the Perl subroutine specified in  the
+       To  make the new destination file, the Perl subroutine specified in the
        rule is invoked, with an argument that is the base name of the files in
-       question.  Simple cases just involve a subroutine invoking an  external
-       program;  this  can  be  done by following the templates below, even by
-       those without knowledge of the Perl programming language.   Of  course,
+       question.   Simple cases just involve a subroutine invoking an external
+       program; this can be done by following the  templates  below,  even  by
+       those  without  knowledge of the Perl programming language.  Of course,
        experts could do something much more elaborate.
 
-       One  other  item  in  each  custom-dependency rule labeled "must" above
-       specifies how the rule should be applied when the source file fails  to
+       One other item in each  custom-dependency  rule  labeled  "must"  above
+       specifies  how the rule should be applied when the source file fails to
        exist.
 
        A simple and typical example of code in an initialization rcfile is
@@ -2889,44 +3010,44 @@
                system( "fig2dev -Leps \"$_[0].fig\" \"$_[0].eps\"" );
            }
 
-       The  first  line  adds  a  custom  dependency that converts a file with
+       The first line adds a custom  dependency  that  converts  a  file  with
+       extension  "fig",  as  created  by the xfig program, to an encapsulated
+       postscript file, with extension "eps".  The remaining  lines  define  a
+       subroutine  that  carries out the conversion.  If a rule for converting
+       "fig" to "eps" files already exists (e.g., from  a  previously  read-in
+       initialization  file),  the latexmk will delete this rule before making
+       the new one.
 
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              40
 
+                               5 September 2016                             43
 
 
 
 
+
 LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-       extension "fig", as created by the xfig  program,  to  an  encapsulated
-       postscript  file,  with  extension "eps".  The remaining lines define a
-       subroutine that carries out the conversion.  If a rule  for  converting
-       "fig"  to  "eps"  files already exists (e.g., from a previously read-in
-       initialization file), the latexmk will delete this rule  before  making
-       the new one.
-
-       Suppose  latexmk  is  using this rule to convert a file "figure.fig" to
-       "figure.eps".  Then it will invoke the fig2eps  subroutine  defined  in
-       the  above  code with a single argument "figure", which is the basename
-       of each of the files (possibly with a path component).   This  argument
-       is  referred to by Perl as $_[0].  In the example above, the subroutine
+       Suppose latexmk is using this rule to convert a  file  "figure.fig"  to
+       "figure.eps".   Then  it  will invoke the fig2eps subroutine defined in
+       the above code with a single argument "figure", which is  the  basename
+       of  each  of the files (possibly with a path component).  This argument
+       is referred to by Perl as $_[0].  In the example above, the  subroutine
        uses the Perl command system to invoke the program fig2dev.  The double
        quotes around the string are a Perl idiom that signify that each string
-       of the form of a variable name, $_[0] in this case, is  to  be  substi-
+       of  the  form  of a variable name, $_[0] in this case, is to be substi-
        tuted by its value.
 
-       If  the  return  value of the subroutine is non-zero, then latexmk will
-       assume an error occurred during the execution of  the  subroutine.   In
-       the  above  example, no explicit return value is given, and instead the
-       return value is the value returned by the last  (and  only)  statement,
+       If the return value of the subroutine is non-zero,  then  latexmk  will
+       assume  an  error  occurred during the execution of the subroutine.  In
+       the above example, no explicit return value is given, and  instead  the
+       return  value  is  the value returned by the last (and only) statement,
        i.e., the invocation of system, which returns the value 0 on success.
 
-       If  you use pdflatex instead of latex, then you will probably prefer to
-       convert your graphics files to pdf format,  in  which  case  you  would
+       If you use pdflatex instead of latex, then you will probably prefer  to
+       convert  your  graphics  files  to  pdf format, in which case you would
        replace the above code in an initialization file by
 
            add_cus_dep( 'fig', 'pdf, 0, 'fig2pdf' );
@@ -2934,62 +3055,63 @@
                system( "fig2dev -Lpdf \"$_[0].fig\" \"$_[0].pdf\"" );
            }
 
-       Note  1: In the command lines given in the system commands in the above
-       examples, double quotes  have  been  inserted  around  the  file  names
-       (implemented  by '\"' in the Perl language).  They immunize the running
-       of the program against special characters  in  filenames.   Very  often
-       these  quotes  are not necessary, i.e., they can be omitted.  But it is
+       Note 1: In the command lines given in the system commands in the  above
+       examples,  double  quotes  have  been  inserted  around  the file names
+       (implemented by '\"' in the Perl language).  They immunize the  running
+       of  the  program  against  special characters in filenames.  Very often
+       these quotes are not necessary, i.e., they can be omitted.  But  it  is
        normally safer to keep them in.  Even though the rules for quoting vary
-       between  operating  systems,  command  shells  and individual pieces of
+       between operating systems, command  shells  and  individual  pieces  of
        software, the quotes in the above examples do not cause problems in the
        cases I have tested.
 
-       Note  2:  One  case in which the quotes are important is when the files
-       are in a subdirectory and your operating system is  Microsoft  Windows.
-       Then  the  separator character for directory components can be either a
-       forward slash '/' or Microsoft's more usual backward slash  '\'.   For-
-       ward  slashes  are  generated  by  latexmk, to maintain its sanity from
-       software like MiKTeX that mixes both directory  separators;  but  their
+       Note 2: One case in which the quotes are important is  when  the  files
+       are  in  a subdirectory and your operating system is Microsoft Windows.
+       Then the separator character for directory components can be  either  a
+       forward  slash  '/' or Microsoft's more usual backward slash '\'.  For-
+       ward slashes are generated by latexmk,  to  maintain  its  sanity  from
+       software  like  MiKTeX  that mixes both directory separators; but their
        correct use normally requires quoted filenames.  (See a log file from a
-       run of MiKTeX (at least in v. 2.9) for an example of the  use  of  both
+       run  of  MiKTeX  (at least in v. 2.9) for an example of the use of both
        directory separators.)
 
-       If  you  have some general custom dependencies defined in the system or
-       user initialization file, you may find that for  a  particular  project
-       they  are  undesirable.  So you might want to delete the unneeded ones.
+       If you have some general custom dependencies defined in the  system  or
+       user  initialization  file,  you may find that for a particular project
+       they are undesirable.  So you might want to delete the  unneeded  ones.
        For example, you remove any "fig" to "eps" rule by the line
 
            remove_cus_dep( 'fig', 'eps' );
 
-       If you have complicated sets of custom dependencies, you  may  want  to
-       get  a  listing  of the custom dependencies.  This is done by using the
+       If  you  have  complicated sets of custom dependencies, you may want to
+       get a listing of the custom dependencies.  This is done  by  using  the
        line
 
            show_cus_dep();
 
+       in an initialization file.
 
+       Another  example  of  a  custom  dependency  overcomes  a limitation of
+       latexmk concerning index files.  The only index-file conversion  built-
+       in to latexmk is from an ".idx" file written on one run of latex/pdfla-
+       tex to an ".ind" file to be read in on a subsequent run.  But with  the
+       index.sty package you can create extra indexes with extensions that you
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              41
 
 
+                               5 September 2016                             44
 
 
 
+
+
 LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-       in an initialization file.
-
-       Another example of  a  custom  dependency  overcomes  a  limitation  of
-       latexmk  concerning index files.  The only index-file conversion built-
-       in to latexmk is from an ".idx" file written on one run of latex/pdfla-
-       tex  to an ".ind" file to be read in on a subsequent run.  But with the
-       index.sty package you can create extra indexes with extensions that you
        configure.  Latexmk does not know how to deduce the extensions from the
        information it has.  But you can easily write a custom dependency.  For
-       example   if   your   latex   file  uses  the  command  "\newindex{spe-
+       example  if  your  latex  file   uses   the   command   "\newindex{spe-
        cial}{ndx}{nnd}{Special index}" you will need to convert files with the
-       extension  .ndx  to  .nnd.  The following lines in an initialization RC
+       extension .ndx to .nnd.  The following lines in  an  initialization  RC
        file will cause this to happen:
 
            add_cus_dep('ndx', 'nnd', 0, 'makendx2nnd');
@@ -2997,21 +3119,21 @@
                system( "makeindex -o \"$_[0].nnd\" \"$_[0].ndx\"" );
            }
 
-       (You will need to modify this code if you use filenames with spaces  in
+       (You  will need to modify this code if you use filenames with spaces in
        them, to provide correct quoting of the filenames.)
 
-       Those  of  you with experience with Makefiles, will undoubtedly be con-
+       Those of you with experience with Makefiles, will undoubtedly  be  con-
        cerned that the .ndx file is written during a run of latex/pdflatex and
-       is  always  later than the .nnd last read in.  Thus the .nnd appears to
-       be perpetually out-of-date.  This situation, of circular  dependencies,
+       is always later than the .nnd last read in.  Thus the .nnd  appears  to
+       be  perpetually out-of-date.  This situation, of circular dependencies,
        is endemic to latex, and latexmk in its current version works correctly
-       with circular dependencies.  It examines the contents of the files  (by
-       use  of an md5 checksum), and only does a remake when the file contents
+       with  circular dependencies.  It examines the contents of the files (by
+       use of an md5 checksum), and only does a remake when the file  contents
        have actually changed.
 
-       Of course if you choose to write random data to the .nnd (or  and  .aux
-       file,  etc) that changes on each new run, then you will have a problem.
-       For real experts: See the %hash_cal_ignore_pattern if you have to  deal
+       Of  course  if you choose to write random data to the .nnd (or and .aux
+       file, etc) that changes on each new run, then you will have a  problem.
+       For  real experts: See the %hash_cal_ignore_pattern if you have to deal
        with such problems.
 
        Glossaries can be dealt with similarly.
@@ -3019,16 +3141,16 @@
 
 
 OLD METHOD OF DEFINING CUSTOM DEPENDENCIES
-       In  previous  versions  of  latexmk, the only method of defining custom
-       dependencies was to directly manipulate the table of  custom  dependen-
+       In previous versions of latexmk, the only  method  of  defining  custom
+       dependencies  was  to directly manipulate the table of custom dependen-
        cies.  This is contained in the @cus_dep_list array.  It is an array of
-       strings, and each string in the array has four items in it, each  sepa-
-       rated  by  a  space,  the  from-extension, the to-extension, the "must"
-       item, and the name of the subroutine for the custom dependency.   These
+       strings,  and each string in the array has four items in it, each sepa-
+       rated by a space, the  from-extension,  the  to-extension,  the  "must"
+       item,  and the name of the subroutine for the custom dependency.  These
        were all defined above.
 
        An example of the old method of defining custom dependencies is as fol-
-       lows. It is the code in an RC file to ensure  automatic  conversion  of
+       lows.  It  is  the code in an RC file to ensure automatic conversion of
        .fig files to .eps files:
 
            push @cus_dep_list, "fig eps 0 fig2eps";
@@ -3036,32 +3158,33 @@
                system( "fig2dev -Lps \"$_[0].fig\" \"$_[0].eps\"" );
            }
 
-       This  method  still  works, and is equivalent to the earlier code using
-       the add_cus_dep subroutine, except that it doesn't delete any  previous
-       custom-dependency  for  the  same  conversion.   So  the  new method is
+       This method still works, and is equivalent to the  earlier  code  using
+       the  add_cus_dep subroutine, except that it doesn't delete any previous
+       custom-dependency for the  same  conversion.   So  the  new  method  is
        preferable.
 
 
 
+ADVANCED CONFIGURATION: Some extra resources and advanced tricks
+       For  most purposes, simple configuration for latexmk along the lines of
+       the examples given is sufficient.  But  sometimes  you  need  something
+       harder.   In this section, I indicate some extra possibilities.  Gener-
+       ally to use these, you need to be fluent in the  Perl  language,  since
+       this is what is used in the rc files.
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              42
 
 
+                               5 September 2016                             45
 
 
 
+
+
 LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-ADVANCED CONFIGURATION: Some extra resources and advanced tricks
-       For most purposes, simple configuration for latexmk along the lines  of
-       the  examples  given  is  sufficient.  But sometimes you need something
-       harder.  In this section, I indicate some extra possibilities.   Gener-
-       ally  to  use  these, you need to be fluent in the Perl language, since
-       this is what is used in the rc files.
-
-       See also the section DEALING WITH ERRORS, PROBLEMS, ETC.  See also  the
+       See  also the section DEALING WITH ERRORS, PROBLEMS, ETC.  See also the
        examples in the directory example_rcfiles in the latexmk distributions.
        Even if none of the examples apply to your case, they may give ideas
 
@@ -3068,23 +3191,23 @@
 
    Variables and subroutines for processing a rule
        A step in the processing is called a rule. One possibility to implement
-       the  processing  of a rule is by a Perl subroutine.  This is always the
-       case for custom dependencies. Also, for any other rule, you can  use  a
-       subroutine  by  prefixing the command specification by the word "inter-
+       the processing of a rule is by a Perl subroutine.  This is  always  the
+       case  for  custom dependencies. Also, for any other rule, you can use a
+       subroutine by prefixing the command specification by the  word  "inter-
        nal" -- see the section FORMAT OF COMMAND SPECIFICATIONS.
 
-       When you use a subroutine for processing a rule, all the  possibilities
-       of  Perl  programming  are  available, of course.  In addition, some of
-       latexmk's internal variables and subroutines are available.   The  ones
-       listed  below  are  intended  to  be available to (advanced) users, and
+       When  you use a subroutine for processing a rule, all the possibilities
+       of Perl programming are available, of course.   In  addition,  some  of
+       latexmk's  internal  variables and subroutines are available.  The ones
+       listed below are intended to be  available  to  (advanced)  users,  and
        their specifications will generally have stability under upgrades. Gen-
-       erally,  the  variables  should be treated as read-only: Changing their
-       values can have bad consequences, since it is liable  to  mess  up  the
+       erally, the variables should be treated as  read-only:  Changing  their
+       values  can  have  bad  consequences, since it is liable to mess up the
        consistency of what latexmk is doing.
 
 
-       $rule  This  variable  has  the  name of the rule, as known to latexmk.
-              Note that the exact contents of this variable for a  given  rule
+       $rule  This variable has the name of the rule,  as  known  to  latexmk.
+              Note  that  the exact contents of this variable for a given rule
               may be dependent on the version of latexmk
 
 
@@ -3094,78 +3217,94 @@
 
 
        $$Pdest
-              This gives the name of the main output file if  any.   Note  the
+              This  gives  the  name of the main output file if any.  Note the
               double dollar signs.
 
 
        rdb_ensure_file( $rule, file )
-              This  a subroutine that ensures that the given file is among the
+              This a subroutine that ensures that the given file is among  the
               source files for the specified rule.  It is typically used when,
-              during  the  processing of a rule, it is known that a particular
-              extra file is among the dependencies that latexmk  should  know,
+              during the processing of a rule, it is known that  a  particular
+              extra  file  is among the dependencies that latexmk should know,
               but its default methods don't find the dependency. Almost always
-              the first argument is the name of the rule currently being  pro-
+              the  first argument is the name of the rule currently being pro-
               cessed, so it is then appropriate to specify it by $rule.
 
-              For  examples of its use, see some of the files in the directory
-              example_rcfiles of latexmk's distribution.  Currently the  cases
-              that  use  this  subroutine  are exceltex_latexmkrc and texinfo-
-              latexmkrc.  These illustrate typical cases where latexmk's  nor-
+              For examples of its use, see some of the files in the  directory
+              example_rcfiles  of latexmk's distribution.  Currently the cases
+              that use this subroutine  are  exceltex_latexmkrc  and  texinfo-
+              latexmkrc.   These illustrate typical cases where latexmk's nor-
               mal processing fails to detect certain extra source files.
 
 
        rdb_remove_files( $rule, file, ... )
-              This  subroutine  removes  one or more files from the dependency
+              This subroutine removes one or more files  from  the  dependency
               list for the given rule.
 
 
+       rdb_list_source( $rule )
+              This  subroutine  returns  the  list  of source files (i.e., the
+              dependency list) for the given rule.
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              43
+       rdb_set_source( $rule, file, ... )
+              rdb_set_source( $rule, @files ) This subroutine sets the  depen-
+              dency  list for the given rule to be the specified files.  Files
 
 
 
+                               5 September 2016                             46
 
 
+
+
+
 LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
+              that are already in the list have unchanged information.   Files
+              that  were not in the list are added to it.  Files in the previ-
+              ous dependency list that are not in the newly specified list  of
+              files are removed from the dependency list.
+
+
+
    Advanced configuration: Using latexmk with make
-       This section is targeted only at advanced users who use the  make  pro-
+       This  section  is targeted only at advanced users who use the make pro-
        gram for complex projects, as for software development, with the depen-
        dencies specified by a Makefile.
 
-       Now the basic task of latexmk is to run  the  appropriate  programs  to
-       make  a  viewable version of a LaTeX document.  However, the usual make
-       program is not suited to this purpose for at least two reasons.   First
+       Now  the  basic  task  of latexmk is to run the appropriate programs to
+       make a viewable version of a LaTeX document.  However, the  usual  make
+       program  is not suited to this purpose for at least two reasons.  First
        is that the use of LaTeX involves circular dependencies (e.g., via .aux
        files), and these cannot be handled by the standard make program.  Sec-
-       ond  is  that  in  a  large document the set of source files can change
-       quite frequently, particularly with included graphics  files;  in  this
-       situation  keeping  a  Makefile  manually  updated is inappropriate and
-       error-prone, especially when the dependencies can be  determined  auto-
+       ond is that in a large document the set  of  source  files  can  change
+       quite  frequently,  particularly  with included graphics files; in this
+       situation keeping a Makefile  manually  updated  is  inappropriate  and
+       error-prone,  especially  when the dependencies can be determined auto-
        matically.  Latexmk solves both of these problems robustly.
 
-       Thus  for  many  standard LaTeX documents latexmk can be used by itself
-       without the make program.  In a complex project it simply needs  to  be
-       suitably  configured.  A standard configuration would be to define cus-
-       tom dependencies to make graphics files from their source files  (e.g.,
-       as  created  by  the  xfig program).  Custom dependencies are latexmk's
+       Thus for many standard LaTeX documents latexmk can be  used  by  itself
+       without  the  make program.  In a complex project it simply needs to be
+       suitably configured.  A standard configuration would be to define  cus-
+       tom  dependencies to make graphics files from their source files (e.g.,
+       as created by the xfig program).   Custom  dependencies  are  latexmk's
        equivalent of pattern rules in Makefiles.
 
-       Nevertheless there are projects for which a  Makefile  is  appropriate,
+       Nevertheless  there  are  projects for which a Makefile is appropriate,
        and it is useful to know how to use latexmk from a Makefile.  A typical
-       example would be to generate  documentation  for  a  software  project.
-       Potentially  the interaction with the rest of the rules in the Makefile
+       example  would  be  to  generate  documentation for a software project.
+       Potentially the interaction with the rest of the rules in the  Makefile
        could be quite complicated, for example if some of the source files for
        a LaTeX document are generated by the project's software.
 
        In this section, I give a couple of examples of how latexmk can be use-
-       fully invoked from a Makefile.  The examples use specific  features  of
-       current  versions  of  GNU make, which is the default on both linux and
-       OS-X systems.  They may need modifications for other versions of  make.
+       fully  invoked  from a Makefile.  The examples use specific features of
+       current versions of GNU make, which is the default on  both  linux  and
+       OS-X  systems.  They may need modifications for other versions of make.
 
-       The  simplest  method  is  simply to delegate all the relevant tasks to
+       The simplest method is simply to delegate all  the  relevant  tasks  to
        latexmk, as is suitable for a straightforward LaTeX document.  For this
        a suitable Makefile is like
 
@@ -3174,30 +3313,25 @@
            %.pdf : %.tex FORCE_MAKE
                latexmk -pdf -dvi- -ps- $<
 
-       (Note:  the  last  line must be introduced by a tab for the Makefile to
-       function correctly!)  Naturally, if making try.pdf from its  associated
-       LaTeX  file try.tex were the only task to be performed, a direct use of
-       latexmk without a Makefile would normally be better.   The  benefit  of
-       using  a  Makefile  for  a LaTeX document would be in a larger project,
+       (Note: the last line must be introduced by a tab for  the  Makefile  to
+       function  correctly!)  Naturally, if making try.pdf from its associated
+       LaTeX file try.tex were the only task to be performed, a direct use  of
+       latexmk  without  a  Makefile would normally be better.  The benefit of
+       using a Makefile for a LaTeX document would be  in  a  larger  project,
        where lines such as the above would be only be a small part of a larger
        Makefile.
 
        The above example has a pattern rule for making a .pdf file from a .tex
-       file, and it is defined to use latexmk in the obvious way.  There is  a
+       file,  and it is defined to use latexmk in the obvious way.  There is a
        conventional  default  target  named  "all",  with  a  prerequisite  of
-       try.pdf.  So when make is invoked, by default it  makes  try.pdf.   The
-       only  complication  is  that  there  may  be  many  source files beyond
+       try.pdf.   So  when  make is invoked, by default it makes try.pdf.  The
+       only complication is  that  there  may  be  many  source  files  beyond
        try.tex, but these aren't specified in the Makefile, so changes in them
-       will  not by themselves cause latexmk to be invoked.  Instead, the pat-
-       tern rule is equipped with a "phony" prerequisite FORCE_MAKE; this  has
-       the  effect  of  causing  the  rule  to  be always out-of-date, so that
-       latexmk is always run.  It is latexmk that decides whether  any  action
-       is  needed,  e.g., a rerun of pdflatex.  Effectively the Makefile dele-
-       gates all decisions to latexmk, while make has no knowledge of the list
+       will not by themselves cause  latexmk  to  be  invoked.   Instead,  the
 
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              44
+                               5 September 2016                             47
 
 
 
@@ -3206,13 +3340,18 @@
 LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
-       of  source  files  except for primary LaTeX file for the  document.  If
-       there are, for example, graphics files to be made, these must  be  made
+       pattern  rule  is equipped with a "phony" prerequisite FORCE_MAKE; this
+       has the effect of causing the rule to be always  out-of-date,  so  that
+       latexmk  is  always run.  It is latexmk that decides whether any action
+       is needed, e.g., a rerun of pdflatex.  Effectively the  Makefile  dele-
+       gates all decisions to latexmk, while make has no knowledge of the list
+       of source files except for primary LaTeX file for  the   document.   If
+       there  are,  for example, graphics files to be made, these must be made
        by custom dependencies configured in latexmk.
 
-       But  something  better  is  needed  in more complicated situations, for
-       example, when the making of graphics files needs  to  be  specified  by
-       rules  in  the  Makefile.   To do this, one can use a Makefile like the
+       But something better is needed  in  more  complicated  situations,  for
+       example,  when  the  making  of graphics files needs to be specified by
+       rules in the Makefile.  To do this, one can use  a  Makefile  like  the
        following:
 
             TARGETS = document1.pdf document2.pdf
@@ -3231,37 +3370,37 @@
             %.pdf : %.fig
                    fig2dev -Lpdf $< $@
 
-       (Again,  the  lines  containing  the  commands  for the rules should be
+       (Again, the lines containing the  commands  for  the  rules  should  be
        started with tabs.)  This example was inspired by how GNU automake han-
        dles automatic dependency tracking of C source files.
 
-       After  each  run of latexmk, dependency information is put in a file in
-       the .deps subdirectory.  The Makefile causes these dependency files  to
+       After each run of latexmk, dependency information is put in a  file  in
+       the  .deps subdirectory.  The Makefile causes these dependency files to
        be read by make, which now has the full dependency information for each
-       target .pdf file.  To make things less trivial it  is  specificed  that
-       two  files document1.pdf and document2.pdf are the targets.  The depen-
+       target  .pdf  file.   To make things less trivial it is specificed that
+       two files document1.pdf and document2.pdf are the targets.  The  depen-
        dency files are .deps/document1.pdfP and .deps/document2.pdfP.
 
-       There is now no need for the phony prerequisite for the  rule  to  make
+       There  is  now  no need for the phony prerequisite for the rule to make
        .pdf files from .tex files.  But I have added a rule to make .pdf files
-       from .fig files produced by the xfig program; these are  commonly  used
-       for  graphics  insertions  in  LaTeX documents.  Latexmk is arranged to
-       output a dependency file after each run.  It  is  given  the  -recorder
+       from  .fig  files produced by the xfig program; these are commonly used
+       for graphics insertions in LaTeX documents.   Latexmk  is  arranged  to
+       output  a  dependency  file  after each run.  It is given the -recorder
        option, which improves its detection of files generated during a run of
-       pdflatex; such files should not be in  the  dependency  list.   The  -e
-       options  are  used to turn off all custom dependencies, and to document
-       this.  Instead the -use-make is used to delegate the making of  missing
+       pdflatex;  such  files  should  not  be in the dependency list.  The -e
+       options are used to turn off all custom dependencies, and  to  document
+       this.   Instead the -use-make is used to delegate the making of missing
        files to make itself.
 
-       Suppose  in  the LaTeX file there is a command \includegraphics{graph},
-       and an xfig file "graph.fig" exists.  On a first run, pdflatex  reports
-       a  missing  file, named "graph". Latexmk succeeds in making "graph.pdf"
+       Suppose in the LaTeX file there is a  command  \includegraphics{graph},
+       and  an xfig file "graph.fig" exists.  On a first run, pdflatex reports
+       a missing file, named "graph". Latexmk succeeds in  making  "graph.pdf"
        by calling "make graph.pdf", and after completion of its work, it lists
        "fig.pdf" among the dependents of the file latexmk is making.  Then let
-       "fig.fig" be updated, and then let make be  run.   Make  first  remakes
+       "fig.fig"  be  updated,  and  then let make be run.  Make first remakes
        "fig.pdf", and only then reruns latexmk.
 
-       Thus  we  now  have  a method by which all the subsidiary processing is
+       Thus we now have a method by which all  the  subsidiary  processing  is
        delegated to make.
 
 
@@ -3268,13 +3407,10 @@
 SEE ALSO
        latex(1), bibtex(1).
 
-BUGS
-       Sometimes a viewer (gv) tries to read an updated .ps or .pdf file after
-       its  creation is started but before the file is complete.  Work around:
 
 
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              45
+                               5 September 2016                             48
 
 
 
@@ -3283,35 +3419,38 @@
 LATEXMK(1L)                                                        LATEXMK(1L)
 
 
+BUGS
+       Sometimes a viewer (gv) tries to read an updated .ps or .pdf file after
+       its creation is started but before the file is complete.  Work  around:
        manually refresh (or reopen) display.  Or use one of the other preview-
        ers and update methods.
 
-       (The  following  isn't  really a bug, but concerns features of preview-
-       ers.)  Preview continuous mode only works perfectly with  certain  pre-
-       viewers:  Xdvi  on  UNIX/LINUX  works  for dvi files.  Gv on UNIX/LINUX
-       works for both postscript and pdf.  Ghostview  on  UNIX/LINUX  needs  a
-       manual  update (reopen); it views postscript and pdf.  Gsview under MS-
-       Windows works for both postscript and pdf, but only reads  the  updated
-       file  when  its  screen  is refreshed.  Acroread under UNIX/LINUX views
-       pdf, but the file needs to be closed and reopened to  view  an  updated
-       version.   Under  MS-Windows,  acroread locks its input file and so the
-       pdf file cannot be updated.  (Remedy: configure latexmk  to  use  suma-
+       (The following isn't really a bug, but concerns  features  of  preview-
+       ers.)   Preview  continuous mode only works perfectly with certain pre-
+       viewers: Xdvi on UNIX/LINUX works for  dvi  files.   Gv  on  UNIX/LINUX
+       works  for  both  postscript  and pdf.  Ghostview on UNIX/LINUX needs a
+       manual update (reopen); it views postscript and pdf.  Gsview under  MS-
+       Windows  works  for both postscript and pdf, but only reads the updated
+       file when its screen is refreshed.   Acroread  under  UNIX/LINUX  views
+       pdf,  but  the  file needs to be closed and reopened to view an updated
+       version.  Under MS-Windows, acroread locks its input file  and  so  the
+       pdf  file  cannot  be updated.  (Remedy: configure latexmk to use suma-
        trapdf instead.)
 
 THANKS TO
-       Authors  of  previous  versions.   Many  users with their feedback, and
-       especially David Coppit (username david at node  coppit.org)  who  made
-       many  useful  suggestions  that  contributed  to version 3, and Herbert
-       Schulz.  (Please note that the e-mail  addresses  are  not  written  in
+       Authors of previous versions.  Many  users  with  their  feedback,  and
+       especially  David  Coppit  (username david at node coppit.org) who made
+       many useful suggestions that contributed  to  version  3,  and  Herbert
+       Schulz.   (Please  note  that  the  e-mail addresses are not written in
        their standard form to avoid being harvested by worms and viruses.)
 
 AUTHOR
-       Current  version,  by  John  Collins  (username  jcc8 at node psu.edu).
-       (Version 4.45).
+       Current version, by John  Collins  (username  jcc8  at  node  psu.edu).
+       (Version 4.48).
 
-       Released version can be obtained from  CTAN:  <http://www.ctan.org/tex-
-       archive/support/latexmk/>,    and    from    the    author's    website
-       <http://www.phys.psu.edu/~collins/software/latexmk/>.
+       Released      version      can      be      obtained     from     CTAN:
+       <http://www.ctan.org/pkg/latexmk/>,  and  from  the  author's   website
+       <http://www.personal.psu.edu/jcc8/latexmk/>.
        Modifications and enhancements by Evan McLean (Version 2.0)
        Original script called "go" by David J. Musliner (RCS Version 3.2)
 
@@ -3350,7 +3489,6 @@
 
 
 
+                               5 September 2016                             49
 
-                                 22 April 2016                              46
 
-

Modified: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/scripts/latexmk/latexmk.pl
===================================================================
--- trunk/Master/texmf-dist/scripts/latexmk/latexmk.pl	2016-10-15 22:55:03 UTC (rev 42271)
+++ trunk/Master/texmf-dist/scripts/latexmk/latexmk.pl	2016-10-15 22:55:38 UTC (rev 42272)
@@ -118,8 +118,8 @@
 
 $my_name = 'latexmk';
 $My_name = 'Latexmk';
-$version_num = '4.45';
-$version_details = "$My_name, John Collins, 22 April 2016";
+$version_num = '4.48';
+$version_details = "$My_name, John Collins, 5 Sep. 2016";
 
 use Config;
 use File::Basename;
@@ -192,6 +192,12 @@
 ##
 ##   12 Jan 2012 STILL NEED TO DOCUMENT some items below
 ##
+##      5 Sep 2016  John Collins  Add routines: rdb_list_source, rdb_set_source
+##     17 Aug 2016  John Collins  Add XDG Base Directory compatibility
+##                                   for per-user rc file
+##      1 May 2016  John Collins  Correct creation of output and aux directories
+##                                to correctly handle relative paths when -cd
+##                                is used.
 ##     22 Apr 2016  John Collins  Fix problem of -C not always working correctly
 ##                                when compilation was with -pdf and clear was default.
 ##                                (Correctly default set of rules in rdb_make_rule_list.)
@@ -1529,6 +1535,16 @@
 elsif (exists $ENV{'USERPROFILE'} ) {
     $HOME = $ENV{'USERPROFILE'};
 }
+# XDG configuration home
+$XDG_CONFIG_HOME = '';
+if (exists $ENV{'XDG_CONFIG_HOME'} ) {
+    $XDG_CONFIG_HOME = $ENV{'XDG_CONFIG_HOME'};
+}
+elsif ($HOME ne '') {
+    if ( -d "$HOME/.config") {
+        $XDG_CONFIG_HOME = "$HOME/.config";
+    }
+}
 
 
 #==================================================
@@ -1569,11 +1585,18 @@
     # System rc file:
     read_first_rc_file_in_list( @rc_system_files );
 }
-if ( $auto_rc_use && ($HOME ne "" ) ) {    
+if ( $auto_rc_use && ($HOME ne "" ) ) {
     # User rc file:
+    @user_rc = ();
+    if ( $XDG_CONFIG_HOME ) { 
+       push @user_rc, "$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/latexmk/latexmkrc";
+    }
     # N.B. $HOME equals "" if latexmk couldn't determine a home directory.
     # In that case, we shouldn't look for an rc file there.
-    read_first_rc_file_in_list( "$HOME/.latexmkrc" );
+    if ( $HOME ) { 
+       push @user_rc, "$HOME/.latexmkrc";
+    }
+    read_first_rc_file_in_list( @user_rc );
 }
 if ( $auto_rc_use ) { 
     # Rc file in current directory:
@@ -2005,40 +2028,20 @@
     add_option( "-recorder", \$latex, \$pdflatex );
 }
 
-# If the output and/or aux directories are specified: Fix the (pdf)latex
-#   commands to use them, and ensure that the directories exist.
-# N.B. We are immune against cd'ing to directory of TeX file, because in
-#   that case we have forced the directories to be absolute.
+# If the output and/or aux directories are specified, fix the (pdf)latex
+#   commands to use them.
+# N.B. We'll ensure that the directories actually exist only after a
+#   possible cd to the document directory, since the directories can be
+#   relative to the document.
 
 if ( $out_dir ) {
     add_option( "-output-directory=\"$out_dir\"", \$latex, \$pdflatex );
-    if ( ! -e $out_dir ) {
-        warn "$My_name: making output directory '$out_dir'\n"
-            if ! $silent;
-        make_path $out_dir;
-    }
-    elsif ( ! -d $out_dir ) {
-        warn "$My_name: you requested output directory '$out_dir',\n",
-             "     but an ordinary file of the same name exists, which will\n",
-             "     probably give an error later\n";
-    }
 }
-
 if ( $aux_dir && ($aux_dir ne $out_dir) ) {
     # N.B. If $aux_dir and $out_dir are the same, then the -output-directory
     # option is sufficient, especially because the -aux-directory exists
     # only in MiKTeX, not in TeXLive.
     add_option( "-aux-directory=\"$aux_dir\"", \$latex, \$pdflatex );
-    if ( ! -e $aux_dir ) {
-        warn "$My_name: making auxiliary directory '$aux_dir'\n"
-            if ! $silent;
-        make_path $aux_dir;
-    }
-    elsif ( ! -d $aux_dir ) {
-        warn "$My_name: you requested aux directory '$aux_dir',\n",
-             "     but an ordinary file of the same name exists, which will\n",
-             "     probably give an error later\n";
-    }
 }
 
 if ( $jobname ne '' ) { 
@@ -2199,7 +2202,36 @@
         $path = '';
     }
 
+    # Ensure the output/auxiliary directories exist, if need be
+    if ( $out_dir ) {
+        if ( ! -e $out_dir ) {
+             warn "$My_name: making output directory '$out_dir'\n"
+                if ! $silent;
+             make_path $out_dir;
+        }
+        elsif ( ! -d $out_dir ) {
+            warn "$My_name: you requested output directory '$out_dir',\n",
+                 "     but an ordinary file of the same name exists, which will\n",
+                 "     probably give an error later\n";
+	}
+    }
 
+    if ( $aux_dir && ($aux_dir ne $out_dir) ) {
+        # N.B. If $aux_dir and $out_dir are the same, then the -output-directory
+        # option is sufficient, especially because the -aux-directory exists
+        # only in MiKTeX, not in TeXLive.
+        if ( ! -e $aux_dir ) {
+            warn "$My_name: making auxiliary directory '$aux_dir'\n"
+               if ! $silent;
+            make_path $aux_dir;
+	}
+        elsif ( ! -d $aux_dir ) {
+            warn "$My_name: you requested aux directory '$aux_dir',\n",
+                 "     but an ordinary file of the same name exists, which will\n",
+                 "     probably give an error later\n";
+	}
+    }
+
     ## remove extension from filename if was given.
     if ( &find_basename($filename, $root_filename, $texfile_name) )
     {
@@ -7503,7 +7535,7 @@
 #************************************************************
 
 sub rdb_remove_files {
-    # rdb_remove_file( rule, file,... )
+    # rdb_remove_file( rule, file, ... )
     # Removes file(s) for the rule.  
     my $rule = shift;
     if (!$rule) { return; }
@@ -7515,6 +7547,36 @@
 
 #************************************************************
 
+sub rdb_list_source {
+    # rdb_list_source( rule )
+    # Return array of source files for rule.
+    my $rule = shift;
+    my @files = ();
+    rdb_one_rule( $rule, 
+                  sub{ @files = keys %$PHsource; }
+    );
+    return @files;
+} #END rdb_list_source
+
+#************************************************************
+
+sub rdb_set_source {
+    # rdb_set_source( rule, file, ... )
+    my $rule = shift;
+    if (!$rule) { return; }
+    my %files = ();
+    foreach (@_) {
+	rdb_ensure_file( $rule, $_ );
+	$files{$_} = 1;
+    }
+    foreach ( rdb_list_source($rule) ) {
+        if ( ! exists $files{$_} ) { rdb_remove_files( $rule, $_ ); }
+    }    
+    return;
+} #END rdb_list_source
+
+#************************************************************
+
 sub rdb_rule_exists { 
     # Call rdb_rule_exists($rule): Returns whether rule exists.
     my $rule = shift;

Modified: trunk/Master/texmf-dist/source/support/latexmk/latexmk.bat
===================================================================
--- trunk/Master/texmf-dist/source/support/latexmk/latexmk.bat	2016-10-15 22:55:03 UTC (rev 42271)
+++ trunk/Master/texmf-dist/source/support/latexmk/latexmk.bat	2016-10-15 22:55:38 UTC (rev 42272)
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
-Rem Execute latexmk.pl, searching for it in the PATH
-Rem Assume perl is in the PATH.  If not, you should replace 'perl' by 
-Rem the full pathname of the perl executable, e.g., 'C:\perl\bin\perl.exe'
-
-perl -S latexmk.pl %1 %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 %7 %8 %9
+Rem Execute latexmk.pl, searching for it in the PATH
+Rem Assume perl is in the PATH.  If not, you should replace 'perl' by 
+Rem the full pathname of the perl executable, e.g., 'C:\perl\bin\perl.exe'
+
+perl -S latexmk.pl %1 %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 %7 %8 %9



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