LaTeX over SSH and HTTP. Lets you remotely compile LaTeX and immediately see your compiled pdf all remotely.
You need
- Flask
- pdflatex
Just install by
python3 -m pip install flask
python3 -m pip install xatelite
The most common use case is ssh-ing into your remote server, starting xatelite, and opening up a web browser to your xatelite latex server.
Here's an example: after ssh-ing into your server, run
$ xatelite -f ~/math/pset4/pset4.tex -q -p 5010
This starts an HTTP server on port 5010
and uses -q
to silence Flask's
output. Now if you visit your server on port 5010
through a web browser,
you'll be presented with your pdf. Refreshing recompiles the LaTeX file.
If there's a bug in your .tex file (if pdflatex returns a non-zero error code), a log file will be presented instead. Use the log file to debug.
The current options can be accessed by xatelite -h
and are:
usage: xatelite.py [-h] [-f LATEX_FILE] [-p PORT] [-q] [-qq]
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-f LATEX_FILE, --latex_file LATEX_FILE
the latex file to be compiled and served. If this is
not passed in, the single *.tex file in the working
directory will be used.
-p PORT, --port PORT specify which port the webserver will run on
-q, --quiet suppress any Flask output
-qq, --qquiet suppress all output including running message
- Better debugging options
- Maybe have a relaxed mode that allows errors if a pdf is generated?
- Have a config file with specific pdflatex commands.
- Recommend
xatelite [file] -qq & disown
for non-screen/tmux users.- Have a
-k/--kill
option to kill servers that can take PID/filename - Have a
-s/--sessions
option to see PID/filename/ports
- Have a