The simplest way to get the latest pandoc release is to use the installer.
For alternative ways to install pandoc, see below under the heading for your operating system.
There is a package installer at pandoc’s download page. This will install pandoc, replacing older versions, and update your path to include the directory where pandoc’s binaries are installed.
If you prefer not to use the msi installer, we also provide a zip file that contains pandoc’s binaries and documentation. Simply unzip this file and move the binaries to a directory of your choice.
choco install pandoc
choco install rsvg-convert python miktex
winget install --source winget --exact --id JohnMacFarlane.Pandoc
Using multiple installation methods can result in two separate installations of pandoc; it is recommended to properly uninstall pandoc before switching to an alternative installation method.
By default, Pandoc creates PDFs using LaTeX. We recommend installing it via MiKTeX. With the option --pdf-engine , you however can specify other programs for this task.
There is a package installer at pandoc’s download page. If you later want to uninstall the package, you can do so by downloading this script and running it with perl uninstall-pandoc.pl .
brew install pandoc
Homebrew can also install other software that integrates with Pandoc. For example, to install librsvg (its rsvg-convert covers formats without SVG support), Python (to use Pandoc filters), and BasicTeX (to typeset PDFs with LaTeX):
brew install librsvg python homebrew/cask/basictex
Note: On unsupported versions of macOS (more than three releases old), Homebrew installs from source, which takes additional time and disk space for the ghc compiler and dependent Haskell libraries.
We also provide a zip file containing the binaries and man pages, for those who prefer not to use the installer. Simply unzip the file and move the binaries and man pages to whatever directory you like.
By default, Pandoc creates PDFs using LaTeX. Because a full MacTeX installation uses four gigabytes of disk space, we recommend BasicTeX or TinyTeX and using the tlmgr tool to install additional packages as needed. If you receive errors warning of fonts not found:
tlmgr install collection-fontsrecommended
With the option --pdf-engine , you however can specify other programs for this task.
The executable is statically linked and has no dynamic dependencies or dependencies on external data files. Note: because of the static linking, the pandoc binary from this package cannot use lua filters that require external lua modules written in C.
Both a tarball and a deb installer are provided. To install the deb:
sudo dpkg -i $DEB
where $DEB is the path to the downloaded deb. This will install the pandoc executable and man page.
If you use an RPM-based distro, you may be able to install the deb from our download page using alien .
On any distro, you may install from the tarball into $DEST (say, /usr/local/ or $HOME/.local ) by doing
tar xvzf $TGZ --strip-components 1 -C $DEST
where $TGZ is the path to the downloaded zipped tarball. For Pandoc versions before 2.0, which don’t provide a tarball, try instead
ar p $DEB data.tar.gz | tar xvz --strip-components 2 -C $DEST
You can also install from source, using the instructions below under Compiling from source. Note that most distros have the Haskell platform in their package repositories. For example, on Debian/Ubuntu, you can install it with apt-get install haskell-platform .
By default, Pandoc creates PDFs using LaTeX. We recommend installing TeX Live via your package manager. (On Debian/Ubuntu, apt-get install texlive .) With the option --pdf-engine , you however can specify other programs for this task.
crew install pandoc
This will automatically build and configure pandoc for the specific device you are using.
Pandoc is in the NetBSD, FreeBSD, and OpenBSD ports repositories.
The pandoc/core image contains pandoc .
The pandoc/latex image also contains the minimal LaTeX installation needed to produce PDFs using pandoc.
To run pandoc using Docker, converting README.md to README.pdf :
docker run --rm --volume "`pwd`:/data" --user `id -u`:`id -g` pandoc/latex README.md -o README.pdf
Pandoc can be run through GitHub Actions. For some examples, see https://github.com/pandoc/pandoc-action-example.
Pandoc can be run through GitLab CI/CD. For some examples, see https://gitlab.com/pandoc/pandoc-ci-example.
If for some reason a binary package is not available for your platform, or if you want to hack on pandoc or use a non-released version, you can install from source.
wget https://hackage.haskell.org/package/pandoc-1.17.0.3/pandoc-1.17.0.3.tar.gz tar xvzf pandoc-1.17.0.3.tar.gz cd pandoc-1.17.0.3
Or you can fetch the development code by cloning the repository:
git clone https://github.com/jgm/pandoc cd pandoc
Note: there may be times when the development code is broken or depends on other libraries which must be installed separately. Unless you really know what you’re doing, install the last released version.
stack setup stack install pandoc-cli
cabal update
cabal install pandoc-cli
pandoc --help
This is a step-by-step procedure that offers maximal control over the build and installation. Most users should use the quick install, but this information may be of use to packagers. For more details, see the Cabal User’s Guide. These instructions assume that the pandoc source directory is your working directory. You will need cabal version 2.0 or higher.
cabal update cabal install --only-dependencies
cabal configure --prefix=DIR --bindir=DIR --libdir=DIR \ --datadir=DIR --libsubdir=DIR --datasubdir=DIR --docdir=DIR \ --htmldir=DIR --program-prefix=PREFIX --program-suffix=SUFFIX \ --mandir=DIR --flags=FLAGSPEC --enable-tests
pandoc-cli ’s flags include:
cabal build cabal test
cabal haddock --html-location=URL --hyperlink-source
It is possible to compile pandoc such that the data files pandoc uses are embedded in the binary. The resulting binary can be run from any directory and is completely self-contained. With cabal, add -fembed_data_files to the cabal configure or cabal install commands.
With stack, use --flag pandoc:embed_data_files .
Pandoc comes with an automated test suite. To run with cabal, cabal test ; to run with stack, stack test .
To run particular tests (pattern-matching on their names), use the -p option:
cabal test --test-options='-p markdown'
stack test --test-arguments='-p markdown'
It is often helpful to add -j4 (run tests in parallel) and --hide-successes (don’t clutter output with successes) to the test arguments as well.
If you add a new feature to pandoc, please add tests as well, following the pattern of the existing tests. The test suite code is in test/test-pandoc.hs . If you are adding a new reader or writer, it is probably easiest to add some data files to the test directory, and modify test/Tests/Old.hs . Otherwise, it is better to modify the module under the test/Tests hierarchy corresponding to the pandoc module you are changing.
To build and run the benchmarks:
cabal configure --enable-benchmarks && cabal build cabal bench
stack bench
To use a smaller sample size so the benchmarks run faster:
cabal bench --benchmark-options='-s 20'
To run just the markdown benchmarks:
cabal bench --benchmark-options='markdown'