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COPYING | ||
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README | ||
TODO |
README file for man(1). This is a replacement for Un*x man(1), apropos(1), whatis(1), and manpath(1). It has all kinds of neat features that other versions of man don't, including support for multiple man page directory trees, preformatted man pages, and troff. It is provided without any warranty whatever. I hope you find it useful. This program is not a GNU product but it is distributed under the terms of the GNU copyleft which is described in the file COPYING. There is a solution written in perl which is probably superior in every way, but, like me, you may prefer this one anyway. :-) If you compile with support for preformatted man pages, man(1) will try to update the preformatted page if the man page source is newer. If you compile with support for troff, you can say things like `man -t foo | psdit > foo.ps' and have fabulous printed documentation as well. I have resisted the temptation to handle all the bizarre ways various vendors have of organizing man pages. This version of man assumes that directory trees have the structure: .../man /manSect /foo.Sect* ... /catSect /foo.Sect* ... where Sect is some number or string and should be listed in the set of sections to be searched. It is not necessary to have both the cat* and man* subdirectories, but you must have at least one. :-) INSTALLATION 1. Run configure. This will grope around your system a bit and then ask you a number of questions. It will create a Makefile from the file Makefile.in, and a config.h file from config.h.in. You may have to do some fine tuning to get things to work exactly right on your system. If you do, I'd like to know what changes you had to make to get things working. 2. Edit the manpath.config file. This determines the system-wide mappings for bin directories and man page directories. 3. Do a `make all', try it out, and then if you're happy with that, do a `make install'. You don't need to be root to use this set of programs. 4. Install the whatis database(s) by running makewhatis. If you want to keep things absolutely current, you'll need to run this whenever you add new man pages. You might want to add an entry in your crontab. BUGS If you find one of these, please tell me about it. If you have a fix, that's even better. If not, I can't guarantee that I'll fix it, but I would like to know about them. John Eaton jwe@che.utexas.edu Department of Chemical Engineering The University of Texas at Austin Austin, Texas 78712 CHANGES Partial list of changes since version 1.0: Installation made easier (this was the intent anyway) with the introduction of a configure script. Commands like `man 3f intro' handled properly when the name of the file we want is something like .../man3/intro.3f. Man can now run set uid to a special user so formatted man pages don't have to be world writable. Man now works with compressed (.Z) frozen (.F) and yabba (.Y) cat files. Frozen files are compressed files using freeze/melt, some combination of LZW and tree coding. Sources for it came out on comp.sources.misc or alt.sources or ... a few months ago. Yabba files are compressed using yabba/unyabba, a data compression scheme posted to alt.sources by Dan Bernstein. Man now uses a more reasonable default for the search order: 1, n, l, 6, 8, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, p, o Man now allows for user-definable section search order via -S or MANSECT. Glob.c can work even if you don't have alloca, and works properly on Suns with the Sun C compiler. There is now a way to automatically to run preprocessors like the Sun man program. The first line of the man page indicates which preprocessors should be run: If the first line is a string of the form: '\" X where X is separated from the the `"' by a single SPACE and consists of any combination of characters in the following list, man pipes its input to troff(1) or nroff(1) through the corresponding preprocessors. e eqn(1), or neqn for nroff g grap(1) p pic(1) r refer(1) t tbl(1), and col(1V) for nroff v vgrind(1) Preprocessors may also be set on the command line with -p or from the environment with MANROFFSEQ. The tbl preprocessor is run by default. Manpath now stat()'s the directories in MANPATH to avoid including directories that don't exist. The output of apropos and whatis are now piped through PAGER. There is a new option to show where you would find a man page (-w option) and in what order (-w with -a).