MAN.CONF(5) MachTen Programmer’s Manual MAN.CONF(5)
NAME
man.conf - configuration file for man(1)
DESCRIPTION
The man(1), apropos(1), and whatis(1) commands search for
manual pages
or their database files as specified by the man.conf file.
Manual pages
are normally expected to be preformatted (see nroff(1)) and
named with a
trailing ‘‘.0’’.
The man.conf file contains two types of lines.
The first type of line is a
‘‘section’’ line, which contains a
section
name followed by one or more directory paths. The directory
paths may
contain the normal shell globbing characters, including
curly braces
(‘‘{}’’); to escape a shell globbing
character, precede it with a back-
slash (‘‘´’). Lines in this format
specify that manual pages for the
section may be found in the following directories.
Directories named with a
trailing slash character (‘‘/’’) are
expected to
contain subdirectories of manual pages, (see the keyword
‘‘_subdir’’ be-
low) instead of manual pages. These subdirectories are
searched instead
of the directory.
Before searching any directory
for a manual page, the man(1) command al-
ways searches the subdirectory with the same name as the
current machine
type, if it exists. No specification of these subdirectories
is neces-
sary in the man.conf file.
Section names are unrestricted
except for the reserved words specified
below; in general, you should avoid anything with a leading
underscore
(‘‘_’’) to avoid future
incompatibilities.
The section named
‘‘_default’’ is the list of
directories that will be
searched if no section is specified by the user.
The second type of line is
preceded with a ‘‘keyword’’. The
possible
keywords and their meanings are as follows:
_build Man file names,
regardless of their format, are expected to end
in a ‘‘.*’’ pattern, i.e. a
‘‘.’’ followed by some suffix. The
first field of a _build line lists a suffix which indicates
files which need to be reformated or manipulated in some way
before being displayed to the user. The suffix may contain
the
normal shell globbing characters (NOT including curly braces
(‘‘{}’’)). The rest of the line must
be a shell command line,
the standard output of which is the manual page in a format
which may be directly displayed to the user. Any occurrences
of the string ‘‘%s’’ in the shell
command line will be replaced
by the name of the file which is being reformatted.
_subdir The list (in search
order) of subdirectories which will be
searched in any directory named with a trailing slash
(‘‘/’’)
character. This list is also used when a path is specified
to
the man(1) utility by the user, using the MANPATH
environment
variable or the -M and -m options.
_suffix Man file names,
regardless of their format are expected to end
in a ‘‘.*’’ pattern, i.e. a
‘‘.’’ followed by some suffix.
Each field of a _suffix line is a suffix which indicates
files
which do not need to be reformatted or manipulated in any
way,
but which may be directly displayed to the user. Each suffix
may contain the normal shell globbing characters (NOT
including
curly braces (‘‘{}’’)).
_version The version of the configuration file.
_whatdb The full pathname (not
just a directory path) for a database to
be used by the apropos(1) and whatis(1) commands.
Multiple specifications for all
types of lines are cumulative and the en-
tries are used in the order listed in the file; multiple
entries may be
listed per line, as well.
Empty lines or lines whose first
non-whitespace character is a hash mark
(‘‘#’’) are ignored.
EXAMPLES
Given the following man.conf file:
_version BSD.2
_subdir cat[123]
_suffix .0
_build .[1-9] nroff -man %s
_build .tbl tbl %s | nroff -man
_default /usr/share/man/
sect3 /usr/share/man/{old/,}cat3
By default, the command
‘‘man mktemp’’ will search for
‘‘mk-
temp.<any_digit>’’ and
‘‘mktemp.tbl’’ in the directories
‘‘/usr/share/man/cat1’’,
‘‘/usr/share/man/cat2’’, and
‘‘/usr/share/man/cat3’’. If on a
machine of type ‘‘vax’’, the
subdirecto-
ry ‘‘vax’’ in each directory would
be searched as well, before the direc-
tory was searched.
If
‘‘mktemp.tbl’’ was found first, the
command ‘‘tbl <manual page> nroff
-man’’ would be run to build a man page for
display to the user.
The command ‘‘man
sect3 mktemp’’ would search the directories
‘‘/usr/share/man/old/cat3’’ and
‘‘/usr/share/man/cat3’’, in that
order,
for the mktemp manual page. If a subdirectory with the same
name as the
current machine type existed in any of them, it would be
searched as
well, before each of them were searched.
FILES
/etc/man.conf Standard manual directory search path.
SEE ALSO
apropos(1), machine(1), man(1), whatis(1), whereis(1),
fnmatch(3),
glob(3)
4.4BSD January 2, 1994 2