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diff --git a/contrib/mdocml/INSTALL b/contrib/mdocml/INSTALL new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..da8eeab9dd4e --- /dev/null +++ b/contrib/mdocml/INSTALL @@ -0,0 +1,187 @@ +$Id: INSTALL,v 1.2 2014/08/10 17:22:26 schwarze Exp $ + +About mdocml, the portable mandoc distribution +---------------------------------------------- +The mandoc manpage compiler toolset is a suite of tools compiling +mdoc(7), the roff(7) macro language of choice for BSD manual pages, +and man(7), the predominant historical language for UNIX manuals. +The toolset does not yet implement man(1); that is only scheduled +for the next release, 1.13.2. It can, however, already serve to +translate source manpages to the output displayed by man(1). +For general information, see <http://mdocml.bsd.lv/>. + +In this document, we describe the installation and deployment of +mandoc(1), first as a simple, standalone formatter, and then as part of +the man(1) system. + +In case you have questions or want to provide feedback, read +<http://mdocml.bsd.lv/contact.html>. Consider subscribing to the +discuss@ mailing list mentioned on that page. If you intend to +help with the development of mandoc, consider subscribing to the +tech@ mailing list, too. + +Enjoy using the mandoc toolset! + +Ingo Schwarze, Karlsruhe, August 2014 + + +Installation +------------ +Before manually installing mandoc on your system, please check +whether the newest version of mandoc is already installed by default +or available via a binary package or a ports system. A list of the +latest bundled and ported versions of mandoc for various operating +systems is maintained at <http://mdocml.bsd.lv/ports.html>. + +If mandoc is installed, you can check the version by running "mandoc -V". +The version contained in this distribution tarball is listed near +the beginning of the file "Makefile". + +Regarding how packages and ports are maintained for your operating +system, please consult your operating system documentation. +To install mandoc manually, the following steps are needed: + +1. Decide whether you want to build the base tools mandoc(1), +preconv(1) and demandoc(1) only or whether you also want to build the +database tools apropos(1) and makewhatis(8). For the latter, +the following dependencies are required: + +1.1. The SQLite database system, see <http://sqlite.org/>. +The recommended version of SQLite is 3.8.4.3 or newer. The mandoc +toolset is known to work with version 3.7.5 or newer. Versions +older than 3.8.3 may not achieve full performance due to the +missing SQLITE_DETERMINISTIC optimization flag. Versions older +than 3.8.0 may not show full error information if opening a database +fails due to the missing sqlite3_errstr() API. Both are very minor +problems, apropos(1) is fully usable with SQLite 3.7.5. Versions +older than 3.7.5 may or may not work, they have not been tested. + +1.2. The fts(3) directory traversion functions. +A compatibility version will be bundled for 1.13.2 but is not available +yet. If you want apropos(1) and makewhatis(8) but do not have fts(3), +please stay with mandoc 1.12.3 for now and upgrade first to 1.12.4, +then to 1.13.2 when these versionns are released. Be careful: the +glibc version of fts(3) is known to be broken on 32bit platforms, +see <https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=15838>. + +1.3. Marc Espie's ohash(3) library. +If your system does not have it, the bundled compatibility version +will be used, so you probably need not worry about it. + +2. If you choose to build the database tools, too, decide whether +you also want to build the CGI program, man.cgi(8). + +3. Read the beginning of the file "Makefile" from "USER SETTINGS" +to "END OF USER SETTINGS" and edit it as required. In particular, +disable "BUILD_TARGETS += db-build" if you do not want database +support or enable "BUILD_TARGETS += cgi-build" if you do want +the CGI program. + +4. Run "make". No separate "./configure" or "make depend" steps +are needed. The former is run automatically by "make". The latter +is a maintainer target. If you merely want to build the released +version as opposed to doing active development, there is no need +to regenerate the dependency specifications. Any POSIX-compatible +make, in particular both BSD make and GNU make, should work. + +5. Run "make -n install" and check whether everything will be +installed to the intended places. Otherwise, edit the *DIR variables +in the Makefile until it is. + +6. Run "sudo make install". If you intend to build a binary +package using some kind of fake root mechanism, you may need a +command like "make DESTDIR=... install". Read the *-install targets +in the "Makefile" to understand how DESTDIR is used. + +7. To set up a man.cgi(8) server, read its manual page. + +8. To use mandoc(1) as your man(1) formatter, read the "Deployment" +section below. + + +Checking autoconfiguration quality +---------------------------------- +If you want to check whether automatic configuration works well +on your platform, consider the following: + +The mandoc package intentionally does not use GNU autoconf because +we consider that toolset a blatant example of overengineering that +is obsolete nowadays, since all modern operating systems are now +reasonably close to POSIX and do not need arcane shell magic any +longer. If your system does need such magic, consider upgrading +to reasonably modern POSIX-compliant tools rather than asking for +autoconf-style workarounds. + +As far as mandoc is using any features not mandated by ANSI X3.159-1989 +("ANSI C") or IEEE Std 1003.1-2008 ("POSIX") that some modern systems +do not have, we intend to provide autoconfiguration tests and +compat_*.c implementations. Please report any that turn out to be +missing. Note that while we do strive to produce portable code, +we do not slavishly restrict ourselves to POSIX-only interfaces. +For improved security and readability, we do use well-designed, +modern interfaces like reallocarray(3) even if they are still rather +uncommon, of course bundling compat_*.c implementations as needed. + +Where mandoc is using ANSI C or POSIX features that some systems +still lack and that compat_*.c implementations can be provided for +without too much hassle, we will consider adding them, too, so +please report whatever is missing on your platform. + +The following steps can be used to manually check the automatic +configuration on your platform: + +1. Run "make clean". + +2. Run "make config.h" + +3. Read the file "config.log". It shows the compiler commands used +to test the libraries installed on your system and the standard +output and standard error output these commands produce. Watch out +for unexpected failures. Those are most likely to happen if headers +or libraries are installed in unusual places or interfaces defined +in unusual headers. You can also look at the file "config.h" and +check that no expected "#define HAVE_*" lines are missing. The +list of tests run can be found in the file "configure". + + +Deployment +---------- +If you want to integrate the mandoc(1) tools with your existing +man(1) system as a formatter, then contact us first: on systems without +mandoc(1) as the default, you may have your work cut out for you! +Usually, you can have your default installation and mandoc(1) work right +alongside each other by using user-specific versions of the files +mentioned below. + +0. Back up each file you want to change! + +1. First see whether your system has "/etc/man.conf" or "/etc/manpath.conf" +(if it has neither, but man(1) is functional, then let us know) or, +if running as your own user, a per-user override file. In either +case, find where man(1) is executing nroff(1) or groff(1) to format +manuals. Replace these calls with mandoc(1). + +2. Then make sure that man(1) isn't running preprocessors, so you may +need to replace tbl(1), eqn(1), and similar references with cat(1). +Some man(1) implementations, like that on Mac OSX, let you run "man -d" +to see how the formatter is invoked. Use this to test your changes. On +Mac OS X, for instance, man(1) will prepend all files with ".ll" and +".nr" to set the terminal size, so you need to pass "tail -n+2 | +mandoc(1)" to disregard them. + +3. Finally, make sure that mandoc(1) is actually being invoked instead +of cached pages being pulled up. You can usually do this by commenting +out NOCACHE or similar. + +mandoc(1) still has a long way to go in understanding non-trivial +low-level roff(7) markup embedded in some man(7) pages. On the BSD +systems using mandoc(1), third-party software is generally vetted +on whether it may be formatted with mandoc(1). If not, groff(1) +is pulled in as a dependency and used to install a pre-formatted +"catpage" intead of directly as manual page source. + +For more background on switching operating systems to use mandoc(1) +instead of groff(1) to format manuals, see the two BSDCan presentations +by Ingo Schwarze: +<http://www.openbsd.org/papers/bsdcan11-mandoc-openbsd.html> +<http://www.openbsd.org/papers/bsdcan14-mandoc.pdf> |