1.\" Copyright 2015 Nexenta Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. 2.\" Copyright 2014 Garrett D'Amore <garrett@damore.org> 3.\" Copyright (c) 1995, Sun Microsystems, Inc. 4.\" The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the Common Development and Distribution License (the "License"). You may not use this file except in compliance with the License. 5.\" You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. 6.\" When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE. If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner] 7.Dd "Feb 18, 2015" 8.Dt MAN 7 9.Os 10.Sh NAME 11.Nm man 12.Nd macros to format Reference Manual pages 13.Sh SYNOPSIS 14.Nm mandoc 15.Fl T Ar man 16.Ar 17.Nm nroff 18.Fl man 19.Ar 20.Nm troff 21.Fl man 22.Ar 23.Sh DESCRIPTION 24These macros are used to lay out the reference pages in this manual. 25Note: if 26.Ar file 27contains format input for a preprocessor, the commands shown 28above must be piped through the appropriate preprocessor. 29This is handled automatically by the 30.Xr man 1 31command. 32See the 33.Sx Conventions 34section. 35.Lp 36Any text argument 37.Ar t 38may be zero to six words. 39Quotes may be used to include SPACE characters in a 40.Qq word . 41If 42.Ar text 43is empty, the special 44treatment is applied to the next input line with text to be printed. 45In this way 46.Nm \&.I 47may be used to italicize a whole line, or 48.Nm \&.SB 49may be used to make small bold letters. 50.Lp 51A prevailing indent distance is remembered between successive indented 52paragraphs, and is reset to default value upon reaching a non-indented 53paragraph. 54Default units for indents 55.Nm i 56are ens. 57.Lp 58Type font and size are reset to default values before each paragraph, and after 59processing font and size setting macros. 60.Pp 61These strings are predefined by 62.Nm -man : 63.Bl -tag -width Ds 64.It Nm \e*R 65.Sq \(rg , 66.Sq (Reg) 67in 68.Nm nroff . 69.It Nm \e*S 70Change to default type size. 71.El 72.Sh "Requests" 73* n.t.l. = next text line; p.i. = prevailing indent 74.Bl -column ".TH n s d f m" "Cause " "t=n.t.l.*" "Explanation " -offset Ds 75.It Sy Request Sy Cause Sy "If No" Sy Explanation 76.It "" Sy Break Sy "Argument" "" 77.It Nm \&.B Ar "t" no Ar t Ns =n.t.l.* Text is in bold font. 78.It Nm \&.BI Ar t no Ar t Ns =n.t.l. Join words, alternating bold and italic. 79.It Nm \&.BR Ar t no Ar t Ns =n.t.l. Join words, alternating bold and roman. 80.It Nm \&.DT no Li \&.5i 1i... Restore default tabs. 81.It Nm \&.HP Ar i yes Ar i Ns =p.i.* "Begin paragraph with hanging indent. Set prevailing indent to" Ar i . 82.It Nm \&.I Ar t no Ar t Ns =n.t.l. Text is italic. 83.It Nm \&.IB Ar t no Ar t Ns =n.t.l. Join words, altenrating italic and bold. 84.It Nm \&.IP Ar x Ar i yes Ar x Ns ="" Same as 85.Nm \&.TP 86with tag 87.Ar x . 88.It Nm \&.IR Ar t no Ar t Ns =n.t.l. Join words, alternating italic and roman. 89.It Nm \&.IX Ar t no - Index macro, not used (obsolete). 90.It Nm \&.LP yes - Begin left-aligned paragraph. Set prevailing indent to .5i. 91.It Nm \&.P yes - Same as 92.Nm \&.LP . 93.It Nm \&.PD Ar d no Ar d Ns =.4v Set vertical distance between paragraphs. 94.It Nm \&.PP yes - Same as 95.Nm \&.LP . 96.It Nm \&.RE yes - End of relative indent. Restores prevailing indent. 97.It Nm \&.RB Ar t no Ar t Ns =n.t.l. Join words, alternating roman and bold. 98.It Nm \&.RI Ar t no Ar t Ns =n.t.l. Join words, alternating roman and italic. 99.It Nm \&.RS Ar i yes Ar i Ns =p.i. Start relative indent, increase indent by Ar i . 100Sets prevailing indent to .5i for nested indents. 101.It Nm \&.SB Ar t no - Reduce size of text by 1 point, make text bold. 102.It Nm \&.SH Ar t yes - Section Heading. 103.It Nm \&.SM Ar t no Ar t Ns =n.t.l. Reduce size of text by 1 point. 104.It Nm \&.SS Ar t yes Ar t Ns =n.t.l. Section Subheading. 105.It Nm \&.TH Ar n s d f m yes - Begin reference page Ar n , No of section Ar s ; Ar d No is the date of the most recent change. If present, Ar f No is the left page footer; Ar m No is the main page (center) header. Sets prevailing indent and tabs to .5i. 106.It Nm \&.TP Ar i yes Ar i Ns =p.i. Begin indented paragraph, with the tag given on the next text line. Set prevailing indent to 107.Ar i . 108.It Nm \&.TX Ar t p no - Resolve the title abbreviation Ar t ; No join to punctuation mark (or text) Ar p . 109.El 110.Ss "Conventions" 111When formatting a manual page, 112.Nm 113examines the first line to determine 114whether it requires special processing. 115For example a first line consisting of: 116.Lp 117.Dl \&'\e" t 118.Lp 119indicates that the manual page must be run through the 120.Xr tbl 1 121preprocessor. 122.Lp 123A typical manual page for a command or function is laid out as follows: 124.Bl -tag -width ".SH RETURN VALUES" 125. 126.It Nm \&.TH Ar title Op "1-9" 127. 128The name of the command or function, which serves as the title of the manual 129page. 130This is followed by the number of the section in which it appears. 131. 132.It Nm \&.SH NAME 133. 134The name, or list of names, by which the command is called, followed by a dash 135and then a one-line summary of the action performed. 136All in roman font, this section contains no 137.Xr troff 1 138commands or escapes, and no macro requests. 139It is used to generate the database used by the 140.Xr whatis 1 141command. 142. 143.It Nm \&.SH SYNOPSIS 144.Bl -tag -width "Functions:" 145.It Sy Commands: 146The syntax of the command and its arguments, as typed on the command line. 147When in boldface, a word must be typed exactly as printed. 148When in italics, a word can be replaced with an argument that you supply. 149References to bold or italicized items are not capitalized in other sections, 150even when they begin a sentence. 151.Lp 152Syntactic symbols appear in roman face: 153.Bl -tag -width " " 154.It Op " " 155An argument, when surrounded by brackets is optional. 156.It | 157Arguments separated by a vertical bar are exclusive. 158You can supply only one item from such a list. 159.It \&.\|.\|. 160Arguments followed by an ellipsis can be repeated. 161When an ellipsis follows a bracketed set, the expression within the brackets can 162be repeated. 163.El 164.It Sy Functions: 165If required, the data declaration, or 166.Li #include 167directive, is shown first, 168followed by the function declaration. 169Otherwise, the function declaration is shown. 170.El 171. 172.It Nm \&.SH DESCRIPTION 173. 174A narrative overview of the command or function's external behavior. 175This includes how it interacts with files or data, and how it handles the 176standard input, standard output and standard error. 177Internals and implementation details are normally omitted. 178This section attempts to provide a succinct overview in answer to the question, 179"what does it do?" 180.Lp 181Literal text from the synopsis appears in constant width, as do literal 182filenames and references to items that appear elsewhere in the reference 183manuals. 184Arguments are italicized. 185.Lp 186If a command interprets either subcommands or an input grammar, its command 187interface or input grammar is normally described in a 188.Nm USAGE 189section, which follows the 190.Nm OPTIONS 191section. 192The 193.Nm DESCRIPTION 194section only 195describes the behavior of the command itself, not that of subcommands. 196. 197.It Nm \&.SH OPTIONS 198. 199The list of options along with a description of how each affects the command's 200operation. 201. 202.It Nm \&.SH RETURN VALUES 203. 204A list of the values the library routine will return to the calling program 205and the conditions that cause these values to be returned. 206. 207.It Nm \&.SH EXIT STATUS 208. 209A list of the values the utility will return to the calling program or shell, 210and the conditions that cause these values to be returned. 211. 212.It Nm \&.SH FILES 213. 214A list of files associated with the command or function. 215. 216.It Nm \&.SH SEE ALSO 217. 218A comma-separated list of related manual pages, followed by references to other 219published materials. 220. 221.It Nm \&.SH DIAGNOSTICS 222. 223A list of diagnostic messages and an explanation of each. 224. 225.It Nm \&.SH BUGS 226. 227A description of limitations, known defects, and possible problems associated 228with the command or function. 229.El 230.Sh FILES 231.Pa /usr/share/man/whatis 232.Sh NOTES 233The 234.Nm 235package should not be used for new documentation. 236The 237.Xr mdoc 7 , 238package is preferred, as it uses semantic markup rather than physical markup. 239.Sh CODE SET INDEPENDENCE 240When processed with 241.Xr mandoc 1 , 242this package is Code Set Independent. 243However, when processed with legacy tools such as 244.Xr nroff 1 245and 246.Xr troff 1 , 247the use of multi-byte characters may not be supported. 248.Sh INTERFACE STABILITY 249.Sy Obsolete Committed . 250The 251.Xr mdoc 7 252package should be used instead. 253.Sh SEE ALSO 254.Xr eqn 1 , 255.Xr man 1 , 256.Xr mandoc 1 , 257.Xr nroff 1 , 258.Xr tbl 1 , 259.Xr troff 1 , 260.Xr whatis 1 , 261.Xr mdoc 7 262.Rs 263.%A Dale Dougherty and Tim O'Reilly 264.%B Unix Text Processing 265.Re 266