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diff --git a/upstream/mageia-cauldron/man1/rman.1 b/upstream/mageia-cauldron/man1/rman.1 new file mode 100644 index 00000000..91e4c1e0 --- /dev/null +++ b/upstream/mageia-cauldron/man1/rman.1 @@ -0,0 +1,273 @@ +.TH PolyglotMan 1 +.SH "NAME " +PolyglotMan, rman - reverse compile man pages from formatted +form to a number of source formats +.SH "SYNOPSIS " +rman [ \fIoptions \fR] [ \fIfile \fR] +.SH "DESCRIPTION " +Up-to-date instructions can be found at +http://polyglotman.sourceforge.net/rman.html + +.PP +\fIPolyglotMan \fR takes man pages from most of the popular flavors +of UNIX and transforms them into any of a number of text source +formats. PolyglotMan was formerly known as RosettaMan. The name +of the binary is still called \fIrman \fR, for scripts that depend +on that name; mnemonically, just think "reverse man". Previously \fI +PolyglotMan \fR required pages to be formatted by nroff prior +to its processing. With version 3.0, it \fIprefers [tn]roff source \fR +and usually produces results that are better yet. And source +processing is the only way to translate tables. Source format +translation is not as mature as formatted, however, so try formatted +translation as a backup. +.PP +In parsing [tn]roff source, one could implement an arbitrarily +large subset of [tn]roff, which I did not and will not do, so +the results can be off. I did implement a significant subset +of those use in man pages, however, including tbl (but not eqn), +if tests, and general macro definitions, so usually the results +look great. If they don't, format the page with nroff before +sending it to PolyglotMan. If PolyglotMan doesn't recognize a +key macro used by a large class of pages, however, e-mail me +the source and a uuencoded nroff-formatted page and I'll see +what I can do. When running PolyglotMan with man page source +that includes or redirects to other [tn]roff source using the .so (source +or inclusion) macro, you should be in the parent directory of +the page, since pages are written with this assumption. For example, +if you are translating /usr/man/man1/ls.1, first cd into /usr/man. +.PP +\fIPolyglotMan \fR accepts man pages from: SunOS, Sun Solaris, +Hewlett-Packard HP-UX, AT&T System V, OSF/1 aka Digital UNIX, +DEC Ultrix, SGI IRIX, Linux, FreeBSD, SCO. Source processing +works for: SunOS, Sun Solaris, Hewlett-Packard HP-UX, AT&T System +V, OSF/1 aka Digital UNIX, DEC Ultrix. It can produce printable +ASCII-only (control characters stripped), section headers-only, +Tk, TkMan, [tn]roff (traditional man page source), SGML, HTML, +MIME, LaTeX, LaTeX2e, RTF, Perl 5 POD. A modular architecture +permits easy addition of additional output formats. +.PP +The latest version of PolyglotMan is available from \fI +http://polyglotman.sourceforge.net/ \fR. +.SH "OPTIONS " +The following options should not be used with any others and +exit PolyglotMan without processing any input. +.TP 15 +-h|--help +Show list of command line options and exit. +.TP 15 +-v|--version +Show version number and exit. +.PP +\fIYou should specify the filter first, as this sets a number +of parameters, and then specify other options. +.TP 15 +-f|--filter <ASCII|roff|TkMan|Tk|Sections|HTML|SGML|MIME|LaTeX|LaTeX2e|RTF|POD> +Set the output filter. Defaults to ASCII. +.TP 15 +-S|--source +PolyglotMan tries to automatically determine whether its input +is source or formatted; use this option to declare source input. +.TP 15 +-F|--format|--formatted +PolyglotMan tries to automatically determine whether its input +is source or formatted; use this option to declare formatted +input. +.TP 15 +-l|--title \fIprintf-string \fR +In HTML mode this sets the <TITLE> of the man pages, given the +same parameters as \fI-r \fR. +.TP 15 +-r|--reference|--manref \fIprintf-string \fR +In HTML and SGML modes this sets the URL form by which to retrieve +other man pages. The string can use two supplied parameters: +the man page name and its section. (See the Examples section.) +If the string is null (as if set from a shell by "-r ''"), `-' +or `off', then man page references will not be HREFs, just set +in italics. If your printf supports XPG3 positions specifier, +this can be quite flexible. +.TP 15 +-V|--volumes \fI<colon-separated list> \fR +Set the list of valid volumes to check against when looking for +cross-references to other man pages. Defaults to \fI1:2:3:4:5:6:7:8:9:o:l:n:p \fR(volume +names can be multicharacter). If an non-whitespace string in +the page is immediately followed by a left parenthesis, then +one of the valid volumes, and ends with optional other characters +and then a right parenthesis--then that string is reported as +a reference to another manual page. If this -V string starts +with an equals sign, then no optional characters are allowed +between the match to the list of valids and the right parenthesis. (This +option is needed for SCO UNIX.) +.PP +The following options apply only when formatted pages are given +as input. They do not apply or are always handled correctly with +the source. +.TP 15 +-b|--subsections +Try to recognize subsection titles in addition to section titles. +This can cause problems on some UNIX flavors. +.TP 15 +-K|--nobreak +Indicate manual pages don't have page breaks, so don't look for +footers and headers around them. (Older nroff -man macros always +put in page breaks, but lately some vendors have realized that +printout are made through troff, whereas nroff -man is used to +format pages for reading on screen, and so have eliminated page +breaks.) \fIPolyglotMan \fR usually gets this right even without +this flag. +.TP 15 +-k|--keep +Keep headers and footers, as a canonical report at the end of +the page. changeleft +Move changebars, such as those found in the Tcl/Tk manual pages, +to the left. --> notaggressive +\fIDisable \fR aggressive man page parsing. Aggressive manual, +which is on by default, page parsing elides headers and footers, +identifies sections and more. --> +.TP 15 +-n|--name \fIname \fR +Set name of man page (used in roff format). If the filename is +given in the form " \fIname \fR. \fIsection \fR", the name and +section are automatically determined. If the page is being parsed +from [tn]roff source and it has a .TH line, this information +is extracted from that line. +.TP 15 +-p|--paragraph +paragraph mode toggle. The filter determines whether lines should +be linebroken as they were by nroff, or whether lines should +be flowed together into paragraphs. Mainly for internal use. +.TP 15 +-s|section \fI# \fR +Set volume (aka section) number of man page (used in roff format). +tables +Turn on aggressive table parsing. --> +.TP 15 +-t|--tabstops \fI# \fR +For those macros sets that use tabs in place of spaces where +possible in order to reduce the number of characters used, set +tabstops every \fI# \fR columns. Defaults to 8. +.SH "NOTES ON FILTER TYPES " +.SS "ROFF " +Some flavors of UNIX ship man page without [tn]roff source, making +one's laser printer little more than a laser-powered daisy wheel. +This filer tries to intuit the original [tn]roff directives, +which can then be recompiled by [tn]roff. +.SS "TkMan " +TkMan, a hypertext man page browser, uses \fIPolyglotMan \fR +to show man pages without the (usually) useless headers and footers +on each pages. It also collects section and (optionally) subsection +heads for direct access from a pulldown menu. TkMan and Tcl/Tk, +the toolkit in which it's written, are available via anonymous +ftp from \fIftp://ftp.smli.com/pub/tcl/ \fR +.SS "Tk " +This option outputs the text in a series of Tcl lists consisting +of text-tags pairs, where tag names roughly correspond to HTML. +This output can be inserted into a Tk text widget by doing an \fI +eval <textwidget> insert end <text> \fR. This format should be +relatively easily parsible by other programs that want both the +text and the tags. Also see ASCII. +.SS "ASCII " +When printed on a line printer, man pages try to produce special +text effects by overstriking characters with themselves (to produce +bold) and underscores (underlining). Other text processing software, +such as text editors, searchers, and indexers, must counteract +this. The ASCII filter strips away this formatting. Piping nroff +output through \fIcol -b \fR also strips away this formatting, +but it leaves behind unsightly page headers and footers. Also +see Tk. +.SS "Sections " +Dumps section and (optionally) subsection titles. This might +be useful for another program that processes man pages. +.SS "HTML " +With a simple extention to an HTTP server for Mosaic or other +World Wide Web browser, \fIPolyglotMan \fR can produce high quality +HTML on the fly. Several such extensions and pointers to several +others are included in \fIPolyglotMan \fR's \fIcontrib \fR directory. +.SS "SGML " +This is appoaching the Docbook DTD, but I'm hoping that someone +that someone with a real interest in this will polish the tags +generated. Try it to see how close the tags are now. +.SS "MIME " +MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions) as defined by RFC 1563, +good for consumption by MIME-aware e-mailers or as Emacs (>=19.29) +enriched documents. +.SS "LaTeX and LaTeX2e " +Why not? +.SS "RTF " +Use output on Mac or NeXT or whatever. Maybe take random man +pages and integrate with NeXT's documentation system better. +Maybe NeXT has own man page macros that do this. +.SS "PostScript and FrameMaker " +To produce PostScript, use \fIgroff \fR or \fIpsroff \fR. To +produce FrameMaker MIF, use FrameMaker's builtin filter. In both +cases you need \fI[tn]roff \fR source, so if you only have a +formatted version of the manual page, use \fIPolyglotMan \fR's +roff filter first. +.SH "EXAMPLES " +To convert the \fIformatted \fR man page named \fIls.1 \fR back +into [tn]roff source form: +.PP +\fIrman -f roff /usr/local/man/cat1/ls.1 > /usr/local/man/man1/ls.1 \fR +.br +.PP +Long man pages are often compressed to conserve space (compression +is especially effective on formatted man pages as many of the +characters are spaces). As it is a long man page, it probably +has subsections, which we try to separate out (some macro sets +don't distinguish subsections well enough for \fIPolyglotMan \fR +to detect them). Let's convert this to LaTeX format: +.br +.PP +\fIpcat /usr/catman/a_man/cat1/automount.z | rman -b -n automount -s 1 -f +latex > automount.man \fR +.br +.PP +Alternatively, \fIman 1 automount | rman -b -n automount -s 1 -f +latex > automount.man \fR +.br +.PP +For HTML/Mosaic users, \fIPolyglotMan \fR can, without modification +of the source code, produce HTML links that point to other HTML +man pages either pregenerated or generated on the fly. First +let's assume pregenerated HTML versions of man pages stored in \fI/usr/man/html \fR. +Generate these one-by-one with the following form: +.br +\fIrman -f html -r 'http:/usr/man/html/%s.%s.html' /usr/man/cat1/ls.1 > /usr/man/html/ls.1.html \fR +.br +.PP +If you've extended your HTML client to generate HTML on the fly +you should use something like: +.br +\fIrman -f html -r 'http:~/bin/man2html?%s:%s' /usr/man/cat1/ls.1 \fR +.br +when generating HTML. +.SH "BUGS/INCOMPATIBILITIES " +\fIPolyglotMan \fR is not perfect in all cases, but it usually +does a good job, and in any case reduces the problem of converting +man pages to light editing. +.PP +Tables in formatted pages, especially H-P's, aren't handled very +well. Be sure to pass in source for the page to recognize tables. +.PP +The man pager \fIwoman \fR applies its own idea of formatting +for man pages, which can confuse \fIPolyglotMan \fR. Bypass \fI +woman \fR by passing the formatted manual page text directly +into \fIPolyglotMan \fR. +.PP +The [tn]roff output format uses fB to turn on boldface. If your +macro set requires .B, you'll have to a postprocess the \fIPolyglotMan \fR +output. +.SH "SEE ALSO " +\fItkman(1) \fR, \fIxman(1) \fR, \fIman(1) \fR, \fIman(7) \fR +or \fIman(5) \fR depending on your flavor of UNIX +.SH "AUTHOR " +PolyglotMan +.br +by Thomas A. Phelps ( \fIphelps@ACM.org \fR) +.br +developed at the +.br +University of California, Berkeley +.br +Computer Science Division +.PP +Manual page last updated on $Date: 1998/07/13 09:47:28 $ |