| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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- change mandocdb.db to mandoc.db
- add HISTORY to mandocdb(8)
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feels so 2008-ish, one of the last remnants of the
Kristaps-doesnt-like-syntax-errors-so-lets-just-give-up--Era.
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try to deal with it.
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from Sascha Wildner <swildner at gmail dot com> (DragonFly)
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different meanings, that cannot be helped. But we can make this less
confusing by stating that the second instance refers to stuff like (2),
(3), and (9), and by adding the sections header the first instance
refers to, for example ERRORS or RETURN VALUES.
Source for confusion noticed by Jan Stary <hans at stare dot cz>,
better wording suggested by jmc@, tweaked by me.
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This fixes horizontal spacing when an Ns macro follows a block-closing
macro and the corresponding block-opening macro is not on the same line.
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one, so they miss the clearing of MDOC_NEWLINE in mdoc.c, node_alloc().
Consequently, MDOC_NEWLINE must be cleared before processing the next
macro on the same line.
This fixes horizontal spacing for input lines beginning like .Oc Ns ...
Issue found by Franco Fichtner <franco at lastsummer dot de>
while working on DragonFly mandoc integration.
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whether they are the first macro on the line or called by another macro.
To help debugging, indicate this property "first macro on a new input line"
by prefixing an asterisk to the line number in -Ttree output.
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from int to size_t, to match some existing ones (offset, *rmargin, viscol).
Move some related local variables from int to size_t as well.
Needed as a preparation to make a generalized adjbuf() function available
beyond the file term.c, i.e. in mandoc.c.
Also saves a couple of ugly casts.
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Part of the patch was sent in by Jan Stary <hans at stare dot cz>,
another part was added by jmc@, the rest was added by myself;
ok jmc@.
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This improves the formatting of about 40 base manuals
and reduces groff-mandoc formatting differences in base by about 5%.
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against vend, causing a premature line break. Fix that bug by reverting
revision 1.93 which Kristaps committed four years ago. Kristaps patch is no
longer needed because the code below /* Write out the [remaining] word. */
now handles leading blanks correctly, probably already for a long time.
This avoids premature line breaks in about a dozen base system manuals,
for example as(1) and gdb(1), and alignment issues in another twenty,
for example mount(2), ip6(4), pfctl(8), and crypto(9).
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because that's the usual order in formal citations.
My patch that was accepted into groff by Werner Lemberg
uses the same order, so keep groff and mandoc consistent.
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consistently use the style ".An name Aq Mt email".
Triggered by a question from Jan Stary <hans at stare dot cz>,
ok jmc@.
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As with any low-level roff request involving subtle interactions
with macro internals, this implementation is not exact, but it
does handle the simplest cases.
This request occurs in man(7) code generated from DocBook,
for example mysql(1) and yasm_arch(7).
Thanks to brad@ for reporting the issue back in January 2011.
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* Again accept suffixes on the name of the whatis utility.
* The usage line for whatis must not invite expressions.
* Revert the argument names in the SYNOPSIS back to the usual ones.
* Revert a few gratuitious changes regarding line breaks etc.
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so move the str_info structure into that function.
No functional change.
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so move the statement into the function dbopen().
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is actually reachable by man(1). This check got lost when
the database backend was changed from Berkeley to sqlite.
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even when the conditional evaluated to false.
While here, reshuffle the code to reduce indentation and make it
more readable; that way, we can even trim down the comments because
it becomes obvious what the code does.
Found in zipinfo(1) - thanks to espie@ and naddy@
for making me look at that manual page.
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output on collections of manual source files. I'm using this for quite
some time now, and it has proven to be rather useful.
Obviously, this will not be installed on user's systems.
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* Parsing macro arguments has to be done in copy mode,
which implies replacing "\t" by a literal tab character.
* Otherwise, render "\t" as the empty string, not as a 't' character.
This fixes formatting of the distfile example in the oldrdist(1) manual.
This also shows up in the unzip(1) manual as one of several issues
preventing the removal of USE_GROFF from the archivers/unzip port.
Thanks to espie@ for attracting my attention to the unzip(1) manual.
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Tweak descriptions of the other POSIX 1003.1<letter> standards.
Sort a few others into their proper places.
From Philip Guenther@ during t2k13.
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Having a mask is sufficient to trigger putmdockey.
Simplify by dropping the flags; no functional change.
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the section was dropped when switching from db to sqlite.
Use the customary format foo(N).
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of the same string within the same manual, so initialize and purge
it for each manual in ofmerge() instead of one single time in main().
There is no point in saving manual names and descriptions in that
table because each of them occurs only once, or very few times.
The is no point in saving section numbers there because they are
so much shorter than the descriptions.
Testing with the complete tree /usr/share/man/ on my notebook shows
that this change slightly reduces memory consumption by about 20%
while there is no measurable difference in execution time.
As a bonus, this allows to delete the functions stradd() and stradds(),
the "next" member from struct str, and the global struct str *words.
While adapting the places in the code using stradd(), i noticed that
parsing of the mdoc(7) .Nd macro was completely broken and that for
formatted manual pages with unusable NAME section, the description
was never set in the struct of. This commit fixes both bugs as well.
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and ohash_find() twice. As a bonus, this allows to drop hashget().
While here, rename index to slot to match the terminology in the ohash
manual; it also prevents potential clashes with index(3).
Drop the slot variable altogether where it is used only once.
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Also rename straddbuf() to stradds() to be more similar to putkeys().
Just cleanup, no functional change.
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While here, simplify dbopen() and dbclose(): No need for strlcpy()
and strlcat() when dealing with constant strings only.
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We are not going back to Berkeley DB and don't care about
overwriting any obsolete files that may be lying around.
So, go back from "mandocdb.db" to "mandoc.db".
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used as a default page description if no usable NAME section was found
was preserved when moving from db to sqlite, but the code line actually
doing that was removed without replacement. So, put it back.
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so make the function void; no functional change.
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during the switch from db to sqlite; restore these:
* Warn and skip when directory and file name mismatch.
* Warn and skip when finding special files.
* Warning about "mandocdb.db" is useless, it is always present.
* While here, do not hardcode "mandocdb.db", use MANDOC_DB.
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db to sqlite; they are needed to prevent corruption of the database
when paths containing dot, dotdot, or symlinks are given on the
command line. Also make sure the exit-code is really non-zero on
system errors and use mandoc(1) exit codes.
To make all this simpler,
* Drop the "basedir" argument from almost every function and make it
global because it is really state info used all over the place.
* Move "startdir" and "fd" as local vars into set_basedir() because they
are only used for this one purpose, i.e. to move out of basedir again.
While here,
* Clarify the name of path_arg in the main program; in the -C case,
it is not a dir, and anyway there are lots of different dirs around.
* Include missing <stdio.h> needed for perror().
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Consistently use the PATH_MAX since it is specified by POSIX,
while MAXPATHLEN is not.
In preparation for using this at a few more places.
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1) SQL statements were only prepared when creating a new database.
2) We rely heavily on foreign_keys, but never enabled them.
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As variadic macros are not supported on all architectures,
replace them by a real function. While here,
* choose a more logical order for "dir" and "file" arguments
* choose a more logical order when printing; as a bonus,
a simple sed 's/:.*//' will get you valid file names
* in ofmerge(), skip diagnostic string comparisons
when we don't want warnings anyway
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sequences such that output modes like -Tutf8 have a chance to select
nice glyphs. This doesn't change anything for -Tascii, and, for now,
it doesn't affect -Tps and -Tpdf either.
OK matthew@ bentley@; like the idea tedu@; no opinion jmc@.
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* Add the missing mparse_parse_buffer prototype.
* Drop the useless MAP_FILE constant: It's not specified in POSIX,
so it's not required, it's the default anyway, and it's 0 anyway.
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That helps to find one's way when hacking on the code.
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Remove one layer of indirection by deleting mparse_readfd_r()
and doing its work in the public mparse_readfd().
As a bonus, catch recursive .so.
This is part of the preparations to resync to openbsd.org.
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