| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Disable some parts of the build (man.cgi, etc.) while sqlite3 is being
merged in nice and slow.
Remove the bit swapping stuff in config.h.post.
Remove apropos_db (replaced by mansearch).
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This makes the utility much smaller and simpler.
A lot of functionality has been omitted while the sqlite3 search routines
improve (logical operations, etc.).
It still needs work to make the output more conventional.
Also add the manpage utility, which I use extensively as a mind-meld of
apropos and man.
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See the tech@ mailing list entries in June 2012 for details, as well as the
discuss@ mailing list entries from March 2012.
Among other changes, this utility now:
1. uses a single sqlite3 database instead of several berkeley dbs
2. stores utf-8 encoded strings
3. using ohash to aggressively hash its contents
4. using fts() instead of manually walking directories
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This is a much more minimal interface that stuffs all operations into
a single function.
It uses sqlite3 and ohash.
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Note this file will not be connected to the build for a little while as
I get the new sqlite3 stuff in.
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To allow doing so, no longer abuse rew_scope() to unwind explicit blocks;
explicitly call man_unscope() instead.
Fixing the indentation of slapd.conf(5) in the OpenLDAP port;
thanks to guenther@ for the report.
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Do not use this, it is not portable and only defined in esr's man-ext.
For example, sox(1) wants these macros.
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In particular, two cases were wrong:
- single-line .if with trailing whitespace gave no blank line
- multiline .if with \{ but without \{\ gave no blank line
While here, simplify roff_cond() by partially reordering the code.
"good one" kristaps@
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profit of the occasion to pull out some spaghetti, that is,
three confusing variables and fourteen pointless assignments
among them; instead, always operate on the official pointers
**start, **end, and *sz, each of which conveys an obvious meaning.
No functional change intended, and the new tests confirm that
everything still (err...) "works", as far as that word can be
applied to the kind of roff(7) mock-up code i'm polishing here.
"just commit" kristaps@
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in particular when the inner escapes are preceded or followed by other terms.
While doing so, remove lots of bogus code that was trying to make pointless
distinctions between numeric and non-numeric escape sequences, while both
actually share the same syntax and we ignore the semantics anyway.
This prevents some of the strings defined in the pod2man(1) preamble
from producing garbage output, in particular in scandinavian words.
Of course, proper rendering of scandinavian national characters
cannot be expected even with these fixes.
"just commit" kristaps@
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character without advancing the cursor position; implement it to
simply skip the next character, as it will usually be overwritten.
With this change, the pod2man(1) preamble user-defined string \*:,
intended to render as a diaeresis or umlaut diacritic above the
preceding character, is rendered in a slightly less ugly way,
though still not correctly. It was rendered as "z.." and is now
rendered as ".".
Given that the definition of \*: uses elaborate manual \h positioning,
there is little chance for mandoc(1) to ever render it correctly,
but at least we can refrain from printing out a spurious "z", and
we can make the \z do something semi-reasonable for easier cases.
"just commit" kristaps@
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Groff forces the document author to manually request sufficient spacing
after .TE - that is, at least .sp 1v after a table with the "box" option
and at least .sp 2v after a table with the "doublebox" option - or else
it clobbers the box. I consider that insane, so i'm not imitating groff
in that respect. Instead, i add at least as much vertical space as groff,
or more where required to avoid clobbering the box.
Consequently, output will be identical for input that looks sane with
groff, and mandoc will make output look better for input that looks bad
with groff.
"Please check them in and I'll look into them later!" kristaps@
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flush right text, for boxes, and when more columns follow the span.
Issue found by sthen@ in the net/arp-scan(1) port manual.
"Please check them in and I'll look into them later!" kristaps@
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instead save their properties with the following column.
This simplifies layout parsing and saves a lot of code
related to column handling.
At output time, print all white space and vertical lines
separating columns before printing the following column,
and none after printing the preceding column, considerably
simplifying white space handling and width calculations.
No functional change, but it saves 150 lines of code,
and it allows the next patch to tbl_term.c, tbl_literal().
"Please check them in and I'll look into them later!" kristaps@
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default value for the mdoc(7) .Os macro.
Needed for man.cgi on the OpenBSD website.
Problem with man.cgi first noticed by deraadt@;
beck@ and deraadt@ agree with the way to solve the issue.
"Please check them in and I'll look into them later!" kristaps@
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in tbl_term.c rev. 1.10 and out.c rev. 1.16
on September 20, 2011.
I merely forgot to delete the TODO entry.
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i'm really sure because i both stepped through the code with gdb
and wrote an OpenBSD regression test for it.
While here, note that bentley@ reported .ti .ce .fc missing.
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If man(7) has any advantage compared to mdoc(7), it's portability,
and using man-ext would needlessly give that advantage away.
ok kristaps@
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even if it starts with a dash.
ok kristaps@
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it out here than merge it to OpenBSD. No binary change.
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Add dummy entry for OpenBSD and XXX entry for the rest.
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we can do this in the frontend.
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shebang into a buffer and parsing it that way. This improves on many
cruddy -man manuals in the wild.
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This makes mandoc work much, much nicer with Mac OSX manpages.
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warnings about grokking manpages in their respective directories.
DO NOT, however, import his temporary-file routines (I don't plan on
staying with a recno/btree split) nor the realpath() routines, which
destroy relative path-ness.
Also pull in the lorder bits.
There are some changes I started to make then stopped relating to
reporting errors in the correct directories. I'll clean this up in
subsequent commits.
This puts us more or less on parity with OpenBSD.
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from Philip Guenther <guenther at openbsd dot org>.
OK Werner Lemberg <wl at gnu dot org>.
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from memory, e.g. after de-compressing a document.
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This is less likely to break the syntax of macros.
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