| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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found on Solaris 10 at OpenCSW
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for systems lacking it
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Use the POSIX function getline(3) rather than the slightly
dangerous BSD function fgetln(3).
Remove the related compatibility code.
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noticed by Peter Bray <pdb_ml at yahoo dot com dot au>
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Bug reported by Peter Bray <pdb_ml at yahoo dot com dot au>.
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Suggested by Joerg@ Sonnenberger (NetBSD).
Last year, deraadt@ confirmed on tech@ that this "has the potential
to be more portable", and micro-optimizing for speed is not relevant
here. Also gets rid of one global variable.
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Many thanks to bentley@ for doing this work.
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level, validation must be separated from parsing and rewinding.
This first big step moves calling of the mdoc(7) post_*() functions
out of the parser loop into their own mdoc_validate() pass, while
using a new mdoc_state() module to make syntax tree state handling
available to both the parser loop and the validation pass.
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* Use ohash(3) rather than a hand-rolled hash table.
* Make the character table static in the chars.c module:
There is no need to pass a pointer around, we most certainly
never want to use two different character tables concurrently.
* No need to keep the characters in a separate file chars.in;
that merely encourages downstream porters to mess with them.
* Sort the characters to agree with the mandoc_chars(7) manual page.
* Specify Unicode codepoints in hex, not decimal (that's the detail
that originally triggered this patch).
No functional change, minus 100 LOC, and i don't see a performance change.
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callback functions into one common place, preparing for the use of
ohash for some additional purposes. No functional change.
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That's more readable and less error-prone than fumbling around
with argv[0], fprintf(3), strerror(3), perror(3), and exit(3).
It's a bad idea to boycott good interfaces merely because standards
committees ignore them. Instead, let's provide compatibility modules
for archaic systems (like commercial Solaris) that still don't have
them. The compat module has an UCB Copyright (c) 1993...
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As discussed with deraadt@, that's cleaner and will help tame(2).
Something like this was also suggested earlier by bapt at FreeBSD.
Minus 50 lines of code, deleting one interface function (mparse_wait),
no functional change intended.
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less(1) -T and :t ctags(1)-like functionality to jump to the
definitions of various terms inside manual pages.
To be polished in the tree, so bear with me and report issues.
Technically, if less(1) is used as a pager, information is collected
by the mdoc(7) terminal formatter, first stored using the ohash
library, then ultimately written to a temporary file which is passed
to less via -T. No change intended for other output formatters or
when running without a pager.
Based on an idea from Kristaps using feedback from many, in particular
phessler@ nicm@ millert@ halex@ doug@ kspillner@ deraadt@.
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* do not process the test-*.c files, they are not built via make
* add the missing compat_stringlist.c and soelim.c
* read.c now uses roff_int.h
* roff.c no longer uses libmdoc.h
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platforms having neither stringlist nor compat_reallocarray.
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* purge and sort headers
* add build and compat glue
* and LICENSE information
for soelim(1)
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Replace enum mdoc_type and enum man_type by a unified enum roff_type.
Almost mechanical, no functional change.
Written on the ICE train from Frankfurt to Bruxelles on the way to p2k15.
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The next step will be to actually use the parsed data.
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one of the next steps will be to use it in addition to manpath(1)
rather than as an alternative to it.
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Thanks to Sevan Janiyan <venture37 at geeklan dot co dot uk> for
reporting the Solaris 10 issues, to Jan Holzhueter <jh at opencsw
dot org> for some additional insight, and to OpenCSW in general for
providing me with a Solaris 9/10/11 testing environment.
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Keeping track of the versions of installed software is the job of
the package manager, not of the individual binaries. If individual
binaries include version numbers, that tends to goad people into
writing broken configuration tests that inspect version numbers
instead of properly testing for features.
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using the file system lookup fallback code, also reducing the number
of preprocessor conditional directives.
Hopefully, it will make some small Linux distros happy.
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to help downstream distributions avoid naming conflicts.
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just like we do it on OpenBSD. Smaller and neater.
While here, let ./configure set INSTALL_TARGETS.
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Drop DISTDIR from www-install target.
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Install man(1) manual in db-install, not base-install.
Get rid of the useless variables BASEBIN, DBBIN, CGIBIN.
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So, it's pointless to make adding version strings easy for downstream.
One source file less to maintain.
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long obsolete and were never written in mdoc(7) in the first place.
Removes 100 lines from source files.
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is a job for makewhatis(8)/mandoc.db(5), not for the parser.
Removes 150 lines from source files and 4k (1%) from the binary.
Bloat found by deraadt@.
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enhances functionality and reduces code and docs by more than 300 lines
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I'm importing the totally unchanged OpenBSD version
such that all changes can easily be tracked in CVS.
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Switch the argmode on the progname, including man(1).
Provide -f and -k options to switch the argmode.
Store the argmode inside struct search, generalizing the flags.
Derive the deftype from the argmode when needed instead of storing it.
Store the outkey inside struct search instead of passing it alone.
While here, get rid of the trailing blanks in Makefile.depend.
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This is the first step on the way to a man(1) implementation.
The new ./configure is flexible enough to make this step quite easy.
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* Make ./configure standalone, that's what people expect.
* Let people write a ./configure.local from scratch, not edit existing files.
* Autodetect wchar, sqlite3, and manpath and act accordingly.
* Autodetect the need for -L/usr/local/lib and -lutil.
* Get rid of config.h.p{re,ost}, let ./configure only write what's needed.
* Let ./configure write a Makefile.local snippet, that's quite flexible.
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I chose the OpenBSD version because it apparently contains various
bugfixes that never made it into libnbcompat. To reduce size and
complexity, i stripped out the features we don't need.
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Include <sys/types.h> where needed, it does not belong in config.h.
Remove <stdio.h> from config.h; if it is missing somewhere, it should
be added, but i cannot find a *.c file where it is missing.
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Paul Onyschuk <ptmelville at gmail dot com> (Alpine Linux)
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in the Makefile; instead, pass it down via the environment just
like CFLAGS.
Nice suggestion from kristaps@ hoping to make MacOS X happier.
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provide a dummy fallback implementation.
Do not bother to decode the error, SQLite error codes
are not useful enough for that to be worthwhile.
Note that using sqlite3_errmsg(db) would be a bad idea:
On malloc() failure, db is NULL, which would cause a segfault.
Issue noticed by kristaps@.
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