| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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formatting manpages is now linked into man.cgi.
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This exists almost entirely to document that /tmp must exist in a jailed
Apache directory for dbopen() not to fail. This was a massive headache
to track down.
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apropos(1) does so) and updates an HTML fragment cache for use by man.cgi.
Right now man.cgi is "online" in that it requires mandoc(1) in its path,
but this doesn't work for, say, OpenBSD's apache chroot(1). This allows
a cache to be maintained.
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set of keywords already exists is a bad idea, so reuse the mdoc(7)
macro names as apropos(1) search types. This is a gain in brevity
as well. Some time ago, kristaps@ agreed in principle.
The search type bit field constants are used by both mandocdb(8) and
apropos(1) and should better stay in sync, so give them their own
header file.
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inspired by apropos.c and mandoc-tools' mandoc-cgi.c). This uses UTF-8
right now for its re-writing, but will soon accomodate for the regular
suspects (this is a rather simple matter).
I also introduce man.cgi (cgi.c), which is a standalone CGI that replaces
mandoc-tools' mandoc.cgi. Right now it's just a framework.
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Windows (via MingW).
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this involves both a major functionality addition (-Tman), a new utility
(apropos), and both apropos and mandocdb being built by default.
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(originally including extern.h, state.c, and sort.c). The apropos
utility interfaces with the databases of mandocdb to provide semantic
searching capabilities. It Works For Me, but will need lots of cleanup
in the coming months.
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to convert mdoc(7) documents to the man(7) language.
This is work in progress and will be developed in tree.
It does already handle the cat(1) manual,
but will hardly handle all your fancy manuals yet.
go ahead kristaps@ jmc@ millert@ deraadt@
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and more expressive.
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This consists of a shim around the text parser that calls out to libroff
if equation components exist on the line. Right now this will do
nothing, as the equation delimiter always returns nil.
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That is to say, with mingw32. This amounts to the following:
(1) break compat.c into compat_strlcpy.c and compat_strlcat.c
(2) add compat_getsubopt.c (from OpenBSD) and test-getsubopt.c
(3) add test-strptime.c for HAVE_STRPTIME
(4) add ifdef bits here and there, where necessary
(5) remove some harmless unportable stuff (u_char, localtime_r)
I've added the appropriate mdocml.zip target to the Makefile, too.
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completes a full initial eqn system, so I'm tagging a release on it.
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minimum: unseparated terms.
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This is required for supporting in-line equations. While here, push
registers properly into roff and add an set/get/mod interface.
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"please make this change" kristaps@
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with OpenBSD, which is sandboxing the code for merge. It makes sense
because it doesn't really make a `makewhatis' file in the traditional
sense, so it may be confusing.
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the database size (one record for each file), but it's critical
information.
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not have mmap(), from what I can tell).
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commit adds parsing of "File Variables" in the first two lines in order
to grok the encoding. This completes groff's recognition sequence (-e,
BOM, File variables, -D, default). I've also cleaned up the manual to
indicate this and for some general readability.
preconv is now compiled by default in the Makefile.
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the \[uNNNN] strings (taking into account big-endian archs). Also allow
it to determine from the BOM whether it's a UTF-8 file. Also add the
initial manual. This has been tested over a random selection of UTF-8
documents, as
% preconv -e utf-8 foo.1 | ./mandoc -Tlocale
where -Tlocale is allowed (-DUSE_WCHAR).
Note that we're still missing the "type" indicator that preconv accepts.
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version and let it grow in-tree. Right now, this only supports the
Latin-1 and US-ASCII encoding. I'll do UTF-8 next. It's
call-compatible with GNU's preconv although I don't do fancy stuff like
BOM or header check. This will come. I used read.c's file-grokking
code.
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within roff.c. These are now grokked from a table in the roff
allocation routine and rest in the newly-created predefs.in (for
consistency with chars.in). This is a first implementation and will
likely be optimised along with the ds/de lookup table itself.
This allows mandoc-defined predefined strings to be correctly removed or
whatnot; earlier they couldn't. What will follow is the stripping-away
of all predefined-string crud in the other parts of the system.
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defined, so remove the check for it and leave it up to people compiling
the software (DOWNSTREAM) to take care of this. This will eventually
need to be fixed up with a proper non-10646 converter and so on, but
this is a simple start. While here, strengthen then language in the
Makefile to this effect.
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Pankov). Also fix typo in Makefile, same reporter. Thanks!
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it looks pretty good. Basically, the -Tlocale option propogates into
term_ascii.c, where we set locale-specific console call-backs IFF (1)
setlocale() works; (2) locale support is compiled in (see Makefile for
-DUSE_WCHAR); (3) the internal structure of wchar_t maps directly to
Unicode codepoints as defined by __STDC_ISO_10646__; and (4) the console
supports multi-byte characters.
To date, this configuration only supports GNU/Linux. OpenBSD doesn't
export __STDC_ISO_10646__ although I'm told by stsp@openbsd.org that it
should (it has the correct map). Apparently FreeBSD is the same way.
NetBSD? Don't know. Apple also supports this, but doesn't define the
macro. Special-casing!
Benchmark: -Tlocale incurs less than 0.2 factor overhead when run
through several thousand manuals when UTF8 output is enabled. Native
mode (whether directly -Tascii or through no locale or whatever) is
UNCHANGED: the function callbacks are the same as before.
Note. If the underlying system does NOT support STDC_ISO_10646, there
is a "slow" version possible with iconv or other means of flipping from
a Unicode codepoint to a wchar_t.
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Add initial version notes.
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