Annotation of mandoc/INSTALL, Revision 1.23
1.23 ! schwarze 1: $Id: INSTALL,v 1.22 2018/07/31 15:34:00 schwarze Exp $
1.19 schwarze 2:
3: About the portable mandoc distribution
4: --------------------------------------
5: The mandoc manpage compiler toolset (formerly called "mdocml")
6: is a suite of tools compiling mdoc(7), the roff(7) macro language
7: of choice for BSD manual pages, and man(7), the predominant
8: historical language for UNIX manuals.
1.1 schwarze 9:
1.10 schwarze 10: It includes a man(1) manual viewer and additional tools.
1.19 schwarze 11: For general information, see <http://mandoc.bsd.lv/>.
1.2 schwarze 12:
13: In case you have questions or want to provide feedback, read
1.19 schwarze 14: <http://mandoc.bsd.lv/contact.html>. Consider subscribing to the
1.2 schwarze 15: discuss@ mailing list mentioned on that page. If you intend to
16: help with the development of mandoc, consider subscribing to the
17: tech@ mailing list, too.
18:
19: Enjoy using the mandoc toolset!
20:
1.23 ! schwarze 21: Ingo Schwarze, Karlsruhe, March 2019
1.2 schwarze 22:
1.1 schwarze 23:
1.2 schwarze 24: Installation
25: ------------
1.1 schwarze 26: Before manually installing mandoc on your system, please check
27: whether the newest version of mandoc is already installed by default
28: or available via a binary package or a ports system. A list of the
29: latest bundled and ported versions of mandoc for various operating
1.19 schwarze 30: systems is maintained at <http://mandoc.bsd.lv/ports.html>.
1.1 schwarze 31:
1.2 schwarze 32: Regarding how packages and ports are maintained for your operating
33: system, please consult your operating system documentation.
34: To install mandoc manually, the following steps are needed:
1.1 schwarze 35:
1.18 schwarze 36: 1. If you want to build the CGI program, man.cgi(8), too,
37: run the command "echo BUILD_CGI=1 >> configure.local".
38: Then run "cp cgi.h.example cgi.h" and edit cgi.h as desired.
39:
1.20 schwarze 40: 2. If you also want to build the catman(8) utility, run the
1.18 schwarze 41: command "echo BUILD_CATMAN=1 >> configure.local". Note that it
42: is unlikely to be a drop-in replacement providing the same
43: functionality as your system's "catman", if your operating
44: system contains one.
1.1 schwarze 45:
1.18 schwarze 46: 3. Define MANPATH_DEFAULT in configure.local
1.17 schwarze 47: if /usr/share/man:/usr/X11R6/man:/usr/local/man is not appropriate
48: for your operating system.
49:
1.18 schwarze 50: 4. Run "./configure".
1.4 schwarze 51: This script attempts autoconfiguration of mandoc for your system.
52: Read both its standard output and the file "Makefile.local" it
53: generates. If anything looks wrong or different from what you
54: wish, read the file "configure.local.example", create and edit
55: a file "configure.local", and re-run "./configure" until the
56: result seems right to you.
57:
1.18 schwarze 58: 5. Run "make".
1.4 schwarze 59: Any POSIX-compatible make, in particular both BSD make and GNU make,
60: should work. If the build fails, look at "configure.local.example"
61: and go back to step 2.
62:
1.18 schwarze 63: 6. Run "make -n install" and check whether everything will be
1.7 schwarze 64: installed to the intended places. Otherwise, put some *DIR or *NM*
1.18 schwarze 65: variables into "configure.local" and go back to step 4.
1.4 schwarze 66:
1.18 schwarze 67: 7. Optionally run the regression suite.
68: Basically, that amounts to "cd regress && ./regress.pl".
69: But you should probably look at "./mandoc -l regress/regress.pl.1"
1.23 ! schwarze 70: first. In particular, regarding Solaris systems, look at the BUGS
! 71: section of that manual page.
1.18 schwarze 72:
73: 8. Run "sudo make install". If you intend to build a binary
1.4 schwarze 74: package using some kind of fake root mechanism, you may need a
75: command like "make DESTDIR=... install". Read the *-install targets
76: in the "Makefile" to understand how DESTDIR is used.
1.10 schwarze 77:
1.18 schwarze 78: 9. Run the command "sudo makewhatis" to build mandoc.db(5) databases
1.20 schwarze 79: in all the directory trees configured in step 3. Whenever installing
1.18 schwarze 80: new manual pages, re-run makewhatis(8) to update the databases, or
81: apropos(1) will not find the new pages.
1.10 schwarze 82:
1.18 schwarze 83: 10. To set up a man.cgi(8) server, read its manual page.
1.10 schwarze 84:
1.21 schwarze 85: Note that a very small number of man(7) pages contain low-level
86: roff(7) markup that mandoc does not yet understand. On some BSD
87: systems using mandoc, third-party software is vetted on whether it
88: may be formatted with mandoc. If not, groff(1) is pulled in as a
89: dependency and used to install pre-formatted "catpages" instead of
90: manual page sources. This mechanism is used much less frequently
91: than in the past. On OpenBSD, only 25 out of about 10000 ports
92: still require formatting with groff(1).
1.4 schwarze 93:
94:
95: Understanding mandoc dependencies
96: ---------------------------------
1.16 schwarze 97: The following libraries are required:
98:
99: 1. zlib for decompressing gzipped manual pages.
1.2 schwarze 100:
1.7 schwarze 101: 2. The fts(3) directory traversion functions.
1.3 schwarze 102: If your system does not have them, the bundled compatibility version
1.18 schwarze 103: will be used, so you need not worry in that case. But be careful: old
104: glibc versions of fts(3) were known to be broken on 32bit platforms,
105: see <https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11460>.
106: That was presumably fixed in glibc-2.23.
1.4 schwarze 107: If you run into that problem, set "HAVE_FTS=0" in configure.local.
1.2 schwarze 108:
1.7 schwarze 109: 3. Marc Espie's ohash(3) library.
1.2 schwarze 110: If your system does not have it, the bundled compatibility version
1.1 schwarze 111: will be used, so you probably need not worry about it.
1.13 schwarze 112:
113: One of the chief design goals of the mandoc toolbox is to make
114: sure that nothing related to documentation requires C++.
115: Consequently, linking mandoc against any kind of C++ program
116: would defeat the purpose and is not supported.
1.1 schwarze 117:
118:
1.2 schwarze 119: Checking autoconfiguration quality
120: ----------------------------------
1.1 schwarze 121: If you want to check whether automatic configuration works well
122: on your platform, consider the following:
123:
124: The mandoc package intentionally does not use GNU autoconf because
125: we consider that toolset a blatant example of overengineering that
126: is obsolete nowadays, since all modern operating systems are now
127: reasonably close to POSIX and do not need arcane shell magic any
128: longer. If your system does need such magic, consider upgrading
129: to reasonably modern POSIX-compliant tools rather than asking for
130: autoconf-style workarounds.
131:
132: As far as mandoc is using any features not mandated by ANSI X3.159-1989
133: ("ANSI C") or IEEE Std 1003.1-2008 ("POSIX") that some modern systems
134: do not have, we intend to provide autoconfiguration tests and
135: compat_*.c implementations. Please report any that turn out to be
136: missing. Note that while we do strive to produce portable code,
137: we do not slavishly restrict ourselves to POSIX-only interfaces.
138: For improved security and readability, we do use well-designed,
139: modern interfaces like reallocarray(3) even if they are still rather
140: uncommon, of course bundling compat_*.c implementations as needed.
141:
142: Where mandoc is using ANSI C or POSIX features that some systems
143: still lack and that compat_*.c implementations can be provided for
144: without too much hassle, we will consider adding them, too, so
145: please report whatever is missing on your platform.
146:
147: The following steps can be used to manually check the automatic
148: configuration on your platform:
149:
1.4 schwarze 150: 1. Run "make distclean".
1.1 schwarze 151:
1.4 schwarze 152: 2. Run "./configure"
1.1 schwarze 153:
154: 3. Read the file "config.log". It shows the compiler commands used
155: to test the libraries installed on your system and the standard
156: output and standard error output these commands produce. Watch out
157: for unexpected failures. Those are most likely to happen if headers
158: or libraries are installed in unusual places or interfaces defined
159: in unusual headers. You can also look at the file "config.h" and
1.4 schwarze 160: check that no "#define HAVE_*" differ from your expectations.
CVSweb