forked from mirrors/nixpkgs
516a9816a3
nixos/manual/manpages: add description on previewing manpage files I was a bit lost with the new manpage format and it took me some time to find the corresponding pull request by @pennae with a very helpful comment of @alyssais that mentioned this: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/213256#issuecomment-1407713215 As @pennae noted, the file path is only a fallback if it cannot be resolved in the man database Co-authored-by: pennae <82953136+pennae@users.noreply.github.com>
58 lines
2.8 KiB
Markdown
58 lines
2.8 KiB
Markdown
# NixOS manpages
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This is the collection of NixOS manpages, excluding `configuration.nix(5)`.
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Man pages are written in [`mdoc(7)` format](https://mandoc.bsd.lv/man/mdoc.7.html) and should be portable between mandoc and groff for rendering (though minor differences may occur, mandoc and groff seem to have slightly different spacing rules.)
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For previewing edited files, you can just run `man -l path/to/file.8` and you will see it rendered.
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Being written in `mdoc` these manpages use semantic markup. This file provides a guideline on where to apply which of the semantic elements of `mdoc`.
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### Command lines and arguments
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In any manpage, commands, flags and arguments to the *current* executable should be marked according to their semantics. Commands, flags and arguments passed to *other* executables should not be marked like this and should instead be considered as code examples and marked with `Ql`.
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- Use `Fl` to mark flag arguments, `Ar` for their arguments.
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- Repeating arguments should be marked by adding ellipses (`...`).
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- Use `Cm` to mark literal string arguments, e.g. the `boot` command argument passed to `nixos-rebuild`.
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- Optional flags or arguments should be marked with `Op`. This includes optional repeating arguments.
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- Required flags or arguments should not be marked.
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- Mutually exclusive groups of arguments should be enclosed in curly brackets, preferrably created with `Bro`/`Brc` blocks.
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When an argument is used in an example it should be marked up with `Ar` again to differentiate it from a constant. For example, a command with a `--host name` flag that calls ssh to retrieve the host's local time would signify this thusly:
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```
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This will run
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.Ic ssh Ar name Ic time
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to retrieve the remote time.
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```
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### Paths, NixOS options, environment variables
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Constant paths should be marked with `Pa`, NixOS options with `Va`, and environment variables with `Ev`.
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Generated paths, e.g. `result/bin/run-hostname-vm` (where `hostname` is a variable or arguments) should be marked as `Ql` inline literals with their variable components marked appropriately.
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- Taking `hostname` from an argument become `.Ql result/bin/run- Ns Ar hostname Ns -vm`
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- Taking `hostname` from a variable otherwise defined becomes `.Ql result/bin/run- Ns Va hostname Ns -vm`
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### Code examples and other commands
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In free text names and complete invocations of other commands (e.g. `ssh` or `tar -xvf src.tar`) should be marked with `Ic`, fragments of command lines should be marked with `Ql`.
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Larger code blocks or those that cannot be shown inline should use indented literal display block markup for their contents, i.e.
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```
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.Bd -literal -offset indent
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...
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.Ed
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```
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Contents of code blocks may be marked up further, e.g. if they refer to arguments that will be subsituted into them:
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```
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.Bd -literal -offset indent
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{
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options.hostname = "\c
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.Ar hostname Ns \c
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";
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}
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.Ed
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```
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