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authorDJ Lucas <dj@linuxfromscratch.org>2008-10-25 21:31:14 +0000
committerDJ Lucas <dj@linuxfromscratch.org>2008-10-25 21:31:14 +0000
commit7f89db8a15fbc62c9ca23d042ef69089e748d3f6 (patch)
tree8e06ece9ff70324afa6912820336eb65506fdf2f /chapter06
parent7d6c9a64b52082c05c12e7d250850c2e1d7c677b (diff)
Updated Man-DB text to account for recent Man-DB development. Many thanks to Alexander Patrakov for patientely guiding me through this.
git-svn-id: http://svn.linuxfromscratch.org/LFS/trunk/BOOK@8698 4aa44e1e-78dd-0310-a6d2-fbcd4c07a689
Diffstat (limited to 'chapter06')
-rw-r--r--chapter06/man-db.xml196
1 files changed, 119 insertions, 77 deletions
diff --git a/chapter06/man-db.xml b/chapter06/man-db.xml
index 5be9fa4e1..729abbaf7 100644
--- a/chapter06/man-db.xml
+++ b/chapter06/man-db.xml
@@ -111,71 +111,95 @@
<screen><userinput remap="install">make install</userinput></screen>
- <para>Some packages provide UTF-8 manual pages, which previous versions of
- <application>Man-DB</application> were unable to display. This limitation
- has been fixed in recent versions, and <application>Man-DB</application>
- can now convert manual pages from legacy encodings to UTF-8
- (and vice-versa) on the fly. This used to be a rather annoying
- problem across different distributions, as packages written for one
- distribution would require changes to work on another. The following
- script will allow you to convert manual pages to and from legacy and UTF-8
- encodings.</para>
-
-<screen><userinput remap="install">cat &gt;&gt; convert-mans &lt;&lt; "EOF"
-<literal>#!/bin/sh -e
-FROM="$1"
-TO="$2"
-shift ; shift
-while [ $# -gt 0 ]
-do
- FILE="$1"
- shift
- iconv -f "$FROM" -t "$TO" "$FILE" >.tmp.iconv
- mv .tmp.iconv "$FILE"
-done</literal>
-EOF
-install -m755 convert-mans /usr/bin</userinput></screen>
-
- <para>Additional information regarding the compression of
- man and info pages can be found in the BLFS book at
- <ulink url="&blfs-root;view/cvs/postlfs/compressdoc.html"/>.</para>
-
</sect2>
<sect2>
<title>Non-English Manual Pages in LFS</title>
+<!--
+ <para>Some packages provide UTF-8 manual pages, which previous versions of
+ <application>Man-DB</application> were unable to display correctly because
+ the expected (8-bit) encoding for each language was hard-coded in the
+ source of <application>Man-DB</application>.
+ <application>Man-DB</application> now uses the extension of the directory
+ name in order to determine the encoding of the manual pages stored within.
+ If no extension exists, <application>Man-DB</application> uses a built-in
+ table (see below) to determine the encoding. E.g., because of "UTF-8" in
+ the directory name, it knows that all manual pages residing in
+ <filename class="directory">/usr/share/man/fr.UTF-8</filename> are UTF-8
+ encoded and, according to the built-in table, expects all manual pages
+ residing in <filename class="directory">/usr/share/man/ru</filename> to
+ be encoded using KOI8-R.</para>
<para>Linux distributions have different policies concerning the character
encoding in which manual pages are stored in the filesystem. E.g., RedHat
stores all manual pages in UTF-8, while Debian previously used
- language-specific (mostly 8-bit) encodings. As mentioned above, this leads
- to incompatibility of packages with manual pages designed for different
- distributions.</para>
-
- <para>LFS previously used the same convention as Debian. This was chosen
- because <application>Man-DB</application> did not understand manual pages
- stored in UTF-8 at the time of its introduction into LFS. For our purposes
- at that time, <application>Man-DB</application> was preferable to
- <application>Man</application> as it worked without any additional
- configuration in any locale. This is still true today as
- <application>Man-DB</application> with Debian patched
- <application>Groff</application> will now dynamically convert UTF-8 encoded
- manual pages to the user's locale. Additionally, this combination provides
- support for Chinese and Japanese locales, and limited support for Korean,
- whereas <application>Man</application> does not. The current offering of
- <application>Man</application> as used in RedHat requires major
- modifications to both the <application>Man</application> and
- <application>Groff</application> packages, and still falls short on
- Chinese, Japanese, and Korean encodings.</para>
-
- <para>Finally, most distributions, including Debian, are rapidly migrating
- to all UTF-8 encoded manual pages. Upstream packagers will very likely drop
- legacy encodings in favor of UTF-8, though adoption has been slow due to
- the hacks required to make the current <application>Man</application> and
- <application>Groff</application> packages work correctly together.</para>
-
- <para>The relationship between language codes and the expected encoding
- of legacy manual pages is listed below.</para>
+ language-specific (mostly 8-bit) encodings. Many other distributions simply
+ ignore the problem all together. LFS also used the legacy encodings in
+ previuos versions of the book. This was chosen because of the ease of
+ configuration associated with <application>Man-DB</application>.
+ Additionally, <application>Man-DB</application> provided support for
+ Chinese and Japanese locales, and limited support for Korean, whereas
+ <application>Man</application> did not at that time.</para>
+
+ <para>In contrast, the setup in Fedora Core expects all manual pages
+ to be UTF-8 encoded, and stored in directories without suffixes.
+ Disagreement about the expected encoding of manual pages amongst
+ distribution vendors, has led to confusion for upstream package maintainers.
+ Some packages contain, UTF-8 manual pages, while others ship with manual
+ pages in legacy encodings. Unlike the
+ <application>Man</application>/<application>Groff</application> setup in
+ Fedora Core, <application>Man-DB</application> can make very good decisions
+ about the on disk encoding and present the information to the user in their
+ prefered format, without complex configurations.</para>
+
+ <para><application>Man-DB</application> has, for the most part, made this
+ problem completely transparent to end users, as long as the manual pages
+ are installed into the correct directory. There may be times, however,
+ where one encoding is preferred over the other. For this purpose, the
+ <command>convert-mans</command> script was written. It will convert manual
+ pages to another encoding before (or after) installation. Install the
+ <command>convert-mans</command> script with the following
+ instructions:</para>
+-->
+ <para>Some packages provide non-English manual pages. They are displayed
+ correctly only if their location and encoding matches the expectation of
+ the "man" program. However, different Linux distributions have different
+ policies (expressed in the choice of the <command>man</command> program,
+ its configuration and patches applied to it) concerning the character
+ encoding in which manual pages are stored in the filesystem.</para>
+
+ <para>E.g., Debian previously required Russian manual pages to be encoded
+ in KOI8-R and to be placed in
+ <filename class="directory">/usr/share/man/ru</filename>. Now, in addition,
+ their <command>man</command> program (<application>Man-DB</application>)
+ searches for UTF-8 encoded Russian manual pages in
+ <filename class="directory">/usr/share/man/ru.UTF-8</filename>. On the
+ other hand, Fedora uses UTF-8 encoded manual pages exclusively. Russian
+ manual pages are found in
+ <filename class="directory">/usr/share/man/ru</filename> and their
+ <command>man</command> program doesn't acknowledge
+ <filename class="directory">/usr/share/man/ru.UTF-8</filename>. Many
+ other distributions ignore the on disk encodings completely, leaving the
+ end user with a mix of improperly encoded manual pages for their
+ configuration. When <command>man</command> processes the requtested page,
+ it will display the contents as configured, resulting in completely
+ unreadable text if the on disk encoding is not what is expected for that
+ configuration.</para>
+
+ <para>Disagreement about the expected encoding of manual pages amongst
+ distribution vendors, has led to confusion for upstream package
+ maintainers. One package may contain UTF-8 manual pages, while another
+ ships with manual pages in legacy encodings. <command>man</command>
+ searches for manual pages based on the user's locale settings.
+ <application>Man-DB</application> uses a built-in table (see below) to
+ determine the on disk encoding of manual pages found for a user's
+ locale, only if the directories found do not have an extension that
+ describes the encoding. E.g., because of ".UTF-8" in the directory name,
+ <application>Man-DB</application> knows that all manual pages residing in
+ <filename class="directory">/usr/share/man/fr.UTF-8</filename> are UTF-8
+ encoded and, according to the built-in table, expects all manual pages
+ residing in <filename class="directory">/usr/share/man/ru</filename> to
+ be encoded using KOI8-R.</para>
<!-- Origin: man-db-2.5.2/src/encodings.c -->
<table>
@@ -308,7 +332,7 @@ install -m755 convert-mans /usr/bin</userinput></screen>
<entry>GBK</entry>
</row>
<row>
- <entry>Simplified Chinese,Singapore} (zh_SG)</entry>
+ <entry>Simplified Chinese, Singapore (zh_SG)</entry>
<entry>GBK</entry>
</row>
<row>
@@ -330,12 +354,36 @@ install -m755 convert-mans /usr/bin</userinput></screen>
Norwegian does not work because of the transition from no_NO to
nb_NO locale, and will be fixed in the next release of
<application>Man-DB</application>. Korean is currently non functional
- because of incomplete fixes in the Groff patch.</para>
+ because of incomplete fixes in the Debian
+ <application>Groff</application> patch applied in LFS.</para>
</note>
+ <para>Packages may install manual pages into an improperly named directory,
+ depending on which distributions the author develops the package for. To
+ assist in the conversion of the manual pages to the proper encoding for the
+ directory in which they are installed, the <command>convert-mans</command>
+ script was written. It will convert manual pages to another encoding before
+ (or after) installation. Install the <command>convert-mans</command>
+ script with the following instructions:</para>
+
+<screen><userinput remap="install">cat &gt;&gt; convert-mans &lt;&lt; "EOF"
+<literal>#!/bin/sh -e
+FROM="$1"
+TO="$2"
+shift ; shift
+while [ $# -gt 0 ]
+do
+ FILE="$1"
+ shift
+ iconv -f "$FROM" -t "$TO" "$FILE" >.tmp.iconv
+ mv .tmp.iconv "$FILE"
+done</literal>
+EOF
+install -m755 convert-mans /usr/bin</userinput></screen>
+
- <para>If upstream distributes the manual pages in a legacy encoding,
- the manual pages can simply be copied to
+ <para>If upstream distributes the manual pages in a legacy encoding, the
+ manual pages can simply be copied to
<filename class="directory">/usr/share/man/<replaceable>&lt;language
code&gt;</replaceable></filename>. For example, <ulink
url="http://www.infodrom.org/projects/manpages-de/download/manpages-de-0.5.tar.gz">
@@ -353,26 +401,20 @@ cp -rv man? /usr/share/man/de</userinput></screen>
code&gt;</replaceable>.UTF-8</filename>.</para>
<para>For example, to install <ulink
- url="http://ditec.um.es/~piernas/manpages-es/man-pages-es-1.55.tar.bz2">
- Spanish manual pages</ulink> in the legacy encoding, use the following
+ url="http://manpagesfr.free.fr/download/man-pages-fr-2.40.0.tar.bz2">
+ French manual pages</ulink> in the legacy encoding, use the following
commands:</para>
-<screen role="nodump"><userinput>mv man7/iso_8859-7.7{,X}
-convert-mans UTF-8 ISO-8859-1 man?/*.?
-mv man7/iso_8859-7.7{X,}
-make install</userinput></screen>
+<screen role="nodump"><userinput>convert-mans UTF-8 ISO-8859-1 man?/*.?
+mkdir -p /usr/share/man/fr
+cp -rv man? /usr/share/man/fr</userinput></screen>
- <note>
- <para>The <filename>man7/iso_8859-7.7</filename> file needs to be
- exclueded from the conversion process because it is already in
- ISO-8859-1 format. This is a packaging bug in man-pages-es-1.55.
- Future versions should not require this workaround.</para>
- </note>
+ <note><para>The French manual pages ship with ready made scripts to do the
+ same conversion. The above instructions are used only as an example for
+ use of the <command>convert-mans</command> script.</para></note>
- <para>Finally, as an example installation of UTF-8 manual pages, the <ulink
- url="http://manpagesfr.free.fr/download/man-pages-fr-2.40.0.tar.bz2">
- French manual pages</ulink> can be installed with the following
- commands:</para>
+ <para>Finally, as an example installation of UTF-8 manual pages, again, the
+ French manual pages could be installed with the following commands:</para>
<screen role="nodump"><userinput>mkdir -p /usr/share/man/fr.UTF-8
cp -rv man? /usr/share/man/fr.UTF-8</userinput></screen>