NAME¶
xman - Manual page display program for the X Window System
SYNOPSIS¶
xman [
-options ... ]
DESCRIPTION¶
Xman is a manual page browser. The default size of the initial
xman window is small so that you can leave it running throughout your
entire login session. In the initial window there are three options:
Help will pop up a window with on-line help,
Quit will exit, and
Manual Page will pop up a window with a manual page browser in it.
Typing Control-S will pop up a window prompting for a specific manual page to
display. You may display more than one manual page browser window at a time
from a single execution of
xman.
For further information on using
xman, please read the on-line help
information. Most of this manual will discuss customization of
xman.
OPTIONS¶
Xman supports all standard Toolkit command line arguments (see
X(7)). The
following additional arguments are supported.
- -helpfile filename
- Specifies a helpfile to use other than the default.
- -bothshown
- Allows both the manual page and manual directory to be on
the screen at the same time.
- -notopbox
- Starts without the Top Menu with the three buttons in
it.
- -geometry WxH+X+Y
- Sets the size and location of the Top Menu with the three
buttons in it.
- -pagesize WxH+X+Y
- Sets the size and location of all the Manual Pages.
CUSTOMIZING XMAN¶
Xman allows customization of both the directories to be searched for
manual pages, and the name that each directory will map to in the
Sections menu. Xman determines which directories it will search by
reading the
MANPATH environment variable. If no
MANPATH is found
then the directory is /usr/man is searched on POSIX systems. This environment
is expected to be a colon-separated list of directories for xman to search.
setenv MANPATH /mit/kit/man:/usr/man
By default,
xman will search each of the following directories (in each
of the directories specified in the users MANPATH) for manual pages. If manual
pages exist in that directory then they are added to list of manual pages for
the corresponding menu item. A menu item is only displayed for those sections
that actually contain manual pages.
Directory Section Name
--------- ------------
man1 (1) User Commands
man2 (2) System Calls
man3 (3) Subroutines
man4 (4) Devices
man5 (5) File Formats
man6 (6) Games
man7 (7) Miscellaneous
man8 (8) Sys. Administration
manl (l) Local
mann (n) New
mano (o) Old
For instance, a user has three directories in her manual path and each contain a
directory called
man3. All these manual pages will appear
alphabetically sorted when the user selects the menu item called
(3)
Subroutines. If there is no directory called
mano in any of the
directories in her MANPATH, or there are no manual pages in any of the
directories called
mano then no menu item will be displayed for the
section called
(o) Old.
BSD AND LINUX SYSTEMS¶
In newer BSD and Linux systems,
Xman will search for a file named
/etc/man.conf which will contain the list of directories containing
manual pages. See
man.conf(5) for a complete description of the file
format.
THE MANDESC FILE¶
By using the
mandesc file a user or system manager is able to more
closely control which manual pages will appear in each of the sections
represented by menu items in the
Sections menu. This functionality is
only available on a section by section basis, and individual manual pages may
not be handled in this manner. (Although generous use of symbolic links
— see
ln(1) — will allow almost any configuration you can
imagine.)
The format of the mandesc file is a character followed by a label. The character
determines which of the sections will be added under this label. For instance
suppose that you would like to create an extra menu item that contains all
programmer subroutines. This label should contain all manual pages in both
sections two and three. The
mandesc file would look like this:
2Programmer Subroutines
3Programmer Subroutines
This will add a menu item to the
Sections menu that would bring up a
listing of all manual pages in sections two and three of the Programmers
Manual. Since the label names are
exactly the same they will be added
to the same section. Note, however, that the original sections still exist.
If you want to completely ignore the default sections in a manual directory then
add the line:
no default sections
anywhere in your mandesc file. This keeps xman from searching the default manual
sections
In that directory only. As an example, suppose you want to do
the same thing as above, but you don't think that it is useful to have the
System Calls or
Subroutines sections any longer. You would need
to duplicate the default entries, as well as adding your new one.
no default sections
1(1) User Commands
2Programmer Subroutines
3Programmer Subroutines
4(4) Devices
5(5) File Formats
6(6) Games
7(7) Miscellaneous
8(8) Sys. Administration
l(l) Local
n(n) New
o(o) Old
Xman will read any section that is of the from
man<character>,
where <character> is an upper or lower case letter (they are treated
distinctly) or a numeral (0-9). Be warned, however, that
man(1) and
catman(8)
will not search directories that are non-standard.
In order to specify resources, it is useful to know the hierarchy of the widgets
which compose
xman. In the notation below, indentation indicates
hierarchical structure. The widget class name is given first, followed by the
widget instance name.
Xman xman (This widget is never used)
TopLevelShell topBox
Form form
Label topLabel
Command helpButton
Command quitButton
Command manpageButton
TransientShell search
DialogWidgetClass dialog
Label label
Text value
Command manualPage
Command apropos
Command cancel
TransientShell pleaseStandBy
Label label
TopLevelShell manualBrowser
Paned Manpage_Vpane
Paned horizPane
MenuButton options
MenuButton sections
Label manualBrowser
Viewport directory
List directory
List directory
.
. (one for each section,
. created on the fly)
.
ScrollByLine manualPage
SimpleMenu optionMenu
SmeBSB displayDirectory
SmeBSB displayManualPage
SmeBSB help
SmeBSB search
SmeBSB showBothScreens
SmeBSB removeThisManpage
SmeBSB openNewManpage
SmeBSB showVersion
SmeBSB quit
SimpleMenu sectionMenu
SmeBSB <name of section>
.
. (one for each section)
.
TransientShell search
DialogWidgetClass dialog
Label label
Text value
Command manualPage
Command apropos
Command cancel
TransientShell pleaseStandBy
Label label
TransientShell likeToSave
Dialog dialog
Label label
Text value
Command yes
Command no
TopLevelShell help
Paned Manpage_Vpane
Paned horizPane
MenuButton options
MenuButton sections
Label manualBrowser
ScrollByLine manualPage
SimpleMenu optionMenu
SmeBSB displayDirectory
SmeBSB displayManualPage
SmeBSB help
SmeBSB search
SmeBSB showBothScreens
SmeBSB removeThisManpage
SmeBSB openNewManpage
SmeBSB showVersion
SmeBSB quit
APPLICATION RESOURCES¶
xman has the following application-specific resources which allow
customizations unique to
xman.
- manualFontNormal (Class Font)
- The font to use for normal text in the manual pages.
- manualFontBold (Class Font)
- The font to use for bold text in the manual pages.
- manualFontItalic (Class Font)
- The font to use for italic text in the manual pages.
- directoryFontNormal (Class Font)
- The font to use for the directory text.
- bothShown (Class Boolean)
- Either `true' or `false,' specifies whether or not you want
both the directory and the manual page shown at start up.
- directoryHeight (Class DirectoryHeight)
- The height in pixels of the directory, when the directory
and the manual page are shown simultaneously.
- topCursor (Class Cursor)
- The cursor to use in the top box.
- helpCursor (Class Cursor)
- The cursor to use in the help window.
- manpageCursor (Class Cursor)
- The cursor to use in the manual page window.
- searchEntryCursor (Class Cursor)
- The cursor to use in the search entry text widget.
- pointerColor (Class Foreground)
- This is the color of all the cursors (pointers) specified
above. The name was chosen to be compatible with xterm.
- helpFile (Class File)
- Use this rather than the system default helpfile.
- topBox (Class Boolean)
- Either `true' or `false,' determines whether the top box
(containing the help, quit and manual page buttons) or a manual page is
put on the screen at start-up. The default is true.
- verticalList (Class Boolean)
- Either `true' or `false,' determines whether the directory
listing is vertically or horizontally organized. The default is horizontal
(false).
GLOBAL ACTIONS¶
Xman defines all user interaction through global actions. This allows the
user to modify the translation table of any widget, and bind any event to the
new user action. The list of actions supported by
xman are:
- GotoPage(page)
- When used in a manual page display window this will allow
the user to move between a directory and manual page display. The
page argument can be either Directory or
ManualPage.
- Quit()
- This action may be used anywhere, and will exit xman.
- Search(type,
action)
- Only useful when used in a search popup, this action will
cause the search widget to perform the named search type on the string in
the search popup's value widget. This action will also pop down the search
widget. The type argument can be either Apropos,
Manpage or Cancel. If an action of Open is
specified then xman will open a new manual page to display the results of
the search, otherwise xman will attempt to display the results in the
parent of the search popup.
- PopupHelp()
- This action may be used anywhere, and will popup the help
widget.
- PopupSearch()
- This action may be used anywhere except in a help window.
It will cause the search popup to become active and visible on the screen,
allowing the user search for a manual page.
- CreateNewManpage()
- This action may be used anywhere, and will create a new
manual page display window.
- RemoveThisManpage()
- This action may be used in any manual page or help display
window. When called it will remove the window, and clean up all resources
associated with it.
- SaveFormattedPage(action)
- This action can only be used in the likeToSave popup
widget, and tells xman whether to Save or Cancel a save of
the manual page that has just been formatted.
- ShowVersion()
- This action may be called from any manual page or help
display window, and will cause the informational display line to show the
current version of xman.
FILES¶
- <manpath
directory>/man<character>
- <manpath
directory>/cat<character>
- <manpath directory>/mandesc
- /etc/X11/app-defaults/Xman
- specifies required resources.
- /tmp
- Xman creates temporary files in /tmp for all
unformatted man pages and all apropos searches.
SEE ALSO¶
X(7),
man(1),
apropos(1),
catman(8),
Athena
Widget Set
ENVIRONMENT¶
- DISPLAY
- the default host and display to use.
- MANPATH
- the search path for manual pages. Directories are separated
by colons (e.g. /usr/man:/mit/kit/man:/foo/bar/man).
- XENVIRONMENT
- to get the name of a resource file that overrides the
global resources stored in the RESOURCE_MANAGER property.
- XAPPLRESDIR
- A string that will have ``Xman'' appended to it. This
string will be the full path name of a user app-defaults file to be merged
into the resource database after the system app-defaults file, and before
the resources that are attached to the display.
See X(7) for a full statement of rights and permissions.
AUTHORS¶
Chris Peterson, MIT X Consortium from the V10 version written by Barry Shein
formerly of Boston University. Bug fixes and Linux support by Carlos A M dos
Santos, for The XFree86 Project.