Davin McCall a058e8e920 More tweaks to manpages - make lazy service loading behaviour more clear 10 months ago
..
Makefile a8b3602963 make, meson: Some configurable options in compile time 11 months ago
README b23ec5bcfa Update README for manpages 1 year ago
dinit-monitor.8.m4 8d5a977d02 Correction to dinit-monitor man page heading 1 year ago
dinit-service.5.m4 a058e8e920 More tweaks to manpages - make lazy service loading behaviour more clear 10 months ago
dinit.8.m4 a058e8e920 More tweaks to manpages - make lazy service loading behaviour more clear 10 months ago
dinitcheck.8.m4 f84a240890 Formatting and other fixes for man pages 2 years ago
dinitctl.8.m4 6c0ca720ec dinitctl: add is-active and is-failed commands 1 year ago
generate-html.sh 1541bc2442 Add man page for dinit-monitor 1 year ago
meson.build a8b3602963 make, meson: Some configurable options in compile time 11 months ago
shutdown.8.m4 568c663dd5 Use SHUTDOWN_PREFIX when referring to shutdown etc in man pages 1 year ago

README

The manpages are generated by processing *.m4 files using m4.

Manpages are written in "roff", which is an ancient text formatting/markup system and language
with a lot of peculiarities. For the Dinit manpages we try to stick to the subset documented here.



Roff formatting guide:


Inline formatting ("escapes"):

\fB - set bold
\fI - set italic (shows as underlined when output on console)
\fR - set regular (i.e. unset bold & italic)


Special characters:
'\ ' - (backslash followed by space) - non-breaking space
\& - zero-width space
\- - non-breaking dash (avoid automatic line-splitting due to hyphen)
\(em - em-dash (GNU groff accepts "\[em]" as well but it may not be portable)
\(en - en-dash
\(bu - bullet point

Line commands ("requests"):

.\" - begins a comment line (may be used for spacing in source document without the effect that having a
line would)
.sp - vertical space (i.e. blank line without breaking paragraph); not really necessary since you can get
the same effect with a blank line in the source document.
.in - set or adjust indent (if given an argument). Argument should be "7m" for example (m = em's,
i = inches) i.e. ".in 7m"; "+7m" increases, "-7m" decreases current indent by specified amount.
Without argument is supposed to restore indent from before previous .in, but mandoc gets this wrong
and always just restores initial indent value.

... and macros (which behave like requests). Arguments can be quoted ("...") if they contain
spaces.

.TH