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#!/usr/bin/perl eval 'exec /usr/bin/perl -S $0 ${1+"$@"}' if 0; # ^ Run only under a shell # Convert POD data to formatted *roff input. # # The driver script for Pod::Man. # # SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-1.0-or-later OR Artistic-1.0-Perl use 5.006; use strict; use warnings; use Getopt::Long qw(GetOptions); use Pod::Man (); use Pod::Usage qw(pod2usage); use strict; # Clean up $0 for error reporting. $0 =~ s%.*/%%; # Insert -- into @ARGV before any single dash argument to hide it from # Getopt::Long; we want to interpret it as meaning stdin. my $stdin; @ARGV = map { $_ eq '-' && !$stdin++ ? ('--', $_) : $_ } @ARGV; # Parse our options, trying to retain backward compatibility with pod2man but # allowing short forms as well. --lax is currently ignored. my %options; Getopt::Long::config ('bundling_override'); GetOptions (\%options, 'center|c=s', 'date|d=s', 'encoding|e=s', 'errors=s', 'fixed=s', 'fixedbold=s', 'fixeditalic=s', 'fixedbolditalic=s', 'guesswork=s', 'help|h', 'lax|l', 'language=s', 'lquote=s', 'name|n=s', 'nourls', 'official|o', 'quotes|q=s', 'release|r=s', 'rquote=s', 'section|s=s', 'stderr', 'verbose|v', 'utf8|u') or exit 1; pod2usage (0) if $options{help}; # Official sets --center, but don't override things explicitly set. if ($options{official} && !defined $options{center}) { $options{center} = 'Perl Programmers Reference Guide'; } # Verbose is only our flag, not a Pod::Man flag. my $verbose = $options{verbose}; delete $options{verbose}; # This isn't a valid Pod::Man option and is only accepted for backward # compatibility. delete $options{lax}; # If neither stderr nor errors is set, default to errors = die. if (!defined $options{stderr} && !defined $options{errors}) { $options{errors} = 'die'; } # Initialize and run the formatter, pulling a pair of input and output off at # a time. For each file, we check whether the document was completely empty # and, if so, will remove the created file and exit with a non-zero exit # status. my $parser = Pod::Man->new (%options); my $status = 0; my @files; do { @files = splice (@ARGV, 0, 2); print " $files[1]\n" if $verbose; $parser->parse_from_file (@files); if ($parser->{CONTENTLESS}) { $status = 1; if (defined $files[0]) { warn "$0: unable to format $files[0]\n"; } else { warn "$0: unable to format standard input\n"; } if (defined ($files[1]) and $files[1] ne '-') { unlink $files[1] unless (-s $files[1]); } } } while (@ARGV); exit $status; __END__ =for stopwords en em --stderr stderr --utf8 UTF-8 overdo markup MT-LEVEL Allbery Solaris URL troff troff-specific formatters uppercased Christiansen --nourls UTC prepend lquote rquote unrepresentable mandoc manref EBCDIC =head1 NAME pod2man - Convert POD data to formatted *roff input =head1 SYNOPSIS pod2man [B<--center>=I<string>] [B<--date>=I<string>] [B<--encoding>=I<encoding>] [B<--errors>=I<style>] [B<--fixed>=I<font>] [B<--fixedbold>=I<font>] [B<--fixeditalic>=I<font>] [B<--fixedbolditalic>=I<font>] [B<--guesswork>=I<rule>[,I<rule>...]] [B<--name>=I<name>] [B<--nourls>] [B<--official>] [B<--release>=I<version>] [B<--section>=I<manext>] [B<--quotes>=I<quotes>] [B<--lquote>=I<quote>] [B<--rquote>=I<quote>] [B<--stderr>] [B<--utf8>] [B<--verbose>] [I<input> [I<output>] ...] pod2man B<--help> =head1 DESCRIPTION B<pod2man> is a wrapper script around the L<Pod::Man> module, using it to generate *roff input from POD source. The resulting *roff code is suitable for display on a terminal using L<nroff(1)>, normally via L<man(1)>, or printing using L<troff(1)>. By default (on non-EBCDIC systems), B<pod2man> outputs UTF-8 manual pages. Its output should work with the B<man> program on systems that use B<groff> (most Linux distributions) or B<mandoc> (most BSD variants), but may result in mangled output on older UNIX systems. To choose a different, possibly more backward-compatible output mangling on such systems, use C<--encoding=roff> (the default in earlier Pod::Man versions). See the B<--encoding> option and L<Pod::Man/ENCODING> for more details. I<input> is the file to read for POD source (the POD can be embedded in code). If I<input> isn't given, it defaults to C<STDIN>. I<output>, if given, is the file to which to write the formatted output. If I<output> isn't given, the formatted output is written to C<STDOUT>. Several POD files can be processed in the same B<pod2man> invocation (saving module load and compile times) by providing multiple pairs of I<input> and I<output> files on the command line. B<--section>, B<--release>, B<--center>, B<--date>, and B<--official> can be used to set the headers and footers to use. If not given, Pod::Man will assume various defaults. See below for details. =head1 OPTIONS Each option is annotated with the version of podlators in which that option was added with its current meaning. =over 4 =item B<-c> I<string>, B<--center>=I<string> [1.00] Sets the centered page header for the C<.TH> macro to I<string>. The default is C<User Contributed Perl Documentation>, but also see B<--official> below. =item B<-d> I<string>, B<--date>=I<string> [4.00] Set the left-hand footer string for the C<.TH> macro to I<string>. By default, the first of POD_MAN_DATE, SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH, the modification date of the input file, or the current date (if input comes from C<STDIN>) will be used, and the date will be in UTC. See L<Pod::Man/CLASS METHODS> for more details. =item B<-e> I<encoding>, B<--encoding>=I<encoding> [5.00] Specifies the encoding of the output. I<encoding> must be an encoding recognized by the L<Encode> module (see L<Encode::Supported>). The default on non-EBCDIC systems is UTF-8. If the output contains characters that cannot be represented in this encoding, that is an error that will be reported as configured by the B<--errors> option. If error handling is other than C<die>, the unrepresentable character will be replaced with the Encode substitution character (normally C<?>). If the C<encoding> option is set to the special value C<groff> (the default on EBCDIC systems), or if the Encode module is not available and the encoding is set to anything other than C<roff> (see below), Pod::Man will translate all non-ASCII characters to C<\[uNNNN]> Unicode escapes. These are not traditionally part of the *roff language, but are supported by B<groff> and B<mandoc> and thus by the majority of manual page processors in use today. If I<encoding> is set to the special value C<roff>, B<pod2man> will do its historic transformation of (some) ISO 8859-1 characters into *roff escapes that may be adequate in troff and may be readable (if ugly) in nroff. This was the default behavior of versions of B<pod2man> before 5.00. With this encoding, all other non-ASCII characters will be replaced with C<X>. It may be required for very old troff and nroff implementations that do not support UTF-8, but its representation of any non-ASCII character is very poor and often specific to European languages. Its use is discouraged. WARNING: The input encoding of the POD source is independent from the output encoding, and setting this option does not affect the interpretation of the POD input. Unless your POD source is US-ASCII, its encoding should be declared with the C<=encoding> command in the source. If this is not done, Pod::Simple will will attempt to guess the encoding and may be successful if it's Latin-1 or UTF-8, but it will produce warnings. See L<perlpod(1)> for more information. =item B<--errors>=I<style> [2.5.0] Set the error handling style. C<die> says to throw an exception on any POD formatting error. C<stderr> says to report errors on standard error, but not to throw an exception. C<pod> says to include a POD ERRORS section in the resulting documentation summarizing the errors. C<none> ignores POD errors entirely, as much as possible. The default is C<die>. =item B<--fixed>=I<font> [1.0] The fixed-width font to use for verbatim text and code. Defaults to C<CW>. Some systems may want C<CR> instead. Only matters for B<troff> output. =item B<--fixedbold>=I<font> [1.0] Bold version of the fixed-width font. Defaults to C<CB>. Only matters for B<troff> output. =item B<--fixeditalic>=I<font> [1.0] Italic version of the fixed-width font (something of a misnomer, since most fixed-width fonts only have an oblique version, not an italic version). Defaults to C<CI>. Only matters for B<troff> output. =item B<--fixedbolditalic>=I<font> [1.0] Bold italic (in theory, probably oblique in practice) version of the fixed-width font. Pod::Man doesn't assume you have this, and defaults to C<CB>. Some systems (such as Solaris) have this font available as C<CX>. Only matters for B<troff> output. =item B<--guesswork>=I<rule>[,I<rule>...] [5.00] By default, B<pod2man> applies some default formatting rules based on guesswork and regular expressions that are intended to make writing Perl documentation easier and require less explicit markup. These rules may not always be appropriate, particularly for documentation that isn't about Perl. This option allows turning all or some of it off. The special rule C<all> enables all guesswork. This is also the default for backward compatibility reasons. The special rule C<none> disables all guesswork. Otherwise, the value of this option should be a comma-separated list of one or more of the following keywords: =over 4 =item functions Convert function references like C<foo()> to bold even if they have no markup. The function name accepts valid Perl characters for function names (including C<:>), and the trailing parentheses must be present and empty. =item manref Make the first part (before the parentheses) of man page references like C<foo(1)> bold even if they have no markup. The section must be a single number optionally followed by lowercase letters. =item quoting If no guesswork is enabled, any text enclosed in CZ<><> is surrounded by double quotes in nroff (terminal) output unless the contents are already quoted. When this guesswork is enabled, quote marks will also be suppressed for Perl variables, function names, function calls, numbers, and hex constants. =item variables Convert Perl variable names to a fixed-width font even if they have no markup. This transformation will only be apparent in troff output, or some other output format (unlike nroff terminal output) that supports fixed-width fonts. =back Any unknown guesswork name is silently ignored (for potential future compatibility), so be careful about spelling. =item B<-h>, B<--help> [1.00] Print out usage information. =item B<-l>, B<--lax> [1.00] No longer used. B<pod2man> used to check its input for validity as a manual page, but this should now be done by L<podchecker(1)> instead. Accepted for backward compatibility; this option no longer does anything. =item B<--language>=I<language> [5.00] Add commands telling B<groff> that the input file is in the given language. The value of this setting must be a language abbreviation for which B<groff> provides supplemental configuration, such as C<ja> (for Japanese) or C<zh> (for Chinese). This adds: .mso <language>.tmac .hla <language> to the start of the file, which configure correct line breaking for the specified language. Without these commands, groff may not know how to add proper line breaks for Chinese and Japanese text if the man page is installed into the normal man page directory, such as F</usr/share/man>. On many systems, this will be done automatically if the man page is installed into a language-specific man page directory, such as F</usr/share/man/zh_CN>. In that case, this option is not required. Unfortunately, the commands added with this option are specific to B<groff> and will not work with other B<troff> and B<nroff> implementations. =item B<--lquote>=I<quote> =item B<--rquote>=I<quote> [4.08] Sets the quote marks used to surround CE<lt>> text. B<--lquote> sets the left quote mark and B<--rquote> sets the right quote mark. Either may also be set to the special value C<none>, in which case no quote mark is added on that side of CE<lt>> text (but the font is still changed for troff output). Also see the B<--quotes> option, which can be used to set both quotes at once. If both B<--quotes> and one of the other options is set, B<--lquote> or B<--rquote> overrides B<--quotes>. =item B<-n> I<name>, B<--name>=I<name> [4.08] Set the name of the manual page for the C<.TH> macro to I<name>. Without this option, the manual name is set to the uppercased base name of the file being converted unless the manual section is 3, in which case the path is parsed to see if it is a Perl module path. If it is, a path like C<.../lib/Pod/Man.pm> is converted into a name like C<Pod::Man>. This option, if given, overrides any automatic determination of the name. Although one does not have to follow this convention, be aware that the convention for UNIX manual pages is for the title to be in all-uppercase, even if the command isn't. (Perl modules traditionally use mixed case for the manual page title, however.) This option is probably not useful when converting multiple POD files at once. When converting POD source from standard input, the name will be set to C<STDIN> if this option is not provided. Providing this option is strongly recommended to set a meaningful manual page name. =item B<--nourls> [2.5.0] Normally, LZ<><> formatting codes with a URL but anchor text are formatted to show both the anchor text and the URL. In other words: L<foo|http://example.com/> is formatted as: foo <http://example.com/> This flag, if given, suppresses the URL when anchor text is given, so this example would be formatted as just C<foo>. This can produce less cluttered output in cases where the URLs are not particularly important. =item B<-o>, B<--official> [1.00] Set the default header to indicate that this page is part of the standard Perl release, if B<--center> is not also given. =item B<-q> I<quotes>, B<--quotes>=I<quotes> [4.00] Sets the quote marks used to surround CE<lt>> text to I<quotes>. If I<quotes> is a single character, it is used as both the left and right quote. Otherwise, it is split in half, and the first half of the string is used as the left quote and the second is used as the right quote. I<quotes> may also be set to the special value C<none>, in which case no quote marks are added around CE<lt>> text (but the font is still changed for troff output). Also see the B<--lquote> and B<--rquote> options, which can be used to set the left and right quotes independently. If both B<--quotes> and one of the other options is set, B<--lquote> or B<--rquote> overrides B<--quotes>. =item B<-r> I<version>, B<--release>=I<version> [1.00] Set the centered footer for the C<.TH> macro to I<version>. By default, this is set to the version of Perl you run B<pod2man> under. Setting this to the empty string will cause some *roff implementations to use the system default value. Note that some system C<an> macro sets assume that the centered footer will be a modification date and will prepend something like C<Last modified: >. If this is the case for your target system, you may want to set B<--release> to the last modified date and B<--date> to the version number. =item B<-s> I<string>, B<--section>=I<string> [1.00] Set the section for the C<.TH> macro. The standard section numbering convention is to use 1 for user commands, 2 for system calls, 3 for functions, 4 for devices, 5 for file formats, 6 for games, 7 for miscellaneous information, and 8 for administrator commands. There is a lot of variation here, however; some systems (like Solaris) use 4 for file formats, 5 for miscellaneous information, and 7 for devices. Still others use 1m instead of 8, or some mix of both. About the only section numbers that are reliably consistent are 1, 2, and 3. By default, section 1 will be used unless the file ends in C<.pm>, in which case section 3 will be selected. =item B<--stderr> [2.1.3] By default, B<pod2man> dies if any errors are detected in the POD input. If B<--stderr> is given and no B<--errors> flag is present, errors are sent to standard error, but B<pod2man> does not abort. This is equivalent to C<--errors=stderr> and is supported for backward compatibility. =item B<-u>, B<--utf8> [2.1.0] This option used to tell B<pod2man> to produce UTF-8 output. Since this is now the default as of version 5.00, it is ignored and does nothing. =item B<-v>, B<--verbose> [1.11] Print out the name of each output file as it is being generated. =back =head1 EXIT STATUS As long as all documents processed result in some output, even if that output includes errata (a C<POD ERRORS> section generated with C<--errors=pod>), B<pod2man> will exit with status 0. If any of the documents being processed do not result in an output document, B<pod2man> will exit with status 1. If there are syntax errors in a POD document being processed and the error handling style is set to the default of C<die>, B<pod2man> will abort immediately with exit status 255. =head1 DIAGNOSTICS If B<pod2man> fails with errors, see L<Pod::Man> and L<Pod::Simple> for information about what those errors might mean. =head1 EXAMPLES pod2man program > program.1 pod2man SomeModule.pm /usr/perl/man/man3/SomeModule.3 pod2man --section=7 note.pod > note.7 If you would like to print out a lot of man page continuously, you probably want to set the C and D registers to set contiguous page numbering and even/odd paging, at least on some versions of man(7). troff -man -rC1 -rD1 perl.1 perldata.1 perlsyn.1 ... To get index entries on C<STDERR>, turn on the F register, as in: troff -man -rF1 perl.1 The indexing merely outputs messages via C<.tm> for each major page, section, subsection, item, and any C<XE<lt>E<gt>> directives. =head1 AUTHOR Russ Allbery <rra@cpan.org>, based on the original B<pod2man> by Larry Wall and Tom Christiansen. =head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE Copyright 1999-2001, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2010, 2012-2019, 2022 Russ Allbery <rra@cpan.org> This program is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =head1 SEE ALSO L<Pod::Man>, L<Pod::Simple>, L<man(1)>, L<nroff(1)>, L<perlpod(1)>, L<podchecker(1)>, L<perlpodstyle(1)>, L<troff(1)>, L<man(7)> The man page documenting the an macro set may be L<man(5)> instead of L<man(7)> on your system. The current version of this script is always available from its web site at L<https://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/software/podlators/>. It is also part of the Perl core distribution as of 5.6.0. =cut