GROFFER
Section: User Commands (1)
Updated: 09 May 2010
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NAME
groffer - display groff files and man~pages on X and tty
SYNOPSIS
[ option ]
[ -- ]
[ filespec ]
-h|--help
-v|--version
DESCRIPTION
The
groffer
program is the easiest way to use
groff(1).
It can display arbitrary documents written in the
groff
language, see
groff(7),
or other
roff
languages, see
roff(7),
that are compatible to the original
troff
language.
It finds and runs all necessary
groff
preprocessors, such as
chem.
The
groffer
program also includes many of the features for finding and displaying
the Unix manual pages
(man~pages),
such that it can be used as a replacement for a
man(1)
program.
Moreover, compressed files that can be handled by
gzip(1)
or
bzip2(1)
are decompressed on-the-fly.
The normal usage is quite simple by supplying a file name or name of a
man~page
without further options.
But the option handling has many possibilities for creating special
behaviors.
This can be done either in configuration files, with the shell
environment variable
or on the command line.
The output can be generated and viewed in several different ways
available for
groff.
This includes the
groff
native X~Window viewer
gxditview(1),
each
Postcript,
pdf,
or
dvi
display program, a web browser by generating
html
in
www~mode,
or several
text~modes
in text terminals.
Most of the options that must be named when running
groff
directly are determined automatically for
groffer,
due to the internal usage of the
grog(1)
program.
But all parts can also be controlled manually by arguments.
Several file names can be specified on the command line arguments.
They are transformed into a single document in the normal way of
groff.
Option handling is done in GNU style.
Options and file names can be mixed freely.
The option
`--'
closes the option handling, all following arguments are treated as
file names.
Long options can be abbreviated in several ways.
OPTION OVERVIEW
- breaking options
-
-
[ -h~|~--help ]
[ -v~|~--version ]
- groffer mode options
-
-
[ --auto ]
[ --default ]
[ --default-modes mode1,mode2, ]
[ --dvi ]
[ --dvi-viewer prog ]
[ --groff ]
[ --html ]
[ --html-viewer prog ]
[ --mode display_mode ]
[ --pdf ]
[ --pdf-viewer prog ]
[ --ps ]
[ --ps-viewer prog ]
[ --source ]
[ --text ]
[ --to-stdout ]
[ --tty ]
[ --tty-viewer prog ]
[ --www ]
[ --www-viewer prog ]
[ --x --X ]
[ --x-viewer --X-viewer prog ]
- options related to groff
-
-
[ -T~|~--device device ]
[ -Z~|~--intermediate-output~|~--ditroff ]
All further
groff
short options are accepted.
- options for man~pages
-
[ --apropos ]
[ --apropos-data ]
[ --apropos-devel ]
[ --apropos-progs ]
[ --man ]
[ --no-man ]
[ --no-special ]
[ --whatis ]
- long options taken over from GNU man
-
-
[ --all ]
[ --ascii ]
[ --ditroff ]
[ --extension suffix ]
[ --locale language ]
[ --local-file ]
[ --location~|~--where ]
[ --manpath dir1:dir2: ]
[ --no-location ]
[ --pager program ]
[ --sections sec1:sec2: ]
[ --systems sys1,sys2, ]
[ --troff-device device ]
Further long options of GNU
man
are accepted as well.
- X Window Toolkit options
-
-
[ --bd~|~--bordercolor pixels ]
[ --bg~|~--background color ]
[ --bw~|~--borderwidth pixels ]
[ --display X-display ]
[ --fg~|~--foreground color ]
[ --fn~|~--ft~|~--font font_name ]
[ --geometry size_pos ]
[ --resolution value ]
[ --rv ]
[ --title string ]
[ --xrm X-resource ]
- options for development
-
-
[ --debug ]
[ --debug-filenames ]
[ --debug-grog ]
[ --debug-keep ]
[ --debug-params ]
[ --debug-tmpdir ]
[ --do-nothing ]
[ --print text ]
[ -V ]
- filespec arguments
-
-
The
filespec
parameters are all arguments that are neither an option nor an option
argument.
They usually mean a file name or a
man page
searching scheme.
In the following, the term
section_extension
is used.
It means a word that consists of a
man section
that is optionally followed by an
extension.
The name of a
man section
is a single character from
[1-9on],
the
extension
is some word.
The
extension
is mostly lacking.
No
filespec
parameters means standard input.
- -
-
stands for standard input (can occur several times).
- filename
-
the path name of an existing file.
- man:name(section_extension)
-
man:name.section_extension
name(section_extension)
name.section_extension
section_extension name
search the man~page
name
in the section with optional extension
section_extension.
- man:name
-
man~page in the lowest
man~section
that has
name.
- name
-
if
name
is not an existing file search for the man~page
name
in the lowest man~section.
OPTION DETAILS
The
groffer
program can usually be run with very few options.
But for special purposes, it supports many options.
These can be classified in 5 option classes.
All short options of
groffer
are compatible with the short options of
groff(1).
All long options of
groffer
are compatible with the long options of
man(1).
Arguments for long option names can be abbreviated in several ways.
First, the argument is checked whether it can be prolonged as is.
Furthermore, each minus sign
-
is considered as a starting point for a new abbreviation.
This leads to a set of multiple abbreviations for a single argument.
For example,
--de-n-f
can be used as an abbreviation for
--debug-not-func,
but
--de-n
works as well.
If the abbreviation of the argument leads to several resulting options
an error is raised.
These abbreviations are only allowed in the environment variable
but not in the configuration files.
In configuration, all long options must be exact.
groffer breaking Options
As soon as one of these options is found on the command line it is
executed, printed to standard output, and the running
groffer
is terminated thereafter.
All other arguments are ignored.
- [ -h|--help ]
-
Print a helping information with a short explanation of option sto
standard output.
- [ -v--version ]
-
Print version information to standard output.
groffer Mode Options
The display mode and the viewer programs are determined by these
options.
If none of these mode and viewer options is specified
groffer
tries to find a suitable display mode automatically.
The default modes are
mode pdf,
mode ps,
mode html,
mode x,
and
mode dvi
in X~Window with different viewers and
mode tty
with device
latin1
under
less
on a terminal; other modes are tested if the programs for the main
default mode do not exist.
In X~Window,
many programs create their own window when called.
groffer
can run these viewers as an independent program in the background.
As this does not work in text mode on a terminal (tty) there must be a
way to know which viewers are X~Window graphical
programs.
The
groffer
script has a small set of information on some viewer names.
If a viewer argument of the command-line chooses an element that is
kept as X~Window program in this list it is treated as a
viewer that can run in the background.
All other, unknown viewer calls are not run in the background.
For each mode, you are free to choose whatever viewer you want.
That need not be some graphical viewer suitable for this mode.
There is a chance to view the output source; for example, the
combination of the options
--mode=ps
and
--ps-viewer=less
shows the content of the
Postscript
output, the source code, with the pager
less.
- --auto
-
Equivalent to
--mode=auto.
- --default
-
Reset all configuration from previously processed command line options
to the default values.
This is useful to wipe out all former options of the configuration, in
and restart option processing using only the rest of the command line.
- --default-modes mode1,mode2,
-
Set the sequence of modes for
auto~mode
to the comma separated list given in the argument.
See
--mode
for details on modes. Display in the default manner; actually, this
means to try the modes
x,
ps,
and
tty
in this sequence.
- --dvi
-
Equivalent to
--mode=dvi.
- --dvi-viewer prog
-
Choose a viewer program for
dvi~mode.
This can be a file name or a program to be searched in
Known X~Window
dvi
viewers include
xdvi(1)
and
dvilx(1)
In each case, arguments can be provided additionally.
- --groff
-
Equivalent to
--mode=groff.
- --html
-
Equivalent to
--mode=html.
- --html-viewer
-
Choose a web browser program for viewing in
html~mode.
It can be the path name of an executable file or a program in
In each case, arguments can be provided additionally.
- --modevalue
-
Set the display mode.
The following mode values are recognized:
-
-
-
Select the automatic determination of the display mode.
The sequence of modes that are tried can be set with the
--default-modes
option.
Useful for restoring the
default~mode
when a different mode was specified before.
-
-
Display formatted input in a
dvi
viewer program.
By default, the formatted input is displayed with the
xdvi(1)
program.
--dvi.
-
-
After the file determination, switch
groffer
to process the input like
groff(1)
would do.
This disables the
groffer
viewing features.
-
-
Translate the input into html format and display the result in a web
browser program.
By default, the existence of a sequence of standard web browsers is
tested, starting with
konqueror(1)
and
mozilla(1).
The text html viewer is
lynx(1).
-
-
Display formatted input in a
PDF
(Portable Document Format) viewer
program.
By default, the input is formatted by
groff
using the Postscript device, then it is transformed into the PDF file
format using
gs(1),
or
ps2pdf(1).
If that's not possible, the
Postscript mode (ps)
is used instead.
Finally it is displayed using different viewer programs.
pdf
has a big advantage because the text is displayed graphically and
is searchable as well.
-
-
Display formatted input in a Postscript viewer program.
By default, the formatted input is displayed in one of many viewer
programs.
-
-
Format in a
groff~text~mode
and write the result to standard output without a pager or viewer
program.
The text device,
latin1
by default, can be chosen with option
-T.
-
-
Format in a
groff~text~mode
and write the result to standard output using a text pager program,
even when in X~Window.
-
-
Equivalent to
--mode=html.
-
-
Display the formatted input in a native
roff
viewer.
By default, the formatted input is displayed with the
gxditview(1)
program being distributed together with
groff.
But the standard X~Window tool
xditview(1)
can also be chosen with the option
--x-viewer .
The default resolution is
75~dpi,
but
100~dpi
are also possible.
The default
groff
device
for the resolution of
75~dpi
is
X75-12,
for
100~dpi
it is
X100.
The corresponding
groff intermediate output
for the actual device is generated and the result is displayed.
For a resolution of
100~dpi,
the default width of the geometry of the display program is chosen to
850~dpi.
-
-
Equivalent to
--mode=x.
The following modes do not use the
groffer
viewing features.
They are only interesting for advanced applications.
-
-
Generate device output with plain
groff
without using the special viewing features of
groffer.
If no device was specified by option
-T
the
groff
default
ps
is assumed.
-
-
Output the roff source code of the input files without further
processing.
- --pdf
-
Equivalent to
--mode=pdf.
- --pdf-viewer prog
-
Choose a viewer program for
pdf~mode.
This can be a file name or a program to be searched in
arguments can be provided additionally.
- --ps
-
Equivalent to
--mode=ps.
- --ps-viewer prog
-
Choose a viewer program for
ps~mode.
This can be a file name or a program to be searched in
Common Postscript viewers inlude
gv(1),
ghostview(1),
and
gs(1),
In each case, arguments can be provided additionally.
- --source
-
Equivalent
--mode=source.
- --text
-
Equivalent to
--mode=text.
- --to-stdout
-
The file for the chosen mode is generated and its content is printed
to standard output.
It will not be displayed in graphical mode.
- --tty
-
Equivalent to
--mode=tty.
- --tty-viewer prog
-
Choose a text pager for mode
tty.
The standard pager is
less(1).
This option is eqivalent to
man
option
--pager=prog.
The option argument can be a file name or a program to be searched in
arguments can be provided additionally.
- --www
-
Equivalent to
--mode=html.
- --www-viewer prog
-
Equivalent to
--html-viewer .
- --X~|~--x
-
Equivalent to
--mode=x.
- --X-viewer -- x-viewer prog
-
Choose a viewer program for
x~mode.
Suitable viewer programs are
gxditview(1)
which is the default and
xditview(1).
The argument can be any executable file or a program in
arguments can be provided additionally.
- --
-
Signals the end of option processing; all remaining arguments are
interpreted as
filespec
parameters.
Besides these,
groffer
accepts all short options that are valid for the
groff(1)
program.
All
non-groffer
options are sent unmodified via
grog
to
groff.
So postprocessors, macro packages, compatibility with
classical
troff,
and much more can be manually specified.
Options related to groff
All short options of
groffer
are compatible with the short options of
groff(1).
The following of
groff
options have either an additional special meaning within
groffer
or make sense for normal usage.
Because of the special outputting behavior of the
groff
option
-Z
groffer
was designed to be switched into
groff~mode ;
the
groffer
viewing features are disabled there.
The other
groff
options do not switch the mode, but allow to customize the formatting
process.
- --a
-
This generates an ascii approximation of output in the
text~modes.
That could be important when the text pager has problems with control
sequences in
tty mode.
- --mfile
-
Add
file
as a
groff
macro file.
This is useful in case it cannot be recognized automatically.
- --Popt_or_arg
-
Send the argument
opt_or_arg
as an option or option argument to the actual
groff
postprocessor.
- --T devname ~|~ --device devname
-
This option determines
groff's
output device.
The most important devices are the text output devices for referring
to the different character sets, such as
ascii,
utf8,
latin1,
and others.
Each of these arguments switches
groffer
into a
text~mode
using this device, to
mode~tty
if the actual mode is not a
text~mode.
The following
devname
arguments are mapped to the corresponding
groffer
--mode=devname
option:
dvi,
html,
and
ps.
All
X*
arguments are mapped to
mode~x.
Each other
devname
argument switches to
mode~groff
using this device.
- --X
-
is equivalent to
groff -X.
It displays the
groff intermediate output
with
gxditview.
As the quality is relatively bad this option is deprecated; use
--X
instead because the
x~mode
uses an
X*
device for a better display.
- -Z~|~--intermediate-output~|~--ditroff
-
Switch into
groff~mode
and format the input with the
groff intermediate output
without postprocessing; see
groff_out(5).
This is equivalent to option
--ditroff
of
man,
which can be used as well.
All other
groff
options are supported by
groffer,
but they are just transparently transferred to
groff
without any intervention.
The options that are not explicitly handled by
groffer
are transparently passed to
groff.
Therefore these transparent options are not documented here, but in
groff(1).
Due to the automatism in
groffer,
none of these
groff
options should be needed, except for advanced usage.
Options for man~pages
- --apropos
-
Start the
apropos(1)
command or facility of
man(1)
for searching the
filespec
arguments within all
man~page
descriptions.
Each
filespec
argument is taken for search as it is;
section
specific parts are not handled, such that
7 groff
searches for the two arguments
7
and
groff,
with a large result; for the
filespec
groff.7
nothing will be found.
The
language
locale is handled only when the called programs do support this; the
GNU
apropos
and
man -k
do not.
The display differs from the
apropos
program by the following concepts:
-
-
-
Construct a
groff
frame similar to a
man~page
to the output of
apropos,
-
-
each
filespec
argument is searched on its own.
-
-
The restriction by
--sections
is handled as well,
-
-
wildcard characters are allowed and handled without a further option.
- --apropos-data
-
Show only the
apropos
descriptions for data documents, these are the
man(7)
sections~4, 5, and 7.
Direct
section
declarations are ignored, wildcards are accepted.
- --apropos-devel
-
Show only the
apropos
descriptions for development documents, these are the
man(7)
sections~2, 3, and 9.
Direct
section
declarations are ignored, wildcards are accepted.
- --apropos-progs
-
Show only the
apropos
descriptions for documents on programs, these are the
man(7)
sections~1, 6, and 8.
Direct
section
declarations are ignored, wildcards are accepted.
- --whatis
-
For each
filespec
argument search all
man~pages
and display their description --- or say that it is not a
man~page.
This is written from anew, so it differs from
man's
whatis
output by the following concepts
-
-
-
each retrieved file name is added,
-
-
local files are handled as well,
-
-
the language and system locale is supported,
-
-
the display is framed by a
groff
output format similar to a
man~page,
-
-
wildcard characters are allowed without a further option.
The following options were added to
groffer
for choosing whether the file name arguments are interpreted as names
for local files or as a search pattern for
man~pages.
The default is looking up for local files.
- --man
-
Check the non-option command line arguments
(filespecs)
first on being
man~pages,
then whether they represent an existing file.
By default, a
filespec
is first tested whether it is an existing file.
- --no-man~|~--local-file
-
Do not check for
man~pages.
--local-file
is the corresponding
man
option.
- --no-special
-
Disable former calls of
--all ,
--apropos* ,
and
--whatis .
Long options taken over from GNU man
The long options of
groffer
were synchronized with the long options of GNU
man.
All long options of GNU
man
are recognized, but not all of these options are important to
groffer,
so most of them are just ignored.
These ignored
man
options are
--catman ,
--troff ,
and
--update .
In the following, the
man
options that have a special meaning for
groffer
are documented.
If your system has GNU
man
installed the full set of long and short options of the GNU
man
program can be passed via the environment variable
see
man(1).
- --all
-
In searching
man~pages,
retrieve all suitable documents instead of only one.
- -7--ascii
-
In
text~modes,
display ASCII translation of special characters for critical environment.
This is equivalent to
groff -mtty_char;
see
groff_tmac(5).
- --ditroff
-
Produce
groff intermediate output.
This is equivalent to
groffer
-Z .
- --extensionsuffix
-
Restrict
man~page
search to file names that have
suffix
appended to their section element.
For example, in the file name
/usr/share/man/man3/terminfo.3ncurses.gz
the
man~page
extension is
ncurses.
- --localelanguage
-
Set the language for
man~pages.
This has the same effect, but overwrites
- --location
-
Print the location of the retrieved files to standard error.
- --no-location
-
Do not display the location of retrieved files; this resets a former
call to
--location .
This was added by
groffer.
- --manpath'dir1:dir2:'
-
Use the specified search path for retrieving
man~pages
instead of the program defaults.
If the argument is set to the empty string "" the search for
man~page
is disabled.
- --pager
-
Set the pager program in
tty~mode;
default is
less.
This is equivalent to
--tty-viewer .
- --sections'sec1:sec2:'
-
Restrict searching for
man~pages
to the given
sections,
a colon-separated list.
- --systems'sys1,sys2,'
-
Search for
man~pages
for the given operating systems; the argument
systems
is a comma-separated list.
- --where
-
Eqivalent to
--location .
X~Window~Toolkit Options
The following long options were adapted from the corresponding
X~Window~Toolkit options.
groffer
will pass them to the actual viewer program if it is an
X~Window program.
Otherwise these options are ignored.
Unfortunately these options use the old style of a single minus for
long options.
For
groffer
that was changed to the standard with using a double minus for long
options, for example,
groffer
uses the option
--font
for the X~Window option
-font .
See
X(7)
and the documentation on the X~Window~Toolkit options
for more details on these options and their arguments.
- --backgroundcolor
-
Set the background color of the viewer window.
- --bdpixels
-
This is equivalent to
--bordercolor .
- --bgcolor
-
This is equivalent to
--background .
- --bw pixels
-
This is equivalent to
--borderwidth .
- --bordercolorpixels
-
Specifies the color of the border surrounding the viewer window.
- --borderwidthpixels
-
Specifies the width in pixels of the border surrounding the viewer
window.
- --displayX-display
-
Set the X~Window display on which the viewer program
shall be started, see the X~Window documentation for the
syntax of the argument.
- --foregroundcolor
-
Set the foreground color of the viewer window.
- --fgcolor
-
This is equivalent to
-foreground .
- --fn font_name
-
This is equivalent to
--font .
- --fontfont_name
-
Set the font used by the viewer window.
The argument is an X~Window font name.
- --ftfont_name
-
This is equivalent to
--font .
- --geometrysize_pos
-
Set the geometry of the display window, that means its size and its
starting position.
See
X(7)
for the syntax of the argument.
- --resolutionvalue
-
Set X~Window resolution in dpi (dots per inch) in some
viewer programs.
The only supported dpi values are
75
and
100.
Actually, the default resolution for
groffer
is set to
75~dpi.
The resolution also sets the default device in
mode x.
- --rv
-
Reverse foreground and background color of the viewer window.
- --title'some text'
-
Set the title for the viewer window.
- --xrm'resource'
-
Set X~Window resource.
Options for Development
- --debug
-
Enable all debugging options
--debug-type .
The temporary files are kept and not deleted, the
grog
output is printed, the name of the temporary directory is printed, the
displayed file names are printed, and the parameters are printed.
- --debug-filenames
-
Print the names of the files and
man~pages
that are displayed by
groffer.
- --debug-grog
-
Print the output of all
grog
commands.
- --debug-keep
-
Enable two debugging informations.
Print the name of the temporary directory and keep the temporary
files, do not delete them during the run of
groffer.
- --debug-params
-
Print the parameters, as obtained from the configuration files, from
and the command line arguments.
- --debug-tmpdir
-
Print the name of the temporary directory.
- --do-nothing
-
This is like
--version ,
but without the output; no viewer is started.
This makes only sense in development.
- --print=text
-
Just print the argument to standard error.
This is good for parameter check.
- -V
-
This is an advanced option for debugging only.
Instead of displaying the formatted input, a lot of
groffer
specific information is printed to standard output:
-
-
-
the output file name in the temporary directory,
-
-
the display mode of the actual
groffer
run,
-
-
the display program for viewing the output with its arguments,
-
-
the active parameters from the config files, the arguments in
and the arguments of the command line,
-
-
the pipeline that would be run by the
groff
program, but without executing it.
Other useful debugging options are the
groff
option
-Z
and
--mode=groff.
Filespec Arguments
A
filespec
parameter is an argument that is not an option or option argument.
In
groffer,
filespec
parameters are a file name or a template for searching
man~pages.
These input sources are collected and composed into a single output
file such as
groff
does.
The strange POSIX behavior to regard all arguments behind
the first non-option argument as
filespec
arguments is ignored.
The GNU behavior to recognize options even when mixed with
filespec
arguments is used througout.
But, as usual, the double minus argument
--
ends the option handling and interprets all following arguments as
filespec
arguments; so the POSIX behavior can be easily adopted.
The options
--apropos*
have a special handling of
filespec
arguments.
Each argument is taken as a search scheme of its own.
Also a regexp (regular expression) can be used in the filespec.
For example,
groffer --apropos '^gro.f$'
searches
groff
in the
man~page
name, while
groffer --apropos groff
searches
groff
somewhere in the name or description of the
man~pages.
All other parts of
groffer,
such as the normal display or the output with
--whatis
have a different scheme for
filespecs.
No regular expressions are used for the arguments.
The
filespec
arguments are handled by the following scheme.
It is necessary to know that on each system the
man~pages
are sorted according to their content into several sections.
The
classical man sections
have a single-character name, either a digit from
1
to
9
or one of the characters
n
or
o.
This can optionally be followed by a string, the so-called
extension.
The
extension
allows to store several
man~pages
with the same name in the same
section.
But the
extension
is only rarely used, usually it is omitted.
Then the
extensions
are searched automatically by alphabet.
In the following, we use the name
section_extension
for a word that consists of a single character
section
name or a
section
character that is followed by an
extension.
Each
filespec
parameter can have one of the following forms in decreasing sequence.
-
-
No
filespec
parameters means that
groffer
waits for standard input.
The minus option
-
always stands for standard input; it can occur several times.
If you want to look up a
man~page
called
-
use the argument
man:-.
-
-
Next a
filespec
is tested whether it is the path name of an existing file.
Otherwise it is assumed to be a searching pattern for a
man~page.
-
-
man:name(section_extension),
man:name.section_extension,
name(section_extension),
or
name.section_extension
search the man~page
name
in man~section and possibly extension of
section_extension.
-
-
Now
man:name
searches for a
man~page
in the lowest
man~section
that has a document called
name.
-
-
section_extension~name
is a pattern of 2 arguments that originates from a strange argument
parsing of the
man
program.
Again, this searches the man page
name
with
section_extension,
a combination of a
section
character optionally followed by an
extension.
-
-
We are left with the argument
name
which is not an existing file.
So this searches for the
man~page
called
name
in the lowest
man~section
that has a document for this name.
Several file name arguments can be supplied.
They are mixed by
groff
into a single document.
Note that the set of option arguments must fit to all of these file
arguments.
So they should have at least the same style of the
groff
language.
OUTPUT MODES
By default, the
groffer
program collects all input into a single file, formats it with the
groff
program for a certain device, and then chooses a suitable viewer
program.
The device and viewer process in
groffer
is called a
mode.
The mode and viewer of a running
groffer
program is selected automatically, but the user can also choose it
with options.
The modes are selected by option the arguments of
--mode=anymode.
Additionally, each of this argument can be specified as an option of
its own, such as
anymode.
Most of these modes have a viewer program, which can be chosen by an
option that is constructed like
--anymode-viewer.
Several different modes are offered, graphical modes for
X~Window,
text~modes,
and some direct
groff~modes
for debugging and development.
By default,
groffer
first tries whether
x~mode
is possible, then
ps~mode,
and finally
tty~mode.
This mode testing sequence for
auto~mode
can be changed by specifying a comma separated list of modes with the
option
--default-modes.
The searching for
man~pages
and the decompression of the input are active in every mode.
Graphical Display Modes
The graphical display modes work mostly in the X~Window
environment (or similar implementations within other windowing
environments).
The environment variable
and the option
--display
are used for specifying the X~Window display to be used.
If this environment variable is empty
groffer
assumes that no X~Window is running and changes to a
text~mode.
You can change this automatic behavior by the option
--default-modes.
Known viewers for the graphical display modes and their standard
X~Window viewer progams are
-
-
in a PDF viewer
(pdf~mode),
-
-
in a web browser
(html
or
www~mode).
-
-
in a Postscript viewer
(ps~mode),
-
-
X~Window
roff
viewers such as
gxditview(1)
or
xditview(1)
(in
x~mode),
-
-
in a dvi viewer program
(dvi~mode),
The
pdf~mode
has a major advantage --- it is the only graphical diplay mode that
allows to search for text within the viewer; this can be a really
important feature.
Unfortunately, it takes some time to transform the input into the PDF
format, so it was not chosen as the major mode.
These graphical viewers can be customized by options of the
X~Window~Toolkit.
But the
groffer
options use a leading double minus instead of the single minus used by
the X~Window~Toolkit.
Text modes
There are two modes for text output,
mode~text
for plain output without a pager and
mode~tty
for a text output on a text terminal using some pager program.
If the variable
is not set or empty,
groffer
assumes that it should use
tty~mode.
In the actual implementation, the
groff
output device
latin1
is chosen for
text~modes.
This can be changed by specifying option
-T
or
--device.
The pager to be used can be specified by one of the options
--pager
and
--tty-viewer,
or by the environment variable
If all of this is not used the
less(1)
program with the option
-r
for correctly displaying control sequences is used as the default
pager.
Special Modes for Debugging and Development
These modes use the
groffer
file determination and decompression.
This is combined into a single input file that is fed directly into
groff
with different strategy without the
groffer
viewing facilities.
These modes are regarded as advanced, they are useful for debugging
and development purposes.
The
source~mode
with option
--source
just displays the decompressed input.
Otion
--to-stdout
does not display in a graphical mode.
It just generates the file for the chosen mode and then prints its
content to standard output.
The
groff~mode
passes the input to
groff
using only some suitable options provided to
groffer.
This enables the user to save the generated output into a file or pipe
it into another program.
In
groff~mode,
the option
-Z
disables post-processing, thus producing the
groff intermediate
output.
In this mode, the input is formatted, but not postprocessed; see
groff_out(5)
for details.
All
groff
short options are supported by
groffer.
MAN~PAGE~SEARCHING
The default behavior of
groffer
is to first test whether a file parameter represents a local file; if
it is not an existing file name, it is assumed to represent the name
of a
man~page.
The following options can be used to determine whether the arguments
should be handled as file name or
man~page
arguments.
- --man
-
forces to interpret all file parameters as
filespecs
for searching
man~pages.
- --no-man
-
--local-file
disable the
man
searching; so only local files are displayed.
If neither a local file nor a
man~page
was retrieved for some file parameter a warning is issued on standard
error, but processing is continued.
Search Algoritm
Let us now assume that a
man~page
should be searched.
The
groffer
program provides a search facility for
man~pages.
All long options, all environment variables, and most of the
functionality of the GNU
man(1)
program were implemented.
The search algorithm shall determine which file is displayed for a given
man~page.
The process can be modified by options and environment variables.
The only
man
action that is omitted in
groffer
are the preformatted
man~pages,
also called
cat~pages.
With the excellent performance of the actual computers, the
preformatted
man~pages
aren't necessary any longer.
Additionally,
groffer
is a
roff
program; it wants to read
roff
source files and format them itself.
The algorithm for retrieving the file for a
man~page
needs first a set of directories.
This set starts with the so-called
man~path
that is modified later on by adding names of
operating system
and
language.
This arising set is used for adding the section directories which
contain the
man~page
files.
The
man~path
is a list of directories that are separated by colon.
It is generated by the following methods.
-
-
The environment variable
can be set.
-
-
It can be read from the arguments of the environment variable
-
-
The
man~path
can be manually specified by using the option
--manpath.
An empty argument disables the
man~page
searching.
-
-
When no
man~path
was set the
manpath(1)
program is tried to determine one.
-
-
If this does not work a reasonable default path from
is determined.
We now have a starting set of directories.
The first way to change this set is by adding names of
operating
systems.
This assumes that
man~pages
for several
operating systems
are installed.
This is not always true.
The names of such
operating systems
can be provided by 3 methods.
-
-
The environment variable
has the lowest precedence.
-
-
This can be overridden by an option in
-
-
This again is overridden by the command line option
--systems.
Several names of
operating systems
can be given by appending their names, separated by a comma.
The
man~path
is changed by appending each
system
name as subdirectory at the end of each directory of the set.
No directory of the
man~path
set is kept.
But if no
system
name is specified the
man~path
is left unchanged.
After this, the actual set of directories can be changed by
language
information.
This assumes that there exist
man~pages
in different languages.
The wanted
language
can be chosen by several methods.
-
-
Enviroment variable
-
-
This is overridden by
-
-
This is overridden by
-
-
This can be overridden by providing an option in
-
-
All these environment variables are overridden by the command line
option
--locale.
The
default language
can be specified by specifying one of the pseudo-language parameters
C or POSIX.
This is like deleting a formerly given
language
information.
The
man~pages
in the
default language
are usually in English.
Of course, the
language
name is determined by
man.
In GNU
man,
it is specified in the POSIX~1003.1 based format:
<language>[_<territory>[.<character-set>[,<version>]]],
but the two-letter code in
<language>
is sufficient for most purposes.
If for a complicated
language
formulation no
man~pages
are found
groffer
searches the country part consisting of these first two characters as
well.
The actual directory set is copied thrice.
The
language
name is appended as subdirectory to each directory in the first copy
of the actual directory set (this is only done when a language
information is given).
Then the 2-letter abbreviation of the
language
name is appended as subdirectories to the second copy of the directory
set (this is only done when the given language name has more than 2
letters).
The third copy of the directory set is kept unchanged (if no
language
information is given this is the kept directory set).
These maximally 3 copies are appended to get the new directory set.
We now have a complete set of directories to work with.
In each of these directories, the
man
files are separated in
sections.
The name of a
section
is represented by a single character, a digit between
1
and
9,
or the character
o
or
n,
in this order.
For each available
section,
a subdirectory
exists containing all
man
files for this
section,
where
<section>
is a single character as described before.
Each
man
file in a
section
directory has the form
man<section>/<name>.<section>[<extension>][.<compression>],
where
<extension>
and
<compression>
are optional.
<name>
is the name of the
man~page
that is also specified as filespec argument on the command line.
The
extension
is an addition to the section.
This postfix acts like a subsection.
An
extension
occurs only in the file name, not in name of the
section
subdirectory.
It can be specified on the command line.
On the other hand, the
compression
is just an information on how the file is compressed.
This is not important for the user, such that it cannot be specified
on the command line.
There are 4 methods to specify a
section
on the command line:
-
-
Environment variable
-
-
Command line option
--sections
-
-
Appendix to the
name
argument in the form
<name>.<section>
-
-
Preargument before the
name
argument in the form
<section> <name>
It is also possible to specify several
sections
by appending the single characters separated by colons.
One can imagine that this means to restrict the
man~page
search to only some
sections.
The multiple
sections
are only possible for
and
--sections.
If no
section
is specified all
sections
are searched one after the other in the given order, starting with
section~1,
until a suitable file is found.
There are 4 methods to specify an
extension
on the command line.
But it is not necessary to provide the whole extension name, some
abbreviation is good enough in most cases.
-
-
Environment variable
-
-
Command line option
--extension
-
-
Appendix to the
<name>.<section>
argument in the form
<name>.<section><extension>
-
-
Preargument before the
name
argument in the form
<section><extension> <name>
For further details on
man~page
searching, see
man(1).
Examples of man files
-
-
This is an uncompressed file for the
man~page
groff in
section~1.
It can be called by
sh# groffer~groff
No
section
is specified here, so all
sections
should be searched, but as
section~1
is searched first this file will be found first.
The file name is composed of the following components.
must be part of the
man~path;
the subdirectory
and the part
stand for the
section;
is the name of the
man~page.
-
-
The file name is composed of the following components.
must be part of the
man~path;
the subdirectory
and the part
stand for the
section;
is the name of the
man~page;
the final part
stands for a compression with
gzip(1).
As the
section
is not the first one it must be specified as well.
This can be done by one of the following commands.
sh#~groffer~groff.7
sh#~groffer~7~groff
sh#~groffer~--sections=7~groff
-
-
Here
must be in
man~path;
the subdirectory
and the file name part
stand for
section~1;
the name of the
man~page
is
the section has an extension
and the file is compressed as
with
bzip2(1).
The file can be viewed with one of the following commands
sh#~groffer~ctags.1e
sh#~groffer~1e~ctags
sh#~groffer~--extension=e~--sections=1~ctags
where e works as an abbreviation for the extension
emacs21.
-
-
The directory
is now part of the
man~path;
then there is a subdirectory for an
operating system
name
next comes a subdirectory
for the German
language;
the
section
names
and
are known so far;
is the name of the
man~page;
and
signifies the compression that can be handled by
gzip(1).
We want now show how to provide several values for some options.
That is possible for
sections
and
operating system
names.
So we use as
sections~5
and
7
and as
system
names
linux
and
aix.
The command is then
sh# groffer~--locale=de~--sections=5:7~--systems=linux,aix~man
sh# LANG=de~MANSECT=5:7~SYSTEM=linux,aix~groffer~man
DECOMPRESSION
The program has a decompression facility.
If standard input or a file that was retrieved from the command line
parameters is compressed with a format that is supported by either
gzip(1)
or
bzip2(1)
it is decompressed on-the-fly.
This includes the GNU
.gz,
.bz2,
and the traditional
.Z
compression.
The program displays the concatenation of all decompressed input in
the sequence that was specified on the command line.
ENVIRONMENT
The
groffer
program supports many system variables, most of them by courtesy of
other programs.
All environment variables of
groff(1)
and GNU
man(1)
and some standard system variables are honored.
Native groffer Variables
-
-
Store options for a run of
groffer.
The options specified in this variable are overridden by the options
given on the command line.
The content of this variable is run through the shell builtin `eval';
so arguments containing white-space or special shell characters should
be quoted.
Do not forget to export this variable, otherwise it does not exist
during the run of
groffer.
System Variables
The following variables have a special meaning for
groffer.
-
-
If this variable is set this indicates that the X~Window
system is running.
Testing this variable decides on whether graphical or text output is
generated.
This variable should not be changed by the user carelessly, but it can
be used to start the graphical
groffer
on a remote X~Window terminal.
For example, depending on your system,
groffer
can be started on the second monitor by the command
sh# DISPLAY=:0.1~groffer~ what.ever &
-
-
If one of these variables is set (in the above sequence), its content
is interpreted as the locale, the language to be used, especially when
retrieving
man~pages.
A locale name is typically of the form
language[_territory[.codeset[@modifier]]],
where
language
is an ISO 639 language code,
territory
is an ISO 3166 country code, and
codeset
is a character set or encoding identifier like ISO-8859-1 or UTF-8;
see
setlocale(3).
The locale values C and POSIX
stand for the default, i.e. the
man~page
directories without a language prefix.
This is the same behavior as when all 3~variables are unset.
-
-
This variable can be used to set the pager for the tty output.
For example, to disable the use of a pager completely set this
variable to the
cat(1)
program
sh# PAGER=cat~groffer~ anything
-
-
All programs within the
groffer
script are called without a fixed path.
Thus this environment variable determines the set of programs used
within the run of
groffer.
Groff Variables
The
groffer
program internally calls
groff,
so all environment variables documented in
groff(1)
are internally used within
groffer
as well.
The following variable has a direct meaning for the
groffer
program.
-
-
If the value of this variable is an existing, writable directory,
groffer
uses it for storing its temporary files, just as
groff
does.
Man Variables
Parts of the functionality of the
man
program were implemented in
groffer;
support for all environment variables documented in
man(1)
was added to
groffer,
but the meaning was slightly modified due to the different approach in
groffer;
but the user interface is the same.
The
man
environment variables can be overwritten by options provided with
which in turn is overwritten by the command line.
-
-
Restrict the search for
man~pages
to files having this extension.
This is overridden by option
--extension;
see there for details.
-
-
This variable contains options as a preset for
man(1).
As not all of these are relevant for
groffer
only the essential parts of its value are extracted.
The options specified in this variable overwrite the values of the
other environment variables that are specific to
man.
All options specified in this variable are overridden by the options
given on the command line.
-
-
If set, this variable contains the directories in which the
man~page
trees are stored.
This is overridden by option
--manpath.
-
-
If this is a colon separated list of section names, the search for
man~pages
is restricted to those manual sections in that order.
This is overridden by option
--sections.
-
-
If this is set to a comma separated list of names these are interpreted
as
man~page
trees for different operating systems.
This variable can be overwritten by option
--systems;
see there for details.
The environment variable
is ignored by
groffer
because the necessary preprocessors are determined automatically.
CONFIGURATION FILES
The
groffer
program can be preconfigured by two configuration files.
-
-
System-wide configuration file for
groffer.
-
-
User-specific configuration file for
groffer,
where
denotes the user's home directory.
This file is called after the system-wide configuration file to enable
overriding by the user.
Both files are handled for the configuration, but the configuration
file in
comes first; it is overwritten by the configuration file in the home
directory; both configuration files are overwritten by the environment
variable
everything is overwritten by the command line arguments.
The configuration files contain options that should be called as
default for every
groffer
run.
These options are written in lines such that each contains either a
long option, a short option, or a short option cluster; each with or
without an argument.
So each line with configuration information starts with a minus
character
`-';
a line with a long option starts with two minus characters
`--',
a line with a short option or short option cluster starts with a
single minus
`-'.
The option names in the configuration files may not be abbreviated,
they must be exact.
The argument for a long option can be separated from the option name
either by an equal sign
`='
or by whitespace, i.e. one or several space or tab characters.
An argument for a short option or short option cluster can be directly
appended to the option name or separated by whitespace.
The end of an argument is the end of the line.
It is not allowed to use a shell environment variable in an option
name or argument.
It is not necessary to use quotes in an option or argument, except for
empty arguments.
An empty argument can be provided by appending a pair of quotes to the
separating equal sign or whitespace; with a short option, the
separator can be omitted as well.
For a long option with a separating equal sign
`=',
the pair of quotes can be omitted, thus ending the line with the
separating equal sign.
All other quote characters are cancelled internally.
In the configuration files, arbitrary whitespace is allowed at the
beginning of each line, it is just ignored.
Each whitespace within a line is replaced by a single space character
` ' internally.
All lines of the configuration lines that do not start
with a minus character are ignored, such that comments starting with
`#'
are possible.
So there are no shell commands in the configuration files.
As an example, consider the following configuration file that can be
used either in
or
# groffer configuration file
#
# groffer options that are used in each call of groffer
--foreground=DarkBlue
--resolution 100
--x-viewer=gxditview -geometry 900x1200
--pdf-viewer xpdf -z 150
The lines starting with
#
are just ignored, so they act as command lines.
This configuration sets four
groffer
options (the lines starting with
`-').
This has the following effects:
-
-
Use a text color of
DarkBlue
in all viewers that support this, such as
gxditview.
-
-
Use a resolution of
100~dpi
in all viewers that support this, such as
gxditview.
By this, the default device in
x mode
is set to
X100.
-
-
Force
gxditview(1)
as the
x-mode
viewer using the geometry option for setting the width to
900~dpi
and the height to
1200~dpi.
This geometry is suitable for a resolution of
100~dpi.
-
-
Use
xpdf(1)
as the
pdf-mode
viewer with the argument
-Z
150.
EXAMPLES
The usage of
groffer
is very easy.
Usually, it is just called with a file name or
man~page.
The following examples, however, show that
groffer
has much more fancy capabilities.
sh#~groffer~/usr/local/share/doc/groff/meintro.ms.gz
Decompress, format and display the compressed file
in the directory
using the standard viewer
gxditview
as graphical viewer when in X~Window, or the
less(1)
pager program when not in X~Window.
sh#~groffer~groff
If the file
exists use it as input.
Otherwise interpret the argument as a search for the
man~page
named
groff
in the smallest possible
man~section,
being section 1 in this case.
sh#~groffer~man:groff
search for the
man~page
of
groff
even when the file
exists.
sh#~groffer~groff.7
sh#~groffer~7~groff
search the
man~page
of
groff
in
man~section
7.
This section search works only for a digit or a single character from
a small set.
sh#~groffer~fb.modes
If the file
does not exist interpret this as a search for the
man~page
of
fb.modes.
As the extension
modes
is not a single character in classical section style the argument is
not split to a search for
fb.
sh#~groffer~groff~'troff(1)'~man:roff
The arguments that are not existing files are looked-up as the
following
man~pages:
groff
(automatic search, should be found in man~section~1),
troff
(in section~1),
and
roff
(in the section with the lowest number, being~7 in this case).
The quotes around
'troff(1)'
are necessary because the paranthesis are special shell characters;
escaping them with a backslash character
\(
and
\)
would be possible, too.
The formatted files are concatenated and displayed in one piece.
sh#~LANG=de~groffer~--man~--www~--www-viever=galeon~ls
Retrieve the German
man~page
(language
de)
for the
ls
program, decompress it, format it to
html
format
(www~mode)
and view the result in the web browser
galeon.
The option
--man
guarantees that the
man~page
is retrieved, even when a local file
exists in the actual directory.
sh#~groffer~--source~'man:roff(7)'
Get the
man~page
called
roff
in man~section 7, decompress it, and print its unformatted
content, its source code.
sh#~groffer~--de-p~--in~--ap
This is a set of abbreviated arguments, it is determined as
sh#~groffer~--debug-params~--intermediate-output~--apropos
sh#~cat~file.gz~|~groffer~-Z~-mfoo"
The file
is sent to standard input, this is decompressed, and then this is
transported to the
groff intermediate output mode
without post-processing
(groff
option
-Z ),
using macro package
foo
(groff
option
-m ) .
sh#~echo~'\f[CB]WOW!'~|
> groffer --x --bg red --fg yellow --geometry 200x100 -
Display the word WOW! in a small window in constant-width
bold font, using color yellow on red background.
COMPATIBILITY
The
groffer
program is written in Perl, the Perl version during writing was v5.8.8.
groffer
provides its own parser for command line arguments that is compatible
to both POSIX
getopts(1)
and GNU
getopt(1).
It can handle option arguments and file names containing white space
and a large set of special characters.
The following standard types of options are supported.
-
-
The option consisting of a single minus
-
refers to standard input.
-
-
A single minus followed by characters refers to a single character
option or a combination thereof; for example, the
groffer
short option combination
-Qmfoo
is equivalent to
-Q~-m~foo .
-
-
Long options are options with names longer than one character; they
are always preceded by a double minus.
An option argument can either go to the next command line argument or
be appended with an equal sign to the argument; for example,
--long=arg
is equivalent to
--long~arg.
-
-
An argument of
--
ends option parsing; all further command line arguments are
interpreted as
filespec
parameters, i.e. file names or constructs for searching
man~pages).
-
-
All command line arguments that are neither options nor option
arguments are interpreted as
filespec
parameters and stored until option parsing has finished.
For example, the command line
sh#~groffer file1 -a -o arg file2
is equivalent to
sh#~groffer -a -o arg -- file1 file2
The free mixing of options and
filespec
parameters follows the GNU principle.
That does not fulfill the strange option behavior of POSIX
that ends option processing as soon as the first non-option argument
has been reached.
The end of option processing can be forced by the option
`--'
anyway.
BUGS
Report bugs to the
bug-groff mailing list
Include a complete, self-contained example that will allow the bug to
be reproduced, and say which version of
groffer
you are using.
You can also use the
groff mailing list
but you must first subscribe to this list.
You can do that by visiting the
groff mailing list web page
See
groff(1)
for information on availability.
SEE ALSO
groff(1),
troff(1)
-
Details on the options and environment variables available in
groff;
all of them can be used with
groffer.
- groff(7)
-
Documentation of the
groff
language.
- grog(1)
-
Internally,
groffer
tries to guess the
groff
command line options from the input using this program.
- chem(1)
-
Preprocessor of
groff
that is run automatically.
- groff_out(5)
-
Documentation on the
groff intermediate output
(ditroff
output).
- groff_tmac(5)
-
Documentation on the
groff
macro files.
- man(1)
-
The standard program to display
man~pages.
The information there is only useful if it is the
man~page
for GNU
man.
Then it documents the options and environment variables that are
supported by
groffer.
gxditview(1),
xditview(1x)
-
Viewers for
groffer's
x~mode.
kpdf(1),
kghostview(1),
evince(1),
ggv(1),
gv(1),
ghostview(1),
gs(1)
-
Viewers for
groffer's
ps~mode.
kpdf(1),
acroread(1),
evince(1),
xpdf(1),
gpdf(1),
kghostview(1),
ggv(1)
-
Viewers for
groffer's
pdf~mode.
kdvi(1),
xdvi(1),
dvilx(1)
-
Viewers for
groffer's
dvi~mode.
konqueror(1),
epiphany(1),
firefox(1),
mozilla(1),
netscape(1),
lynx(1)
-
Web-browsers for
groffer's
html
or
www~mode.
- less(1)
-
Standard pager program for the
tty~mode .
gzip(1),
bzip2(1)
-
The decompression programs supported by
groffer.
AUTHOR
This file was written by Bernd Warken.
COPYING
Copyright (C) 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2009
Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of
groffer,
which is part of
groff,
a free software project.
You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the
GNU General Public License
as published by the
Free Software Foundation,
either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public
License along with
groff,
see the files COPYING and LICENSE in the top
directory of the
groff
source package.
Or read the
man~page
gpl(1).
You can also visit
<http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
Index
- NAME
-
- SYNOPSIS
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- OPTION OVERVIEW
-
- OPTION DETAILS
-
- groffer breaking Options
-
- groffer Mode Options
-
- Options related to groff
-
- Options for man~pages
-
- Long options taken over from GNU man
-
- X~Window~Toolkit Options
-
- Options for Development
-
- Filespec Arguments
-
- OUTPUT MODES
-
- Graphical Display Modes
-
- Text modes
-
- Special Modes for Debugging and Development
-
- MAN~PAGE~SEARCHING
-
- Search Algoritm
-
- Examples of man files
-
- DECOMPRESSION
-
- ENVIRONMENT
-
- Native groffer Variables
-
- System Variables
-
- Groff Variables
-
- Man Variables
-
- CONFIGURATION FILES
-
- EXAMPLES
-
- COMPATIBILITY
-
- BUGS
-
- SEE ALSO
-
- AUTHOR
-
- COPYING
-
This document was created by
man2html,
using the manual pages.
Time: 19:49:10 GMT, April 27, 2011