INSTALL revision 322249
1$Id: INSTALL,v 1.20 2017/07/28 14:57:56 schwarze Exp $
2
3About the portable mandoc distribution
4--------------------------------------
5The mandoc manpage compiler toolset (formerly called "mdocml")
6is a suite of tools compiling mdoc(7), the roff(7) macro language
7of choice for BSD manual pages, and man(7), the predominant
8historical language for UNIX manuals.
9
10It includes a man(1) manual viewer and additional tools.
11For general information, see <http://mandoc.bsd.lv/>.
12
13In case you have questions or want to provide feedback, read
14<http://mandoc.bsd.lv/contact.html>.  Consider subscribing to the
15discuss@ mailing list mentioned on that page.  If you intend to
16help with the development of mandoc, consider subscribing to the
17tech@ mailing list, too.
18
19Enjoy using the mandoc toolset!
20
21Ingo Schwarze, Karlsruhe, July 2017
22
23
24Installation
25------------
26Before manually installing mandoc on your system, please check
27whether the newest version of mandoc is already installed by default
28or available via a binary package or a ports system.  A list of the
29latest bundled and ported versions of mandoc for various operating
30systems is maintained at <http://mandoc.bsd.lv/ports.html>.
31
32Regarding how packages and ports are maintained for your operating
33system, please consult your operating system documentation.
34To install mandoc manually, the following steps are needed:
35
361. If you want to build the CGI program, man.cgi(8), too,
37run the command "echo BUILD_CGI=1 >> configure.local".
38Then run "cp cgi.h.example cgi.h" and edit cgi.h as desired.
39
402. If you also want to build the catman(8) utility, run the
41command "echo BUILD_CATMAN=1 >> configure.local".  Note that it
42is unlikely to be a drop-in replacement providing the same
43functionality as your system's "catman", if your operating
44system contains one.
45
463. Define MANPATH_DEFAULT in configure.local
47if /usr/share/man:/usr/X11R6/man:/usr/local/man is not appropriate
48for your operating system.
49
504. Run "./configure".
51This script attempts autoconfiguration of mandoc for your system.
52Read both its standard output and the file "Makefile.local" it
53generates.  If anything looks wrong or different from what you
54wish, read the file "configure.local.example", create and edit
55a file "configure.local", and re-run "./configure" until the
56result seems right to you.
57On Solaris 10 and earlier, you may have to run "ksh ./configure"
58because the native /bin/sh lacks some POSIX features.
59
605. Run "make".
61Any POSIX-compatible make, in particular both BSD make and GNU make,
62should work.  If the build fails, look at "configure.local.example"
63and go back to step 2.
64
656. Run "make -n install" and check whether everything will be
66installed to the intended places.  Otherwise, put some *DIR or *NM*
67variables into "configure.local" and go back to step 4.
68
697. Optionally run the regression suite.
70Basically, that amounts to "cd regress && ./regress.pl".
71But you should probably look at "./mandoc -l regress/regress.pl.1"
72first.
73
748. Run "sudo make install".  If you intend to build a binary
75package using some kind of fake root mechanism, you may need a
76command like "make DESTDIR=... install".  Read the *-install targets
77in the "Makefile" to understand how DESTDIR is used.
78
799. Run the command "sudo makewhatis" to build mandoc.db(5) databases
80in all the directory trees configured in step 3.  Whenever installing
81new manual pages, re-run makewhatis(8) to update the databases, or
82apropos(1) will not find the new pages.
83
8410. To set up a man.cgi(8) server, read its manual page.
85
86Note that some man(7) pages may contain low-level roff(7) markup
87that mandoc does not yet understand.  On some BSD systems using
88mandoc, third-party software is vetted on whether it may be formatted
89with mandoc.  If not, groff(1) is pulled in as a dependency and
90used to install a pre-formatted "catpage" instead of directly as
91manual page source.
92
93
94Understanding mandoc dependencies
95---------------------------------
96The following libraries are required:
97
981. zlib for decompressing gzipped manual pages.
99
1002. The fts(3) directory traversion functions.
101If your system does not have them, the bundled compatibility version
102will be used, so you need not worry in that case.  But be careful: old
103glibc versions of fts(3) were known to be broken on 32bit platforms,
104see <https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11460>.
105That was presumably fixed in glibc-2.23.
106If you run into that problem, set "HAVE_FTS=0" in configure.local.
107
1083. Marc Espie's ohash(3) library.
109If your system does not have it, the bundled compatibility version
110will be used, so you probably need not worry about it.
111
112One of the chief design goals of the mandoc toolbox is to make
113sure that nothing related to documentation requires C++.
114Consequently, linking mandoc against any kind of C++ program
115would defeat the purpose and is not supported.
116
117
118Checking autoconfiguration quality
119----------------------------------
120If you want to check whether automatic configuration works well
121on your platform, consider the following:
122
123The mandoc package intentionally does not use GNU autoconf because
124we consider that toolset a blatant example of overengineering that
125is obsolete nowadays, since all modern operating systems are now
126reasonably close to POSIX and do not need arcane shell magic any
127longer.  If your system does need such magic, consider upgrading
128to reasonably modern POSIX-compliant tools rather than asking for
129autoconf-style workarounds.
130
131As far as mandoc is using any features not mandated by ANSI X3.159-1989
132("ANSI C") or IEEE Std 1003.1-2008 ("POSIX") that some modern systems
133do not have, we intend to provide autoconfiguration tests and
134compat_*.c implementations.  Please report any that turn out to be
135missing.  Note that while we do strive to produce portable code,
136we do not slavishly restrict ourselves to POSIX-only interfaces.
137For improved security and readability, we do use well-designed,
138modern interfaces like reallocarray(3) even if they are still rather
139uncommon, of course bundling compat_*.c implementations as needed.
140
141Where mandoc is using ANSI C or POSIX features that some systems
142still lack and that compat_*.c implementations can be provided for
143without too much hassle, we will consider adding them, too, so
144please report whatever is missing on your platform.
145
146The following steps can be used to manually check the automatic
147configuration on your platform:
148
1491. Run "make distclean".
150
1512. Run "./configure"
152
1533. Read the file "config.log".  It shows the compiler commands used
154to test the libraries installed on your system and the standard
155output and standard error output these commands produce.  Watch out
156for unexpected failures.  Those are most likely to happen if headers
157or libraries are installed in unusual places or interfaces defined
158in unusual headers.  You can also look at the file "config.h" and
159check that no "#define HAVE_*" differ from your expectations.
160