use Config;
use File::Basename qw(&basename &dirname);
+use Cwd;
# List explicitly here the variables you want Configure to
# generate. Metaconfig only looks for shell variables, so you
# have to mention them as if they were shell variables, not
# %Config entries. Thus you write
# $startperl
+# $man3ext
# to ensure Configure will look for $Config{startperl}.
# This forces PL files to create target in same directory as PL file.
# This is so that make depend always knows where to find PL derivatives.
-chdir(dirname($0));
-($file = basename($0)) =~ s/\.PL$//;
-$file =~ s/\.pl$//
- if ($Config{'osname'} eq 'VMS' or
- $Config{'osname'} eq 'OS2'); # "case-forgiving"
+$origdir = cwd;
+chdir dirname($0);
+$file = basename($0, '.PL');
+$file .= '.com' if $^O eq 'VMS';
open OUT,">$file" or die "Can't create $file: $!";
# You can use $Config{...} to use Configure variables.
print OUT <<"!GROK!THIS!";
-$Config{'startperl'}
- eval 'exec perl -S \$0 "\$@"'
- if 0;
+$Config{startperl}
+ eval 'exec $Config{perlpath} -S \$0 \${1+"\$@"}'
+ if \$running_under_some_shell;
+
+\$DEF_PM_SECTION = '$Config{man3ext}' || '3';
!GROK!THIS!
# In the following, perl variables are not expanded during extraction.
print OUT <<'!NO!SUBS!';
+=head1 NAME
+
+pod2man - translate embedded Perl pod directives into man pages
+
+=head1 SYNOPSIS
+
+B<pod2man>
+[ B<--section=>I<manext> ]
+[ B<--release=>I<relpatch> ]
+[ B<--center=>I<string> ]
+[ B<--date=>I<string> ]
+[ B<--fixed=>I<font> ]
+[ B<--official> ]
+[ B<--lax> ]
+I<inputfile>
+
+=head1 DESCRIPTION
+
+B<pod2man> converts its input file containing embedded pod directives (see
+L<perlpod>) into nroff source suitable for viewing with nroff(1) or
+troff(1) using the man(7) macro set.
+
+Besides the obvious pod conversions, B<pod2man> also takes care of
+func(), func(n), and simple variable references like $foo or @bar so
+you don't have to use code escapes for them; complex expressions like
+C<$fred{'stuff'}> will still need to be escaped, though. Other nagging
+little roffish things that it catches include translating the minus in
+something like foo-bar, making a long dash--like this--into a real em
+dash, fixing up "paired quotes", putting a little space after the
+parens in something like func(), making C++ and PI look right, making
+double underbars have a little tiny space between them, making ALLCAPS
+a teeny bit smaller in troff(1), and escaping backslashes so you don't
+have to.
+
+=head1 OPTIONS
+
+=over 8
+
+=item center
+
+Set the centered header to a specific string. The default is
+"User Contributed Perl Documentation", unless the C<--official> flag is
+given, in which case the default is "Perl Programmers Reference Guide".
+
+=item date
+
+Set the left-hand footer string to this value. By default,
+the modification date of the input file will be used.
+
+=item fixed
+
+The fixed font to use for code refs. Defaults to CW.
+
+=item official
+
+Set the default header to indicate that this page is of
+the standard release in case C<--center> is not given.
+
+=item release
+
+Set the centered footer. By default, this is the current
+perl release.
+
+=item section
+
+Set the section for the C<.TH> macro. The standard conventions on
+sections are 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. This works
+best if you put your Perl man pages in a separate tree, like
+F</usr/local/perl/man/>. By default, section 1 will be used
+unless the file ends in F<.pm> in which case section 3 will be selected.
+
+=item lax
+
+Don't complain when required sections aren't present.
+
+=back
+
+=head1 Anatomy of a Proper Man Page
+
+For those not sure of the proper layout of a man page, here's
+an example of the skeleton of a proper man page. Head of the
+major headers should be setout as a C<=head1> directive, and
+are historically written in the rather startling ALL UPPER CASE
+format, although this is not mandatory.
+Minor headers may be included using C<=head2>, and are
+typically in mixed case.
+
+=over 10
+
+=item NAME
+
+Mandatory section; should be a comma-separated list of programs or
+functions documented by this podpage, such as:
+
+ foo, bar - programs to do something
+
+=item SYNOPSIS
+
+A short usage summary for programs and functions, which
+may someday be deemed mandatory.
+
+=item DESCRIPTION
+
+Long drawn out discussion of the program. It's a good idea to break this
+up into subsections using the C<=head2> directives, like
+
+ =head2 A Sample Subection
+
+ =head2 Yet Another Sample Subection
+
+=item OPTIONS
+
+Some people make this separate from the description.
+
+=item RETURN VALUE
+
+What the program or function returns if successful.
+
+=item ERRORS
+
+Exceptions, return codes, exit stati, and errno settings.
+
+=item EXAMPLES
+
+Give some example uses of the program.
+
+=item ENVIRONMENT
+
+Envariables this program might care about.
+
+=item FILES
+
+All files used by the program. You should probably use the FE<lt>E<gt>
+for these.
+
+=item SEE ALSO
+
+Other man pages to check out, like man(1), man(7), makewhatis(8), or catman(8).
+
+=item NOTES
+
+Miscellaneous commentary.
+
+=item CAVEATS
+
+Things to take special care with; sometimes called WARNINGS.
+
+=item DIAGNOSTICS
+
+All possible messages the program can print out--and
+what they mean.
+
+=item BUGS
+
+Things that are broken or just don't work quite right.
+
+=item RESTRICTIONS
+
+Bugs you don't plan to fix :-)
+
+=item AUTHOR
+
+Who wrote it (or AUTHORS if multiple).
+
+=item HISTORY
+
+Programs derived from other sources sometimes have this, or
+you might keep a modification log here.
+
+=back
+
+=head1 EXAMPLES
+
+ pod2man program > program.1
+ pod2man some_module.pm > /usr/perl/man/man3/some_module.3
+ pod2man --section=7 note.pod > note.7
+
+=head1 DIAGNOSTICS
+
+The following diagnostics are generated by B<pod2man>. Items
+marked "(W)" are non-fatal, whereas the "(F)" errors will cause
+B<pod2man> to immediately exit with a non-zero status.
+
+=over 4
+
+=item bad option in paragraph %d of %s: ``%s'' should be [%s]<%s>
+
+(W) If you start include an option, you should set it off
+as bold, italic, or code.
+
+=item can't open %s: %s
+
+(F) The input file wasn't available for the given reason.
+
+=item Improper man page - no dash in NAME header in paragraph %d of %s
+
+(W) The NAME header did not have an isolated dash in it. This is
+considered important.
+
+=item Invalid man page - no NAME line in %s
+
+(F) You did not include a NAME header, which is essential.
+
+=item roff font should be 1 or 2 chars, not `%s' (F)
+
+(F) The font specified with the C<--fixed> option was not
+a one- or two-digit roff font.
+
+=item %s is missing required section: %s
+
+(W) Required sections include NAME, DESCRIPTION, and if you're
+using a section starting with a 3, also a SYNOPSIS. Actually,
+not having a NAME is a fatal.
+
+=item Unknown escape: %s in %s
+
+(W) An unknown HTML entity (probably for an 8-bit character) was given via
+a C<EE<lt>E<gt>> directive. Besides amp, lt, gt, and quot, recognized
+entities are Aacute, aacute, Acirc, acirc, AElig, aelig, Agrave, agrave,
+Aring, aring, Atilde, atilde, Auml, auml, Ccedil, ccedil, Eacute, eacute,
+Ecirc, ecirc, Egrave, egrave, ETH, eth, Euml, euml, Iacute, iacute, Icirc,
+icirc, Igrave, igrave, Iuml, iuml, Ntilde, ntilde, Oacute, oacute, Ocirc,
+ocirc, Ograve, ograve, Oslash, oslash, Otilde, otilde, Ouml, ouml, szlig,
+THORN, thorn, Uacute, uacute, Ucirc, ucirc, Ugrave, ugrave, Uuml, uuml,
+Yacute, yacute, and yuml.
+
+=item Unmatched =back
+
+(W) You have a C<=back> without a corresponding C<=over>.
+
+=item Unrecognized pod directive: %s
+
+(W) You specified a pod directive that isn't in the known list of
+C<=head1>, C<=head2>, C<=item>, C<=over>, C<=back>, or C<=cut>.
+
+
+=back
+
+=head1 NOTES
+
+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).
+Settting the F register will get you some additional experimental
+indexing:
+
+ troff -man -rC1 -rD1 -rF1 perl.1 perldata.1 perlsyn.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 RESTRICTIONS
+
+None at this time.
+
+=head1 BUGS
+
+The =over and =back directives don't really work right. They
+take absolute positions instead of offsets, don't nest well, and
+making people count is suboptimal in any event.
+
+=head1 AUTHORS
+
+Original prototype by Larry Wall, but so massively hacked over by
+Tom Christiansen such that Larry probably doesn't recognize it anymore.
+
+=cut
+
$/ = "";
$cutting = 1;
+@Indices = ();
+
+# We try first to get the version number from a local binary, in case we're
+# running an installed version of Perl to produce documentation from an
+# uninstalled newer version's pod files.
+if ($^O ne 'plan9' and $^O ne 'dos' and $^O ne 'os2' and $^O ne 'MSWin32') {
+ my $perl = (-x './perl' && -f './perl' ) ?
+ './perl' :
+ ((-x '../perl' && -f '../perl') ?
+ '../perl' :
+ '');
+ ($version,$patch) = `$perl -e 'print $]'` =~ /^(\d\.\d{3})(\d{2})?/ if $perl;
+}
+# No luck; we'll just go with the running Perl's version
+($version,$patch) = $] =~ /^(.{5})(\d{2})?/ unless $version;
+$DEF_RELEASE = "perl $version";
+$DEF_RELEASE .= ", patch $patch" if $patch;
+
+
+sub makedate {
+ my $secs = shift;
+ my ($sec,$min,$hour,$mday,$mon,$year,$wday,$yday,$isdst) = localtime($secs);
+ my $mname = (qw{Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec})[$mon];
+ $year += 1900;
+ return "$mday/$mname/$year";
+}
-$CFont = 'CW';
-if ($ARGV[0] =~ s/-fc(.*)//) {
- shift;
- $CFont = $1 || shift;
+use Getopt::Long;
+
+$DEF_SECTION = 1;
+$DEF_CENTER = "User Contributed Perl Documentation";
+$STD_CENTER = "Perl Programmers Reference Guide";
+$DEF_FIXED = 'CW';
+$DEF_LAX = 0;
+
+sub usage {
+ warn "$0: @_\n" if @_;
+ die <<EOF;
+usage: $0 [options] podpage
+Options are:
+ --section=manext (default "$DEF_SECTION")
+ --release=relpatch (default "$DEF_RELEASE")
+ --center=string (default "$DEF_CENTER")
+ --date=string (default "$DEF_DATE")
+ --fixed=font (default "$DEF_FIXED")
+ --official (default NOT)
+ --lax (default NOT)
+EOF
}
+$uok = GetOptions( qw(
+ section=s
+ release=s
+ center=s
+ date=s
+ fixed=s
+ official
+ lax
+ help));
+
+$DEF_DATE = makedate((stat($ARGV[0]))[9] || time());
+
+usage("Usage error!") unless $uok;
+usage() if $opt_help;
+usage("Need one and only one podpage argument") unless @ARGV == 1;
+
+$section = $opt_section || ($ARGV[0] =~ /\.pm$/
+ ? $DEF_PM_SECTION : $DEF_SECTION);
+$RP = $opt_release || $DEF_RELEASE;
+$center = $opt_center || ($opt_official ? $STD_CENTER : $DEF_CENTER);
+$lax = $opt_lax || $DEF_LAX;
+
+$CFont = $opt_fixed || $DEF_FIXED;
+
if (length($CFont) == 2) {
$CFont_embed = "\\f($CFont";
-}
+}
elsif (length($CFont) == 1) {
$CFont_embed = "\\f$CFont";
-}
+}
else {
- die "Roff font should be 1 or 2 chars, not `$CFont_embed'";
-}
+ die "roff font should be 1 or 2 chars, not `$CFont_embed'";
+}
-$name = @ARGV ? $ARGV[0] : "something";
-$name =~ s/\..*//;
+$date = $opt_date || $DEF_DATE;
+
+for (qw{NAME DESCRIPTION}) {
+# for (qw{NAME DESCRIPTION AUTHOR}) {
+ $wanna_see{$_}++;
+}
+$wanna_see{SYNOPSIS}++ if $section =~ /^3/;
+
+
+$name = @ARGV ? $ARGV[0] : "<STDIN>";
+$Filename = $name;
+if ($section =~ /^1/) {
+ require File::Basename;
+ $name = uc File::Basename::basename($name);
+}
+$name =~ s/\.(pod|p[lm])$//i;
+
+# Lose everything up to the first of
+# */lib/*perl* standard or site_perl module
+# */*perl*/lib from -D prefix=/opt/perl
+# */*perl*/ random module hierarchy
+# which works.
+$name =~ s-//+-/-g;
+if ($name =~ s-^.*?/lib/[^/]*perl[^/]*/--i
+ or $name =~ s-^.*?/[^/]*perl[^/]*/lib/--i
+ or $name =~ s-^.*?/[^/]*perl[^/]*/--i) {
+ # Lose ^site(_perl)?/.
+ $name =~ s-^site(_perl)?/--;
+ # Lose ^arch/. (XXX should we use Config? Just for archname?)
+ $name =~ s~^(.*-$^O|$^O-.*)/~~o;
+ # Lose ^version/.
+ $name =~ s-^\d+\.\d+/--;
+}
+
+# Translate Getopt/Long to Getopt::Long, etc.
+$name =~ s(/)(::)g;
+
+if ($name ne 'something') {
+ FCHECK: {
+ open(F, "< $ARGV[0]") || die "can't open $ARGV[0]: $!";
+ while (<F>) {
+ next unless /^=\b/;
+ if (/^=head1\s+NAME\s*$/) { # an /m would forgive mistakes
+ $_ = <F>;
+ unless (/\s*-+\s+/) {
+ $oops++;
+ warn "$0: Improper man page - no dash in NAME header in paragraph $. of $ARGV[0]\n"
+ } else {
+ my @n = split /\s+-+\s+/;
+ if (@n != 2) {
+ $oops++;
+ warn "$0: Improper man page - malformed NAME header in paragraph $. of $ARGV[0]\n"
+ }
+ else {
+ %namedesc = @n;
+ }
+ }
+ last FCHECK;
+ }
+ next if /^=cut\b/; # DB_File and Net::Ping have =cut before NAME
+ next if /^=pod\b/; # It is OK to have =pod before NAME
+ die "$0: Invalid man page - 1st pod line is not NAME in $ARGV[0]\n" unless $lax;
+ }
+ die "$0: Invalid man page - no documentation in $ARGV[0]\n" unless $lax;
+ }
+ close F;
+}
print <<"END";
.rn '' }`
''' \$RCSfile\$\$Revision\$\$Date\$
-'''
+'''
''' \$Log\$
-'''
+'''
.de Sh
.br
.if t .Sp
.tr \\(*W-|\\(bv\\*(Tr
.ie n \\{\\
.ds -- \\(*W-
+.ds PI pi
.if (\\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \\(*W\\h'-12u'\\(*W\\h'-12u'-\\" diablo 10 pitch
.if (\\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \\(*W\\h'-12u'\\(*W\\h'-8u'-\\" diablo 12 pitch
.ds L" ""
.ds R" ""
+''' \\*(M", \\*(S", \\*(N" and \\*(T" are the equivalent of
+''' \\*(L" and \\*(R", except that they are used on ".xx" lines,
+''' such as .IP and .SH, which do another additional levels of
+''' double-quote interpretation
+.ds M" """
+.ds S" """
+.ds N" """""
+.ds T" """""
.ds L' '
.ds R' '
+.ds M' '
+.ds S' '
+.ds N' '
+.ds T' '
'br\\}
.el\\{\\
.ds -- \\(em\\|
.tr \\*(Tr
.ds L" ``
.ds R" ''
+.ds M" ``
+.ds S" ''
+.ds N" ``
+.ds T" ''
.ds L' `
.ds R' '
-.if t .ds PI \\(*p
-.if n .ds PI PI
+.ds M' `
+.ds S' '
+.ds N' `
+.ds T' '
+.ds PI \\(*p
'br\\}
-.TH \U$name\E 1 "\\*(RP"
+END
+
+print <<'END';
+.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate
+.\" index entries out stderr for the following things:
+.\" TH Title
+.\" SH Header
+.\" Sh Subsection
+.\" Ip Item
+.\" X<> Xref (embedded
+.\" Of course, you have to process the output yourself
+.\" in some meaninful fashion.
+.if \nF \{
+.de IX
+.tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2"
+..
+.nr % 0
+.rr F
+.\}
+END
+
+print <<"END";
+.TH $name $section "$date" "$RP" "$center"
.UC
END
+push(@Indices, qq{.IX Title "$name $section"});
+
+while (($name, $desc) = each %namedesc) {
+ for ($name, $desc) { s/^\s+//; s/\s+$//; }
+ push(@Indices, qq(.IX Name "$name - $desc"\n));
+}
+
print <<'END';
-.if n .hy 0
+.if n .hy 0
.if n .na
.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p'
.de CQ \" put $1 in typewriter font
..
.\" @(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2
. \" AM - accent mark definitions
-.bd S B 3
+.bd B 3
. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff
.if n \{\
. ds #H 0
. ds ~ ~
. ds ? ?
. ds ! !
-. ds /
-. ds q
+. ds /
+. ds q
.\}
.if t \{\
. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u"
$indent = 0;
+$begun = "";
+
+# Unrolling [^-=A-Z>]|[A-Z](?!<)|[-=](?![A-Z]<)[\x00-\xFF] gives: // MRE pp 165.
+my $nonest = q{(?x) # Turn on /x mode.
+ (?: # Group
+ [^-=A-Z>]* # Anything that isn't a dash, equal sign or
+ # closing hook isn't special. Eat as much as
+ # we can.
+ (?: # Group.
+ (?: # Group.
+ [-=] # We want to recognize -> and =>.
+ (?![A-Z]<) # So, as long as it isn't followed by markup
+ [\x00-\xFF] # anything may follow - and =
+ |
+ [A-Z] # Capitals are fine too,
+ (?!<) # But not if they start markup.
+ ) # End of special sequences.
+ [^-=A-Z>]* # Followed by zero or more non-special chars.
+ )* # And we can repeat this as often as we can.
+ )}; # That's all folks.
+
while (<>) {
if ($cutting) {
next unless /^=/;
$cutting = 0;
}
+ if ($begun) {
+ if (/^=end\s+$begun/) {
+ $begun = "";
+ }
+ elsif ($begun =~ /^(roff|man)$/) {
+ print STDOUT $_;
+ }
+ next;
+ }
chomp;
# Translate verbatim paragraph
$verbatim = 0;
+ if (/^=for\s+(\S+)\s*/s) {
+ if ($1 eq "man" or $1 eq "roff") {
+ print STDOUT $',"\n\n";
+ } else {
+ # ignore unknown for
+ }
+ next;
+ }
+ elsif (/^=begin\s+(\S+)\s*/s) {
+ $begun = $1;
+ if ($1 eq "man" or $1 eq "roff") {
+ print STDOUT $'."\n\n";
+ }
+ next;
+ }
+
# check for things that'll hosed our noremap scheme; affects $_
init_noremap();
# trofficate backslashes; must do it before what happens below
s/\\/noremap('\\e')/ge;
- # first hide the escapes in case we need to
+ # protect leading periods and quotes against *roff
+ # mistaking them for directives
+ s/^(?:[A-Z]<)?[.']/\\&$&/gm;
+
+ # first hide the escapes in case we need to
# intuit something and get it wrong due to fmting
- s/([A-Z]<[^<>]*>)/noremap($1)/ge;
+ 1 while s/([A-Z]<$nonest>)/noremap($1)/ge;
# func() is a reference to a perl function
s{
)
} {I<$1>}gx;
- # func(n) is a reference to a man page
+ # func(n) is a reference to a perl function or a man page
s{
- (\w+)
+ ([:\w]+)
(
- \(
- [^\s,\051]+
- \)
+ \( [^\051]+ \)
)
} {I<$1>\\|$2}gx;
# convert simple variable references
- s/(\s+)([\$\@%][\w:]+)/${1}C<$2>/g;
+ s/(\s+)([\$\@%&*][\w:]+)(?!\()/${1}C<$2>/g;
if (m{ (
[\-\w]+
[^\051]*?
\)
)
- }x && $` !~ /([LCI]<[^<>]*|-)$/ && !/^=\w/)
+ }x && $` !~ /([LCI]<[^<>]*|-)$/ && !/^=\w/)
{
- warn "``$1'' should be a [LCI]<$1> ref";
- }
+ warn "$0: bad option in paragraph $. of $ARGV: ``$1'' should be [LCI]<$1>\n";
+ $oops++;
+ }
while (/(-[a-zA-Z])\b/g && $` !~ /[\w\-]$/) {
- warn "``$1'' should be [CB]<$1> ref";
- }
+ warn "$0: bad option in paragraph $. of $ARGV: ``$1'' should be [CB]<$1>\n";
+ $oops++;
+ }
# put it back so we get the <> processed again;
clear_noremap(0); # 0 means leave the E's
# trofficate backslashes
s/\\/noremap('\\e')/ge;
- }
+ }
# need to hide E<> first; they're processed in clear_noremap
s/(E<[^<>]+>)/noremap($1)/ge;
while ($maxnest-- && /[A-Z]</) {
# can't do C font here
- s/([BI])<([^<>]*)>/font($1) . $2 . font('R')/eg;
+ s/([BI])<($nonest)>/font($1) . $2 . font('R')/eg;
# files and filelike refs in italics
- s/F<([^<>]*)>/I<$1>/g;
+ s/F<($nonest)>/I<$1>/g;
# no break -- usually we want C<> for this
- s/S<([^<>]*)>/nobreak($1)/eg;
+ s/S<($nonest)>/nobreak($1)/eg;
+
+ # LREF: a la HREF L<show this text|man/section>
+ s:L<([^|>]+)\|[^>]+>:$1:g;
- # LREF: a manpage(3f)
+ # LREF: a manpage(3f)
s:L<([a-zA-Z][^\s\/]+)(\([^\)]+\))?>:the I<$1>$2 manpage:g;
# LREF: an =item on another manpage
s{
L<
(?:
- ([a-zA-Z]\S+?) /
+ ([a-zA-Z]\S+?) /
)?
"?(.*?)"?
>
$1 # if no $1, assume it means on this page.
? "the section on I<$2> in the I<$1> manpage"
: "the section on I<$2>"
- }
- }gex;
+ }
+ }gesx; # s in case it goes over multiple lines, so . matches \n
s/Z<>/\\&/g;
# comes last because not subject to reprocessing
- s/C<([^<>]*)>/noremap("${CFont_embed}${1}\\fR")/eg;
+ s/C<($nonest)>/noremap("${CFont_embed}${1}\\fR")/eg;
}
if (s/^=//) {
($Cmd, $_) = split(' ', $_, 2);
+ $dotlevel = 1;
+ if ($Cmd eq 'head1') {
+ $dotlevel = 1;
+ }
+ elsif ($Cmd eq 'head2') {
+ $dotlevel = 1;
+ }
+ elsif ($Cmd eq 'item') {
+ $dotlevel = 2;
+ }
+
if (defined $_) {
- &escapes;
+ &escapes($dotlevel);
s/"/""/g;
}
$cutting = 1;
}
elsif ($Cmd eq 'head1') {
- print qq{.SH "$_"\n}
+ s/\s+$//;
+ delete $wanna_see{$_} if exists $wanna_see{$_};
+ print qq{.SH "$_"\n};
+ push(@Indices, qq{.IX Header "$_"\n});
}
elsif ($Cmd eq 'head2') {
- print qq{.Sh "$_"\n}
+ print qq{.Sh "$_"\n};
+ push(@Indices, qq{.IX Subsection "$_"\n});
}
elsif ($Cmd eq 'over') {
push(@indent,$indent);
- $indent = $_ + 0;
+ $indent += ($_ + 0) || 5;
}
elsif ($Cmd eq 'back') {
$indent = pop(@indent);
- warn "Unmatched =back\n" unless defined $indent;
+ warn "$0: Unmatched =back in paragraph $. of $ARGV\n" unless defined $indent;
$needspace = 1;
}
elsif ($Cmd eq 'item') {
s/^\*( |$)/\\(bu$1/g;
+ # if you know how to get ":s please do
+ s/\\\*\(L"([^"]+?)\\\*\(R"/'$1'/g;
+ s/\\\*\(L"([^"]+?)""/'$1'/g;
+ s/[^"]""([^"]+?)""[^"]/'$1'/g;
+ # here do something about the $" in perlvar?
print STDOUT qq{.Ip "$_" $indent\n};
+ push(@Indices, qq{.IX Item "$_"\n});
}
+ elsif ($Cmd eq 'pod') {
+ # this is just a comment
+ }
else {
- warn "Unrecognized directive: $Cmd\n";
+ warn "$0: Unrecognized pod directive in paragraph $. of $ARGV: $Cmd\n";
}
}
else {
if ($needspace) {
&makespace;
}
- &escapes;
+ &escapes(0);
clear_noremap(1);
print $_, "\n";
$needspace = 1;
.rn }` ''
END
+if (%wanna_see && !$lax) {
+ @missing = keys %wanna_see;
+ warn "$0: $Filename is missing required section"
+ . (@missing > 1 && "s")
+ . ": @missing\n";
+ $oops++;
+}
+
+foreach (@Indices) { print "$_\n"; }
+
+exit;
+#exit ($oops != 0);
+
#########################################################################
sub nobreak {
}
sub escapes {
+ my $indot = shift;
+
+ s/X<(.*?)>/mkindex($1)/ge;
# translate the minus in foo-bar into foo\-bar for roff
s/([^0-9a-z-])-([^-])/$1\\-$2/g;
s/([^"])--"/$1\\*(--"/g;
# fix up quotes; this is somewhat tricky
+ my $dotmacroL = 'L';
+ my $dotmacroR = 'R';
+ if ( $indot == 1 ) {
+ $dotmacroL = 'M';
+ $dotmacroR = 'S';
+ }
+ elsif ( $indot >= 2 ) {
+ $dotmacroL = 'N';
+ $dotmacroR = 'T';
+ }
if (!/""/) {
- s/(^|\s)(['"])/noremap("$1\\*(L$2")/ge;
- s/(['"])($|[\-\s,;\\!?.])/noremap("\\*(R$1$2")/ge;
+ s/(^|\s)(['"])/noremap("$1\\*($dotmacroL$2")/ge;
+ s/(['"])($|[\-\s,;\\!?.])/noremap("\\*($dotmacroR$1$2")/ge;
}
#s/(?!")(?:.)--(?!")(?:.)/\\*(--/g;
#s/(?:(?!")(?:.)--(?:"))|(?:(?:")--(?!")(?:.))/\\*(--/g;
-
+
# make sure that func() keeps a bit a space tween the parens
### s/\b\(\)/\\|()/g;
# make double underbars have a little tiny space between them
s/__/_\\|_/g;
- # PI goes to \*(-- (defined above)
+ # PI goes to \*(PI (defined above)
s/\bPI\b/noremap('\\*(PI')/ge;
# make all caps a teeny bit smaller, but don't muck with embedded code literals
(
\b[A-Z]{2,}[\/A-Z+:\-\d_\$]*\b
)
- } {
+ } {
$1 . noremap( '\\s-1' . $2 . '\\s0' )
}egmox;
# make troff just be normal, but make small nroff get quoted
# decided to just put the quotes in the text; sigh;
sub ccvt {
- local($_,$prev) = @_;
- if ( /^\W+$/ && !/^\$./ ) {
- ($prev && "\n") . noremap(qq{.CQ $_ \n\\&});
- # what about $" ?
- } else {
- noremap(qq{${CFont_embed}$_\\fR});
- }
+ local($_,$prev) = @_;
noremap(qq{.CQ "$_" \n\\&});
-}
+}
sub makespace {
if ($indent) {
}
}
+sub mkindex {
+ my ($entry) = @_;
+ my @entries = split m:\s*/\s*:, $entry;
+ push @Indices, ".IX Xref " . join ' ', map {qq("$_")} @entries;
+ return '';
+}
+
sub font {
local($font) = shift;
return '\\f' . noremap($font);
-}
+}
sub noremap {
local($thing_to_hide) = shift;
$thing_to_hide =~ tr/\000-\177/\200-\377/;
return $thing_to_hide;
-}
+}
sub init_noremap {
- if ( /[\200-\377]/ ) {
- warn "hit bit char in input stream";
- }
-}
+ # escape high bit characters in input stream
+ s/([\200-\377])/"E<".ord($1).">"/ge;
+}
sub clear_noremap {
my $ready_to_print = $_[0];
# otherwise the interative \w<> processing would have
# been hosed by the E<gt>
s {
- E<
- ( [A-Za-z]+ )
+ E<
+ (
+ ( \d + )
+ | ( [A-Za-z]+ )
+ )
>
- } {
- do {
- exists $HTML_Escapes{$1}
- ? do { $HTML_Escapes{$1} }
+ } {
+ do {
+ defined $2
+ ? chr($2)
+ :
+ exists $HTML_Escapes{$3}
+ ? do { $HTML_Escapes{$3} }
: do {
- warn "Unknown escape: $& in $_";
+ warn "$0: Unknown escape in paragraph $. of $ARGV: ``$&''\n";
"E<$1>";
- }
- }
+ }
+ }
}egx if $ready_to_print;
-}
+}
sub internal_lrefs {
local($_) = shift;
+ local $trailing_and = s/and\s+$// ? "and " : "";
s{L</([^>]+)>}{$1}g;
my(@items) = split( /(?:,?\s+(?:and\s+)?)/ );
$retstr .= "C<$items[$i]>";
$retstr .= ", " if @items > 2 && $i != $#items;
$retstr .= " and " if $i+2 == @items;
- }
+ }
$retstr .= " entr" . ( @items > 1 ? "ies" : "y" )
. " elsewhere in this document";
+ # terminal space to avoid words running together (pattern used
+ # strips terminal spaces)
+ $retstr .= " " if length $trailing_and;
+ $retstr .= $trailing_and;
return $retstr;
-}
+}
BEGIN {
%HTML_Escapes = (
"yuml" => "y\\*:", # small y, dieresis or umlaut mark
);
}
+
!NO!SUBS!
close OUT or die "Can't close $file: $!";
chmod 0755, $file or die "Can't reset permissions for $file: $!\n";
exec("$Config{'eunicefix'} $file") if $Config{'eunicefix'} ne ':';
+chdir $origdir;