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docbook2man(1) |
docbook2X |
docbook2man(1) |
docbook2man - Convert DocBook to man pages
docbook2man
[options] xml-document
docbook2man converts the given DocBook XML document into man pages. By
default, the man pages will be output to the current directory.
Only the refentry content in the DocBook document is converted.
(To convert content outside of a refentry, stylesheet customization is
required. See the docbook2X package for details.)
The docbook2man command is a wrapper script for a two-step
conversion process. See the section “CONVERSION PROCESS” below
for details.
The available options are essentially the union of the options from
db2x_xsltproc(1) and db2x_manxml(1).
Some commonly-used options are listed below:
- --encoding=encoding
- Sets the character encoding of the output.
- --string-param parameter=value
- Sets a stylesheet parameter (options that affect how the output looks).
See “Stylesheet parameters” below for the parameters that
can be set.
- --sgml
- Accept an SGML source document as input instead of XML.
- --solinks
- Make stub pages for alternate names for an output man page.
- uppercase-headings
- Brief. Make headings uppercase?
Default setting. 1 (boolean true)
Headings in man page content should be or should not be
uppercased.
- manvolnum-cite-numeral-only
- Brief. Man page section citation should use only the number
Default setting. 1 (boolean true)
When citing other man pages, the man-page section is either
given as is, or has the letters stripped from it, citing only the number
of the section (e.g. section 3x becomes 3). This option specifies which
style.
- quotes-on-literals
- Brief. Display quotes on literal elements?
Default setting. 0 (boolean false)
If true, render literal elements with quotes around them.
- show-comments
- Brief. Display comment elements?
Default setting. 1 (boolean true)
If true, comments will be displayed, otherwise they are
suppressed. Comments here refers to the comment element, which will be
renamed remark in DocBook V4.0, not XML comments (<-- like this
-->) which are unavailable.
- function-parens
- Brief. Generate parentheses after a function?
Default setting. 0 (boolean false)
If true, the formatting of a <function> element will
include generated parenthesis.
- xref-on-link
- Brief. Should link generate a cross-reference?
Default setting. 1 (boolean true)
Man pages cannot render the hypertext links created by link.
If this option is set, then the stylesheet renders a cross reference to
the target of the link. (This may reduce clutter). Otherwise, only the
content of the link is rendered and the actual link itself is
ignored.
- header-3
- Brief. Third header text
Default setting. (blank)
Specifies the text of the third header of a man page,
typically the date for the man page. If empty, the date content for the
refentry is used.
- header-4
- Brief. Fourth header text
Default setting. (blank)
Specifies the text of the fourth header of a man page. If
empty, the refmiscinfo content for the refentry is used.
- header-5
- Brief. Fifth header text
Default setting. (blank)
Specifies the text of the fifth header of a man page. If
empty, the ‘manual name’, that is, the title of the book
or reference container is used.
- default-manpage-section
- Brief. Default man page section
Default setting. 1
The source document usually indicates the sections that each
man page should belong to (with manvolnum in refmeta). In case the
source document does not indicate man-page sections, this option
specifies the default.
- custom-localization-file
- Brief. URI of XML document containing custom localization data
Default setting. (blank)
This parameter specifies the URI of a XML document that
describes text translations (and other locale-specific information) that
is needed by the stylesheet to process the DocBook document.
The text translations pointed to by this parameter always
override the default text translations (from the internal parameter
localization-file). If a particular translation is not present here, the
corresponding default translation is used as a fallback.
This parameter is primarily for changing certain punctuation
characters used in formatting the source document. The settings for
punctuation characters are often specific to the source document, but
can also be dependent on the locale.
To not use custom text translations, leave this parameter as
the empty string.
- custom-l10n-data
- Brief. XML document containing custom localization data
Default setting.
document($custom-localization-file)
This parameter specifies the XML document that describes text
translations (and other locale-specific information) that is needed by
the stylesheet to process the DocBook document.
This parameter is internal to the stylesheet. To point to an
external XML document with a URI or a file name, you should use the
custom-localization-file parameter instead.
However, inside a custom stylesheet (not on the
command-line) this paramter can be set to the XPath expression
document(''), which will cause the custom translations directly embedded
inside the custom stylesheet to be read.
- author-othername-in-middle
- Brief. Is othername in author a middle name?
Default setting. 1
If true, the othername of an author appears between the
firstname and surname. Otherwise, othername is suppressed.
$ docbook2man --solinks manpages.xml
$ docbook2man --solinks --encoding=utf-8//TRANSLIT manpages.xml
$ docbook2man --string-param header-4="Free Recode 3.6" document.xml
.fi
DocBook documents are converted to man pages in two steps:
- 1.
- The DocBook source is converted by a XSLT stylesheet into an intermediate
XML format, Man-XML.
Man-XML is simpler than DocBook and closer to the man page
format; it is intended to make the stylesheets’ job easier.
The stylesheet for this purpose is in
xslt/man/docbook.xsl. For portability, it should always be
referred to by the following URI:
http://docbook2x.sourceforge.net/latest/xslt/man/docbook.xsl
Run this stylesheet with db2x_xsltproc(1).
Customizing. You can also customize the output by
creating your own XSLT stylesheet — changing parameters or adding
new templates — and importing xslt/man/docbook.xsl.
- 2.
- Man-XML is converted to the actual man pages by
db2x_manxml(1).
The docbook2man command does both steps automatically, but
if any problems occur, you can see the errors more clearly if you do each
step separately:
$ db2x_xsltproc -s man mydoc.xml -o mydoc.mxml
$ db2x_manxml mydoc.mxml
.fi
Options to the conversion stylesheet are described in
the man-pages stylesheets
reference.
Pure XSLT conversion.
An alternative to the db2x_manxml Perl script is the XSLT
stylesheet in
xslt/backend/db2x_manxml.xsl.
This stylesheet performs a similar function
of converting Man-XML to actual man pages.
It is useful if you desire a pure XSLT
solution to man-page conversion.
Of course, the quality of the conversion using this stylesheet
will never be as good as the Perl db2x_manxml,
and it runs slower.
In particular, the pure XSLT version
currently does not support tables in man pages,
but its Perl counterpart does.
When translating XML to legacy ASCII-based formats with poor support for
Unicode, such as man pages and Texinfo, there is always the problem that
Unicode characters in the source document also have to be translated somehow.
A straightforward character set conversion from Unicode does not
suffice, because the target character set, usually US-ASCII or ISO Latin-1,
do not contain common characters such as dashes and directional quotation
marks that are widely used in XML documents. But document formatters (man
and Texinfo) allow such characters to be entered by a markup escape: for
example, \(lq for the left directional quote “. And if a markup-level
escape is not available, an ASCII transliteration might be used: for
example, using the ASCII less-than sign < for the angle quotation mark
⟨.
So the Unicode character problem can be solved in two steps:
- 1.
- utf8trans(1), a program included in docbook2X, maps Unicode
characters to markup-level escapes or transliterations.
Since there is not necessarily a fixed, official mapping of
Unicode characters, utf8trans can read in user-modifiable
character mappings expressed in text files and apply them. (Unlike most
character set converters.)
In charmaps/man/roff.charmap and
charmaps/man/texi.charmap are character maps that may be used for
man-page and Texinfo conversion. The programs db2x_manxml(1) and
db2x_texixml(1) will apply these character maps, or another
character map specified by the user, automatically.
- 2.
- The rest of the Unicode text is converted to some other character set
(encoding). For example, a French document with accented characters (such
as é) might be converted to ISO Latin 1.
This step is applied after utf8trans character mapping,
using the iconv(1) encoding conversion tool. Both
db2x_manxml(1) and db2x_texixml(1) can call
iconv(1) automatically when producing their output.
/usr/local/share/docbook2X/xslt/man/docbook.xsl
/usr/local/share/docbook2X/xslt/backend/db2x_manxml.xsl
/usr/local/share/docbook2X/xslt/catalog.xml
/usr/local/share/docbook2X/charmaps/roff.charmap
/usr/local/share/docbook2X/charmaps/roff.charmap.xml
The above files are distributed and installed by the docbook2X
package.
The docbook2man or the docbook2texi command described in this
manual page come from the docbook2X package. It should not be confused with
the command of the same name from the obsoleted docbook-utils package.
- •
- Internally there is one long pipeline of programs which your document goes
through. If any segment of the pipeline fails (even trivially, like from
mistyped program options), the resulting errors can be difficult to
decipher — in this case, try running the components of docbook2X
separately.
Steve Cheng <stevecheng@users.sourceforge.net>.
db2x_xsltproc(1), db2x_manxml(1), utf8trans(1)
The docbook2X manual (in Texinfo or HTML format) fully describes
how to convert DocBook to man pages and Texinfo.
Up-to-date information about this program can be found at the
docbook2X Web site ⟨http://docbook2x.sourceforge.net/⟩ .
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