| .\" (C) Copyright 1992-1999 Rickard E. Faith and David A. Wheeler |
| .\" (faith@cs.unc.edu and dwheeler@ida.org) |
| .\" and (C) Copyright 2007 Michael Kerrisk <mtk.manpages@gmail.com> |
| .\" |
| .\" Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this |
| .\" manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are |
| .\" preserved on all copies. |
| .\" |
| .\" Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this |
| .\" manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the |
| .\" entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a |
| .\" permission notice identical to this one. |
| .\" |
| .\" Since the Linux kernel and libraries are constantly changing, this |
| .\" manual page may be incorrect or out-of-date. The author(s) assume no |
| .\" responsibility for errors or omissions, or for damages resulting from |
| .\" the use of the information contained herein. The author(s) may not |
| .\" have taken the same level of care in the production of this manual, |
| .\" which is licensed free of charge, as they might when working |
| .\" professionally. |
| .\" |
| .\" Formatted or processed versions of this manual, if unaccompanied by |
| .\" the source, must acknowledge the copyright and authors of this work. |
| .\" |
| .\" 2007-05-30 created by mtk, using text from old man.7 plus |
| .\" rewrites and additional text. |
| .\" |
| .TH MAN-PAGES 7 2013-01-17 "Linux" "Linux Programmer's Manual" |
| .SH NAME |
| man-pages \- conventions for writing Linux man pages |
| .SH SYNOPSIS |
| .B man |
| .RI [ section ] |
| .I title |
| .SH DESCRIPTION |
| This page describes the conventions that should be employed |
| when writing man pages for the Linux \fIman-pages\fP project, |
| which comprises Sections 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7 of the Linux manual pages. |
| The conventions described on this page may also be useful |
| for authors writing man pages for other projects. |
| .SS Sections of the Manual Pages |
| .PP |
| The manual Sections are traditionally defined as follows: |
| .TP 10 |
| .B 1 Commands (Programs) |
| Those commands that can be executed by the user from within |
| a shell. |
| .TP |
| .B 2 System calls |
| Those functions which must be performed by the kernel. |
| .TP |
| .B 3 Library calls |
| Most of the |
| .I libc |
| functions. |
| .TP |
| .B 4 Special files (devices) |
| Files found in |
| .IR /dev . |
| .TP |
| .B 5 File formats and conventions |
| The format for |
| .I /etc/passwd |
| and other human-readable files. |
| .TP |
| .B 6 Games |
| .TP |
| .B 7 Overview, conventions, and miscellaneous |
| Overviews of various topics, conventions and protocols, |
| character set standards, and miscellaneous other things. |
| .TP |
| .B 8 System management commands |
| Commands like |
| .BR mount (8), |
| many of which only root can execute. |
| .\" .TP |
| .\" .B 9 Kernel routines |
| .\" This is an obsolete manual section. |
| .\" Once it was thought a good idea to document the Linux kernel here, |
| .\" but in fact very little has been documented, and the documentation |
| .\" that exists is outdated already. |
| .\" There are better sources of |
| .\" information for kernel developers. |
| .SS Macro package |
| New manual pages should be marked up using the |
| .B groff an.tmac |
| package described in |
| .BR man (7). |
| This choice is mainly for consistency: the vast majority of |
| existing Linux manual pages are marked up using these macros. |
| .SS Conventions for source file layout |
| Please limit source code line length to no more than about 75 characters |
| wherever possible. |
| This helps avoid line-wrapping in some mail clients when patches are |
| submitted inline. |
| |
| New sentences should be started on new lines. |
| This makes it easier to see the effect of patches, |
| which often operate at the level of individual sentences. |
| .SS Title line |
| The first command in a man page should be a \fBTH\fP command: |
| .RS |
| .sp |
| .B \&.TH |
| .I "title section date source manual" |
| .sp |
| .RE |
| where: |
| .RS |
| .TP 10 |
| .I title |
| The title of the man page, written in all caps (e.g., |
| .IR MAN-PAGES ). |
| .TP |
| .I section |
| The section number in which the man page should be placed (e.g., |
| .IR 7 ). |
| .TP |
| .I date |
| The date of the last revision\(emremember to change this every time a |
| change is made to the man page, |
| since this is the most general way of doing version control. |
| Dates should be written in the form YYYY-MM-DD. |
| .TP |
| .I source |
| The source of the command, function, or system call. |
| |
| For those few \fIman-pages\fP pages in Sections 1 and 8, |
| probably you just want to write |
| .IR GNU . |
| |
| For system calls, just write |
| .IR "Linux" . |
| (An earlier practice was to write the version number |
| of the kernel from which the manual page was being written/checked. |
| However, this was never done consistently, and so was |
| probably worse than including no version number. |
| Henceforth, avoid including a version number.) |
| |
| For library calls that are part of glibc or one of the |
| other common GNU libraries, just use |
| .IR "GNU C Library" ", " GNU , |
| or an empty string. |
| |
| For Section 4 pages, use |
| .IR "Linux" . |
| |
| In cases of doubt, just write |
| .IR Linux ", or " GNU . |
| .TP |
| .I manual |
| The title of the manual (e.g., for Section 2 and 3 pages in |
| the \fIman-pages\fP package, use |
| .IR "Linux Programmer's Manual" ). |
| .RE |
| .SS Sections within a manual page |
| The list below shows conventional or suggested sections. |
| Most manual pages should include at least the |
| .B highlighted |
| sections. |
| Arrange a new manual page so that sections |
| are placed in the order shown in the list. |
| .in +0.5i |
| .nf |
| |
| \fBNAME\fP |
| \fBSYNOPSIS\fP |
| CONFIGURATION [Normally only in Section 4] |
| \fBDESCRIPTION\fP |
| OPTIONS [Normally only in Sections 1, 8] |
| EXIT STATUS [Normally only in Sections 1, 8] |
| RETURN VALUE [Normally only in Sections 2, 3] |
| .\" May 07: Few current man pages have an ERROR HANDLING section,,, |
| .\" ERROR HANDLING, |
| ERRORS [Typically only in Sections 2, 3] |
| .\" May 07: Almost no current man pages have a USAGE section,,, |
| .\" USAGE, |
| .\" DIAGNOSTICS, |
| .\" May 07: Almost no current man pages have a SECURITY section,,, |
| .\" SECURITY, |
| ENVIRONMENT |
| FILES |
| VERSIONS [Normally only in Sections 2, 3] |
| CONFORMING TO |
| NOTES |
| BUGS |
| EXAMPLE |
| .\" AUTHORS sections are discouraged |
| .\" AUTHORS [Discouraged] |
| \fBSEE ALSO\fP |
| |
| .fi |
| .in |
| .IR "Where a traditional heading would apply" ", " "please use it" ; |
| this kind of consistency can make the information easier to understand. |
| If you must, you can create your own |
| headings if they make things easier to understand (this can |
| be especially useful for pages in Sections 4 and 5). |
| However, before doing this, consider whether you could use the |
| traditional headings, with some subsections (\fI.SS\fP) within |
| those sections. |
| |
| The following list elaborates on the contents of each of |
| the above sections. |
| .TP 14 |
| .B NAME |
| The name of this manual page. |
| See |
| .BR man (7) |
| for important details of the line(s) that should follow the |
| \fB.SH NAME\fP command. |
| All words in this line (including the word immediately |
| following the "\\\-") should be in lowercase, |
| except where English or technical terminological convention |
| dictates otherwise. |
| .TP |
| .B SYNOPSIS |
| briefly describes the command or function's interface. |
| For commands, this shows the syntax of the command and its arguments |
| (including options); |
| boldface is used for as-is text and italics are used to |
| indicate replaceable arguments. |
| Brackets ([]) surround optional arguments, vertical bars (|) |
| separate choices, and ellipses (\&...) can be repeated. |
| For functions, it shows any required data declarations or |
| .B #include |
| directives, followed by the function declaration. |
| |
| Where a feature test macro must be defined in order to obtain |
| the declaration of a function (or a variable) from a header file, |
| then the SYNOPSIS should indicate this, as described in |
| .BR feature_test_macros (7). |
| .\" FIXME . Say something here about compiler options |
| .TP |
| .B CONFIGURATION |
| Configuration details for a device. |
| This section normally only appears in Section 4 pages. |
| .TP |
| .B DESCRIPTION |
| gives an explanation of what the program, function, or format does. |
| Discuss how it interacts with files and standard input, and what it |
| produces on standard output or standard error. |
| Omit internals and implementation details unless they're critical for |
| understanding the interface. |
| Describe the usual case; |
| for information on command-line options of a program use the |
| .B OPTIONS |
| section. |
| .\" If there is some kind of input grammar or complex set of subcommands, |
| .\" consider describing them in a separate |
| .\" .B USAGE |
| .\" section (and just place an overview in the |
| .\" .B DESCRIPTION |
| .\" section). |
| .TP |
| .B OPTIONS |
| describes the command-line options accepted by a |
| program and how they change its behavior. |
| This section should only appear for Section 1 and 8 manual pages. |
| .\" .TP |
| .\" .B USAGE |
| .\" describes the grammar of any sublanguage this implements. |
| .TP |
| .B EXIT STATUS |
| lists the possible exit status values of a program and |
| the conditions that cause these values to be returned. |
| This section should only appear for Section 1 and 8 manual pages. |
| .TP |
| .B RETURN VALUE |
| For Section 2 and 3 pages, this section gives a |
| list of the values the library routine will return to the caller |
| and the conditions that cause these values to be returned. |
| .TP |
| .B ERRORS |
| For Section 2 and 3 manual pages, this is a list of the |
| values that may be placed in |
| .I errno |
| in the event of an error, along with information about the cause |
| of the errors. |
| .IR "The error list should be in alphabetical order" . |
| .TP |
| .B ENVIRONMENT |
| lists all environment variables that affect the program or function |
| and how they affect it. |
| .TP |
| .B FILES |
| lists the files the program or function uses, such as |
| configuration files, startup files, |
| and files the program directly operates on. |
| Give the full pathname of these files, and use the installation |
| process to modify the directory part to match user preferences. |
| For many programs, the default installation location is in |
| .IR /usr/local , |
| so your base manual page should use |
| .I /usr/local |
| as the base. |
| .\" May 07: Almost no current man pages have a DIAGNOSTICS section; |
| .\" "RETURN VALUE" or "EXIT STATUS" is preferred. |
| .\" .TP |
| .\" .B DIAGNOSTICS |
| .\" gives an overview of the most common error messages and how to |
| .\" cope with them. |
| .\" You don't need to explain system error messages |
| .\" or fatal signals that can appear during execution of any program |
| .\" unless they're special in some way to the program. |
| .\" |
| .\" May 07: Almost no current man pages have a SECURITY section. |
| .\".TP |
| .\".B SECURITY |
| .\"discusses security issues and implications. |
| .\"Warn about configurations or environments that should be avoided, |
| .\"commands that may have security implications, and so on, especially |
| .\"if they aren't obvious. |
| .\"Discussing security in a separate section isn't necessary; |
| .\"if it's easier to understand, place security information in the |
| .\"other sections (such as the |
| .\" .B DESCRIPTION |
| .\" or |
| .\" .B USAGE |
| .\" section). |
| .\" However, please include security information somewhere! |
| .TP |
| .B VERSIONS |
| A brief summary of the Linux kernel or glibc versions where a |
| system call or library function appeared, |
| or changed significantly in its operation. |
| As a general rule, every new interface should |
| include a VERSIONS section in its manual page. |
| Unfortunately, |
| many existing manual pages don't include this information |
| (since there was no policy to do so when they were written). |
| Patches to remedy this are welcome, |
| but, from the perspective of programmers writing new code, |
| this information probably only matters in the case of kernel |
| interfaces that have been added in Linux 2.4 or later |
| (i.e., changes since kernel 2.2), |
| and library functions that have been added to glibc since version 2.1 |
| (i.e., changes since glibc 2.0). |
| |
| The |
| .BR syscalls (2) |
| manual page also provides information about kernel versions |
| in which various system calls first appeared. |
| .TP |
| .B CONFORMING TO |
| describes any standards or conventions that relate to the function |
| or command described by the manual page. |
| For a page in Section 2 or 3, |
| this section should note the POSIX.1 |
| version(s) that the call conforms to, |
| and also whether the call is specified in C99. |
| (Don't worry too much about other standards like SUS, SUSv2, and XPG, |
| or the SVr4 and 4.xBSD implementation standards, |
| unless the call was specified in those standards, |
| but isn't in the current version of POSIX.1.) |
| (See |
| .BR standards (7).) |
| |
| If the call is not governed by any standards but commonly |
| exists on other systems, note them. |
| If the call is Linux-specific, note this. |
| |
| If this section consists of just a list of standards |
| (which it commonly does), |
| terminate the list with a period (\(aq.\(aq). |
| .TP |
| .B NOTES |
| provides miscellaneous notes. |
| For Section 2 and 3 man pages you may find it useful to include |
| subsections (\fBSS\fP) named \fILinux Notes\fP and \fIGlibc Notes\fP. |
| .TP |
| .B BUGS |
| lists limitations, known defects or inconveniences, |
| and other questionable activities. |
| .TP |
| .B EXAMPLE |
| provides one or more examples describing how this function, file or |
| command is used. |
| For details on writing example programs, |
| see \fIExample Programs\fP below. |
| .TP |
| .B AUTHORS |
| lists authors of the documentation or program. |
| \fBUse of an AUTHORS section is strongly discouraged\fP. |
| Generally, it is better not to clutter every page with a list |
| of (over time potentially numerous) authors; |
| if you write or significantly amend a page, |
| add a copyright notice as a comment in the source file. |
| If you are the author of a device driver and want to include |
| an address for reporting bugs, place this under the BUGS section. |
| .TP |
| .B SEE ALSO |
| provides a comma-separated list of related man pages, |
| ordered by section number and |
| then alphabetically by name, possibly followed by |
| other related pages or documents. |
| Do not terminate this with a period. |
| .IP |
| Where the SEE ALSO list contains many long manual page names, |
| to improve the visual result of the output, it may be useful to employ the |
| .I .ad l |
| (don't right justify) |
| and |
| .I .nh |
| (don't hyphenate) |
| directives. |
| Hyphenation of individual page names can be prevented |
| by preceding words with the string "\\%". |
| .SS Font conventions |
| .PP |
| For functions, the arguments are always specified using italics, |
| .IR "even in the SYNOPSIS section" , |
| where the rest of the function is specified in bold: |
| .PP |
| .BI " int myfunction(int " argc ", char **" argv ); |
| .PP |
| Variable names should, like argument names, be specified in italics. |
| .PP |
| Filenames (whether pathnames, or references to files in the |
| .I /usr/include |
| directory) |
| are always in italics (e.g., |
| .IR <stdio.h> ), |
| except in the SYNOPSIS section, where included files are in bold (e.g., |
| .BR "#include <stdio.h>" ). |
| When referring to a standard include file under |
| .IR /usr/include , |
| specify the header file surrounded by angle brackets, |
| in the usual C way (e.g., |
| .IR <stdio.h> ). |
| .PP |
| Special macros, which are usually in upper case, are in bold (e.g., |
| .BR MAXINT ). |
| Exception: don't boldface NULL. |
| .PP |
| When enumerating a list of error codes, the codes are in bold (this list |
| usually uses the |
| .B \&.TP |
| macro). |
| .PP |
| Complete commands should, if long, |
| be written as in an indented line on their own, for example |
| .in +4n |
| .nf |
| |
| man 7 man-pages |
| |
| .fi |
| .in |
| If the command is short, then it can be included inline in the text, |
| in italic format, for example, |
| .IR "man 7 man-pages" . |
| In this case, it may be worth using nonbreaking spaces |
| ("\e\ ") at suitable places in the command. |
| Command options should be written in italics, e.g., |
| .IR \-l . |
| .PP |
| Expressions, if not written on a separate indented line, should |
| be specified in italics. |
| Again, the use of nonbreaking spaces may be appropriate |
| if the expression is inlined with normal text. |
| .PP |
| Any reference to the subject of the current manual page |
| should be written with the name in bold. |
| If the subject is a function (i.e., this is a Section 2 or 3 page), |
| then the name should be followed by a pair of parentheses |
| in Roman (normal) font. |
| For example, in the |
| .BR fcntl (2) |
| man page, references to the subject of the page would be written as: |
| .BR fcntl (). |
| The preferred way to write this in the source file is: |
| .nf |
| |
| .BR fcntl () |
| |
| .fi |
| (Using this format, rather than the use of "\\fB...\\fP()" |
| makes it easier to write tools that parse man page source files.) |
| .PP |
| Any reference to another man page |
| should be written with the name in bold, |
| \fIalways\fP followed by the section number, |
| formatted in Roman (normal) font, without any |
| separating spaces (e.g., |
| .BR intro (2)). |
| The preferred way to write this in the source file is: |
| .nf |
| |
| .BR intro (2) |
| |
| .fi |
| (Including the section number in cross references lets tools like |
| .BR man2html (1) |
| create properly hyperlinked pages.) |
| .SS Spelling |
| Starting with release 2.59, |
| .I man-pages |
| follows American spelling conventions; |
| please write all new pages and patches according to these conventions. |
| .SS Example Programs and Shell Sessions |
| Manual pages can include example programs demonstrating how to |
| use a system call or library function. |
| However, note the following: |
| .TP 3 |
| * |
| Example programs should be written in C. |
| .TP |
| * |
| An example program is only necessary and useful if it demonstrates |
| something beyond what can easily be provided in a textual |
| description of the interface. |
| An example program that does nothing |
| other than call an interface usually serves little purpose. |
| .TP |
| * |
| Example programs should be fairly short (preferably less than 100 lines; |
| ideally less than 50 lines). |
| .TP |
| * |
| Example programs should do error checking after system calls and |
| library function calls. |
| .TP |
| * |
| Example programs should be complete, and compile without |
| warnings when compiled with \fIcc\ \-Wall\fP. |
| .TP |
| * |
| Where possible and appropriate, example programs should allow |
| experimentation, by varying their behavior based on inputs |
| (ideally from command-line arguments, or alternatively, via |
| input read by the program). |
| .TP |
| * |
| Example programs should be laid out according to Kernighan and |
| Ritchie style, with 4-space indents. |
| (Avoid the use of TAB characters in source code!) |
| .PP |
| For some examples of what example programs should look like, see |
| .BR wait (2) |
| and |
| .BR pipe (2). |
| |
| If you include a shell session demonstrating the use of a program |
| or other system feature, boldface the user input text, |
| to distinguish it from output produced by the system. |
| .SS Indentation of structure definitions, shell session logs, etc. |
| When structure definitions, shell session logs, and so on are included |
| in running text, indent them by 4 spaces (i.e., a block enclosed by |
| .I ".in\ +4n" |
| and |
| .IR ".in" ). |
| .SH EXAMPLE |
| For canonical examples of how man pages in the |
| .I man-pages |
| package should look, see |
| .BR pipe (2) |
| and |
| .BR fcntl (2). |
| .SH SEE ALSO |
| .BR man (1), |
| .BR man2html (1), |
| .BR groff (7), |
| .BR groff_man (7), |
| .BR man (7), |
| .BR mdoc (7) |