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1 .\" $Id: mandoc.1,v 1.261 2022/06/22 17:37:59 schwarze Exp $
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3 .\" Copyright (c) 2012, 2014-2022 Ingo Schwarze <schwarze@openbsd.org>
4 .\" Copyright (c) 2009, 2010, 2011 Kristaps Dzonsons <kristaps@bsd.lv>
5 .\"
6 .\" Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any
7 .\" purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above
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10 .\" THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES
11 .\" WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
12 .\" MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR
13 .\" ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES
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15 .\" ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF
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18 .Dd $Mdocdate: June 22 2022 $
19 .Dt MANDOC 1
20 .Os
21 .Sh NAME
22 .Nm mandoc
23 .Nd format manual pages
24 .Sh SYNOPSIS
25 .Nm mandoc
26 .Op Fl ac
27 .Op Fl I Cm os Ns = Ns Ar name
28 .Op Fl K Ar encoding
29 .Op Fl mdoc | man
30 .Op Fl O Ar options
31 .Op Fl T Ar output
32 .Op Fl W Ar level
33 .Op Ar
34 .Sh DESCRIPTION
35 The
36 .Nm
37 utility formats manual pages for display.
38 .Pp
39 By default,
40 .Nm
41 reads
42 .Xr mdoc 7
43 or
44 .Xr man 7
45 text from stdin and produces
46 .Fl T Cm locale
47 output.
48 .Pp
49 The options are as follows:
50 .Bl -tag -width Ds
51 .It Fl a
52 If the standard output is a terminal device and
53 .Fl c
54 is not specified, use
55 .Xr less 1
56 to paginate the output, just like
57 .Xr man 1
58 would.
59 .It Fl c
60 Copy the formatted manual pages to the standard output without using
61 .Xr less 1
62 to paginate them.
63 This is the default.
64 It can be specified to override
65 .Fl a .
66 .It Fl I Cm os Ns = Ns Ar name
67 Override the default operating system
68 .Ar name
69 for the
70 .Xr mdoc 7
71 .Ic \&Os
72 and for the
73 .Xr man 7
74 .Ic \&TH
75 macro.
76 .It Fl K Ar encoding
77 Specify the input encoding.
78 The supported
79 .Ar encoding
80 arguments are
81 .Cm us-ascii ,
82 .Cm iso-8859-1 ,
83 and
84 .Cm utf-8 .
85 If not specified, autodetection uses the first match in the following
86 list:
87 .Bl -enum
88 .It
89 If the first three bytes of the input file are the UTF-8 byte order
90 mark (BOM, 0xefbbbf), input is interpreted as
91 .Cm utf-8 .
92 .It
93 If the first or second line of the input file matches the
94 .Sy emacs
95 mode line format
96 .Pp
97 .D1 .\e" -*- Oo ...; Oc coding: Ar encoding ; No -*-
98 .Pp
99 then input is interpreted according to
100 .Ar encoding .
101 .It
102 If the first non-ASCII byte in the file introduces a valid UTF-8
103 sequence, input is interpreted as
104 .Cm utf-8 .
105 .It
106 Otherwise, input is interpreted as
107 .Cm iso-8859-1 .
108 .El
109 .It Fl mdoc | man
110 With
111 .Fl mdoc ,
112 all input files are interpreted as
113 .Xr mdoc 7 .
114 With
115 .Fl man ,
116 all input files are interpreted as
117 .Xr man 7 .
118 By default, the input language is automatically detected for each file:
119 if the first macro is
120 .Ic \&Dd
121 or
122 .Ic \&Dt ,
123 the
124 .Xr mdoc 7
125 parser is used; otherwise, the
126 .Xr man 7
127 parser is used.
128 With other arguments,
129 .Fl m
130 is silently ignored.
131 .It Fl O Ar options
132 Comma-separated output options.
133 See the descriptions of the individual output formats for supported
134 .Ar options .
135 .It Fl T Ar output
136 Select the output format.
137 Supported values for the
138 .Ar output
139 argument are
140 .Cm ascii ,
141 .Cm html ,
142 the default of
143 .Cm locale ,
144 .Cm man ,
145 .Cm markdown ,
146 .Cm pdf ,
147 .Cm ps ,
148 .Cm tree ,
149 and
150 .Cm utf8 .
151 .Pp
152 The special
153 .Fl T Cm lint
154 mode only parses the input and produces no output.
155 It implies
156 .Fl W Cm all
157 and redirects parser messages, which usually appear on standard
158 error output, to standard output.
159 .It Fl W Ar level
160 Specify the minimum message
161 .Ar level
162 to be reported on the standard error output and to affect the exit status.
163 The
164 .Ar level
165 can be
166 .Cm base ,
167 .Cm style ,
168 .Cm warning ,
169 .Cm error ,
170 or
171 .Cm unsupp .
172 The
173 .Cm base
174 level automatically derives the operating system from the contents of the
175 .Ic \&Os
176 macro, from the
177 .Fl Ios
178 command line option, or from the
179 .Xr uname 3
180 return value.
181 The levels
182 .Cm openbsd
183 and
184 .Cm netbsd
185 are variants of
186 .Cm base
187 that bypass autodetection and request validation of base system
188 conventions for a particular operating system.
189 The level
190 .Cm all
191 is an alias for
192 .Cm base .
193 By default,
194 .Nm
195 is silent.
196 See
197 .Sx EXIT STATUS
198 and
199 .Sx DIAGNOSTICS
200 for details.
201 .Pp
202 The special option
203 .Fl W Cm stop
204 tells
205 .Nm
206 to exit after parsing a file that causes warnings or errors of at least
207 the requested level.
208 No formatted output will be produced from that file.
209 If both a
210 .Ar level
211 and
212 .Cm stop
213 are requested, they can be joined with a comma, for example
214 .Fl W Cm error , Ns Cm stop .
215 .It Ar file
216 Read from the given input file.
217 If multiple files are specified, they are processed in the given order.
218 If unspecified,
219 .Nm
220 reads from standard input.
221 .El
222 .Pp
223 The options
224 .Fl fhklw
225 are also supported and are documented in
226 .Xr man 1 .
227 In
228 .Fl f
229 and
230 .Fl k
231 mode,
232 .Nm
233 also supports the options
234 .Fl CMmOSs
235 described in the
236 .Xr apropos 1
237 manual.
238 The options
239 .Fl fkl
240 are mutually exclusive and override each other.
241 .Ss ASCII Output
242 Use
243 .Fl T Cm ascii
244 to force text output in 7-bit ASCII character encoding documented in the
245 .Xr ascii 7
246 manual page, ignoring the
247 .Xr locale 1
248 set in the environment.
249 .Pp
250 Font styles are applied by using back-spaced encoding such that an
251 underlined character
252 .Sq c
253 is rendered as
254 .Sq _ Ns \e[bs] Ns c ,
255 where
256 .Sq \e[bs]
257 is the back-space character number 8.
258 Emboldened characters are rendered as
259 .Sq c Ns \e[bs] Ns c .
260 This markup is typically converted to appropriate terminal sequences by
261 the pager or
262 .Xr ul 1 .
263 To remove the markup, pipe the output to
264 .Xr col 1
265 .Fl b
266 instead.
267 .Pp
268 The special characters documented in
269 .Xr mandoc_char 7
270 are rendered best-effort in an ASCII equivalent.
271 In particular, opening and closing
272 .Sq single quotes
273 are represented as characters number 0x60 and 0x27, respectively,
274 which agrees with all ASCII standards from 1965 to the latest
275 revision (2012) and which matches the traditional way in which
276 .Xr roff 7
277 formatters represent single quotes in ASCII output.
278 This correct ASCII rendering may look strange with modern
279 Unicode-compatible fonts because contrary to ASCII, Unicode uses
280 the code point U+0060 for the grave accent only, never for an opening
281 quote.
282 .Pp
283 The following
284 .Fl O
285 arguments are accepted:
286 .Bl -tag -width Ds
287 .It Cm indent Ns = Ns Ar indent
288 The left margin for normal text is set to
289 .Ar indent
290 blank characters instead of the default of five for
291 .Xr mdoc 7
292 and seven for
293 .Xr man 7 .
294 Increasing this is not recommended; it may result in degraded formatting,
295 for example overfull lines or ugly line breaks.
296 When output is to a pager on a terminal that is less than 66 columns
297 wide, the default is reduced to three columns.
298 .It Cm mdoc
299 Format
300 .Xr man 7
301 input files in
302 .Xr mdoc 7
303 output style.
304 This prints the operating system name rather than the page title
305 on the right side of the footer line, and it implies
306 .Fl O Cm indent Ns =5 .
307 One useful application is for checking that
308 .Fl T Cm man
309 output formats in the same way as the
310 .Xr mdoc 7
311 source it was generated from.
312 .It Cm tag Ns Op = Ns Ar term
313 If the formatted manual page is opened in a pager,
314 go to the definition of the
315 .Ar term
316 rather than showing the manual page from the beginning.
317 If no
318 .Ar term
319 is specified, reuse the first command line argument that is not a
320 .Ar section
321 number.
322 If that argument is in
323 .Xr apropos 1
324 .Ar key Ns = Ns Ar val
325 format, only the
326 .Ar val
327 is used rather than the argument as a whole.
328 This is useful for commands like
329 .Ql man -akO tag Ic=ulimit
330 to search for a keyword and jump right to its definition
331 in the matching manual pages.
332 .It Cm width Ns = Ns Ar width
333 The output width is set to
334 .Ar width
335 instead of the default of 78.
336 When output is to a pager on a terminal that is less than 79 columns
337 wide, the default is reduced to one less than the terminal width.
338 In any case, lines that are output in literal mode are never wrapped
339 and may exceed the output width.
340 .El
341 .Ss HTML Output
342 Output produced by
343 .Fl T Cm html
344 conforms to HTML5 using optional self-closing tags.
345 Equations rendered from
346 .Xr eqn 7
347 blocks use MathML.
348 .Pp
349 The file
350 .Pa /usr/share/misc/mandoc.css
351 documents style-sheet classes available for customising output.
352 If a style-sheet is not specified with
353 .Fl O Cm style ,
354 .Fl T Cm html
355 defaults to simple output (via an embedded style-sheet)
356 readable in any graphical or text-based web
357 browser.
358 .Pp
359 Non-ASCII characters are rendered
360 as hexadecimal Unicode character references.
361 .Pp
362 The following
363 .Fl O
364 arguments are accepted:
365 .Bl -tag -width Ds
366 .It Cm fragment
367 Omit the <!DOCTYPE> declaration and the <html>, <head>, and <body>
368 elements and only emit the subtree below the <body> element.
369 The
370 .Cm style
371 argument will be ignored.
372 This is useful when embedding manual content within existing documents.
373 .It Cm includes Ns = Ns Ar fmt
374 The string
375 .Ar fmt ,
376 for example,
377 .Ar ../src/%I.html ,
378 is used as a template for linked header files (usually via the
379 .Ic \&In
380 macro).
381 Instances of
382 .Sq \&%I
383 are replaced with the include filename.
384 The default is not to present a
385 hyperlink.
386 .It Cm man Ns = Ns Ar fmt Ns Op ; Ns Ar fmt
387 The string
388 .Ar fmt ,
389 for example,
390 .Ar ../html%S/%N.%S.html ,
391 is used as a template for linked manuals (usually via the
392 .Ic \&Xr
393 macro).
394 Instances of
395 .Sq \&%N
396 and
397 .Sq %S
398 are replaced with the linked manual's name and section, respectively.
399 If no section is included, section 1 is assumed.
400 The default is not to
401 present a hyperlink.
402 If two formats are given and a file
403 .Ar %N.%S
404 exists in the current directory, the first format is used;
405 otherwise, the second format is used.
406 .It Cm style Ns = Ns Ar style.css
407 The file
408 .Ar style.css
409 is used for an external style-sheet.
410 This must be a valid absolute or
411 relative URI.
412 .It Cm tag Ns Op = Ns Ar term
413 Same syntax and semantics as for
414 .Sx ASCII Output .
415 This is implemented by passing a
416 .Ic file://
417 URI ending in a fragment identifier to the pager
418 rather than passing merely a file name.
419 When using this argument, use a pager supporting such URIs, for example
420 .Bd -literal -offset 3n
421 MANPAGER='lynx -force_html' man -T html -O tag=MANPAGER man
422 MANPAGER='w3m -T text/html' man -T html -O tag=toc mandoc
423 .Ed
424 .Pp
425 Consequently, for HTML output, this argument does not work with
426 .Xr more 1
427 or
428 .Xr less 1 .
429 For example,
430 .Ql MANPAGER=less man -T html -O tag=toc mandoc
431 does not work because
432 .Xr less 1
433 does not support
434 .Ic file://
435 URIs.
436 .It Cm toc
437 If an input file contains at least two non-standard sections,
438 print a table of contents near the beginning of the output.
439 .El
440 .Ss Locale Output
441 By default,
442 .Nm
443 automatically selects UTF-8 or ASCII output according to the current
444 .Xr locale 1 .
445 If any of the environment variables
446 .Ev LC_ALL ,
447 .Ev LC_CTYPE ,
448 or
449 .Ev LANG
450 are set and the first one that is set
451 selects the UTF-8 character encoding, it produces
452 .Sx UTF-8 Output ;
453 otherwise, it falls back to
454 .Sx ASCII Output .
455 This output mode can also be selected explicitly with
456 .Fl T Cm locale .
457 .Ss Man Output
458 Use
459 .Fl T Cm man
460 to translate
461 .Xr mdoc 7
462 input into
463 .Xr man 7
464 output format.
465 This is useful for distributing manual sources to legacy systems
466 lacking
467 .Xr mdoc 7
468 formatters.
469 Embedded
470 .Xr eqn 7
471 and
472 .Xr tbl 7
473 code is not supported.
474 .Pp
475 If the input format of a file is
476 .Xr man 7 ,
477 the input is copied to the output.
478 The parser is also run, and as usual, the
479 .Fl W
480 level controls which
481 .Sx DIAGNOSTICS
482 are displayed before copying the input to the output.
483 .Ss Markdown Output
484 Use
485 .Fl T Cm markdown
486 to translate
487 .Xr mdoc 7
488 input to the markdown format conforming to
489 .Lk https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax.text\
490 "John Gruber's 2004 specification" .
491 The output also almost conforms to the
492 .Lk https://commonmark.org/ CommonMark
493 specification.
494 .Pp
495 The character set used for the markdown output is ASCII.
496 Non-ASCII characters are encoded as HTML entities.
497 Since that is not possible in literal font contexts, because these
498 are rendered as code spans and code blocks in the markdown output,
499 non-ASCII characters are transliterated to ASCII approximations in
500 these contexts.
501 .Pp
502 Markdown is a very weak markup language, so all semantic markup is
503 lost, and even part of the presentational markup may be lost.
504 Do not use this as an intermediate step in converting to HTML;
505 instead, use
506 .Fl T Cm html
507 directly.
508 .Pp
509 The
510 .Xr man 7 ,
511 .Xr tbl 7 ,
512 and
513 .Xr eqn 7
514 input languages are not supported by
515 .Fl T Cm markdown
516 output mode.
517 .Ss PDF Output
518 PDF-1.1 output may be generated by
519 .Fl T Cm pdf .
520 See
521 .Sx PostScript Output
522 for
523 .Fl O
524 arguments and defaults.
525 .Ss PostScript Output
526 PostScript
527 .Qq Adobe-3.0
528 Level-2 pages may be generated by
529 .Fl T Cm ps .
530 Output pages default to letter sized and are rendered in the Times font
531 family, 11-point.
532 Margins are calculated as 1/9 the page length and width.
533 Line-height is 1.4m.
534 .Pp
535 Special characters are rendered as in
536 .Sx ASCII Output .
537 .Pp
538 The following
539 .Fl O
540 arguments are accepted:
541 .Bl -tag -width Ds
542 .It Cm paper Ns = Ns Ar name
543 The paper size
544 .Ar name
545 may be one of
546 .Ar a3 ,
547 .Ar a4 ,
548 .Ar a5 ,
549 .Ar legal ,
550 or
551 .Ar letter .
552 You may also manually specify dimensions as
553 .Ar NNxNN ,
554 width by height in millimetres.
555 If an unknown value is encountered,
556 .Ar letter
557 is used.
558 .El
559 .Ss UTF-8 Output
560 Use
561 .Fl T Cm utf8
562 to force text output in UTF-8 multi-byte character encoding,
563 ignoring the
564 .Xr locale 1
565 settings in the environment.
566 See
567 .Sx ASCII Output
568 regarding font styles and
569 .Fl O
570 arguments.
571 .Pp
572 On operating systems lacking locale or wide character support, and
573 on those where the internal character representation is not UCS-4,
574 .Nm
575 always falls back to
576 .Sx ASCII Output .
577 .Ss Syntax tree output
578 Use
579 .Fl T Cm tree
580 to show a human readable representation of the syntax tree.
581 It is useful for debugging the source code of manual pages.
582 The exact format is subject to change, so don't write parsers for it.
583 .Pp
584 The first paragraph shows meta data found in the
585 .Xr mdoc 7
586 prologue, on the
587 .Xr man 7
588 .Ic \&TH
589 line, or the fallbacks used.
590 .Pp
591 In the tree dump, each output line shows one syntax tree node.
592 Child nodes are indented with respect to their parent node.
593 The columns are:
594 .Pp
595 .Bl -enum -compact
596 .It
597 For macro nodes, the macro name; for text and
598 .Xr tbl 7
599 nodes, the content.
600 There is a special format for
601 .Xr eqn 7
602 nodes.
603 .It
604 Node type (text, elem, block, head, body, body-end, tail, tbl, eqn).
605 .It
606 Flags:
607 .Bl -dash -compact
608 .It
609 An opening parenthesis if the node is an opening delimiter.
610 .It
611 An asterisk if the node starts a new input line.
612 .It
613 The input line number (starting at one).
614 .It
615 A colon.
616 .It
617 The input column number (starting at one).
618 .It
619 A closing parenthesis if the node is a closing delimiter.
620 .It
621 A full stop if the node ends a sentence.
622 .It
623 BROKEN if the node is a block broken by another block.
624 .It
625 NOSRC if the node is not in the input file,
626 but automatically generated from macros.
627 .It
628 NOPRT if the node is not supposed to generate output
629 for any output format.
630 .El
631 .El
632 .Pp
633 The following
634 .Fl O
635 argument is accepted:
636 .Bl -tag -width Ds
637 .It Cm noval
638 Skip validation and show the unvalidated syntax tree.
639 This can help to find out whether a given behaviour is caused by
640 the parser or by the validator.
641 Meta data is not available in this case.
642 .El
643 .Sh ENVIRONMENT
644 .Bl -tag -width MANPAGER
645 .It Ev LC_CTYPE
646 The character encoding
647 .Xr locale 1 .
648 When
649 .Sx Locale Output
650 is selected, it decides whether to use ASCII or UTF-8 output format.
651 It never affects the interpretation of input files.
652 .It Ev MANPAGER
653 Any non-empty value of the environment variable
654 .Ev MANPAGER
655 is used instead of the standard pagination program,
656 .Xr less 1 ;
657 see
658 .Xr man 1
659 for details.
660 Only used if
661 .Fl a
662 or
663 .Fl l
664 is specified.
665 .It Ev PAGER
666 Specifies the pagination program to use when
667 .Ev MANPAGER
668 is not defined.
669 If neither PAGER nor MANPAGER is defined,
670 .Xr less 1
671 is used.
672 Only used if
673 .Fl a
674 or
675 .Fl l
676 is specified.
677 .El
678 .Sh EXIT STATUS
679 The
680 .Nm
681 utility exits with one of the following values, controlled by the message
682 .Ar level
683 associated with the
684 .Fl W
685 option:
686 .Pp
687 .Bl -tag -width Ds -compact
688 .It 0
689 No base system convention violations, style suggestions, warnings,
690 or errors occurred, or those that did were ignored because they
691 were lower than the requested
692 .Ar level .
693 .It 1
694 At least one base system convention violation or style suggestion
695 occurred, but no warning or error, and
696 .Fl W Cm base
697 or
698 .Fl W Cm style
699 was specified.
700 .It 2
701 At least one warning occurred, but no error, and
702 .Fl W Cm warning
703 or a lower
704 .Ar level
705 was requested.
706 .It 3
707 At least one parsing error occurred,
708 but no unsupported feature was encountered, and
709 .Fl W Cm error
710 or a lower
711 .Ar level
712 was requested.
713 .It 4
714 At least one unsupported feature was encountered, and
715 .Fl W Cm unsupp
716 or a lower
717 .Ar level
718 was requested.
719 .It 5
720 Invalid command line arguments were specified.
721 No input files have been read.
722 .It 6
723 An operating system error occurred, for example exhaustion
724 of memory, file descriptors, or process table entries.
725 Such errors may cause
726 .Nm
727 to exit at once, possibly in the middle of parsing or formatting a file.
728 .El
729 .Pp
730 Note that selecting
731 .Fl T Cm lint
732 output mode implies
733 .Fl W Cm all .
734 .Sh EXAMPLES
735 To page manuals to the terminal:
736 .Pp
737 .Dl $ mandoc -a mandoc.1 man.1 apropos.1 makewhatis.8
738 .Pp
739 To produce HTML manuals with
740 .Pa /usr/share/misc/mandoc.css
741 as the style-sheet:
742 .Pp
743 .Dl $ mandoc \-T html -O style=/usr/share/misc/mandoc.css mdoc.7 > mdoc.7.html
744 .Pp
745 To check over a large set of manuals:
746 .Pp
747 .Dl $ mandoc \-T lint \(gafind /usr/src -name \e*\e.[1-9]\(ga
748 .Pp
749 To produce a series of PostScript manuals for A4 paper:
750 .Pp
751 .Dl $ mandoc \-T ps \-O paper=a4 mdoc.7 man.7 > manuals.ps
752 .Pp
753 Convert a modern
754 .Xr mdoc 7
755 manual to the older
756 .Xr man 7
757 format, for use on systems lacking an
758 .Xr mdoc 7
759 parser:
760 .Pp
761 .Dl $ mandoc \-T man foo.mdoc > foo.man
762 .Sh DIAGNOSTICS
763 Messages displayed by
764 .Nm
765 follow this format:
766 .Bd -ragged -offset indent
767 .Nm :
768 .Ar file : Ns Ar line : Ns Ar column : level : message : macro arguments
769 .Pq Ar os
770 .Ed
771 .Pp
772 The first three fields identify the
773 .Ar file
774 name,
775 .Ar line
776 number, and
777 .Ar column
778 number of the input file where the message was triggered.
779 The line and column numbers start at 1.
780 Both are omitted for messages referring to an input file as a whole.
781 All
782 .Ar level
783 and
784 .Ar message
785 strings are explained below.
786 The name of the
787 .Ar macro
788 triggering the message and its
789 .Ar arguments
790 are omitted where meaningless.
791 The
792 .Ar os
793 operating system specifier is omitted for messages that are relevant
794 for all operating systems.
795 Fatal messages about invalid command line arguments
796 or operating system errors, for example when memory is exhausted,
797 may also omit the
798 .Ar file
799 and
800 .Ar level
801 fields.
802 .Pp
803 Message levels have the following meanings:
804 .Bl -tag -width "warning"
805 .It Cm syserr
806 An operating system error occurred.
807 There isn't necessarily anything wrong with the input files.
808 Output may all the same be missing or incomplete.
809 .It Cm badarg
810 Invalid command line arguments were specified.
811 No input files have been read and no output is produced.
812 .It Cm unsupp
813 An input file uses unsupported low-level
814 .Xr roff 7
815 features.
816 The output may be incomplete and/or misformatted,
817 so using GNU troff instead of
818 .Nm
819 to process the file may be preferable.
820 .It Cm error
821 Indicates a risk of information loss or severe misformatting,
822 in most cases caused by serious syntax errors.
823 .It Cm warning
824 Indicates a risk that the information shown or its formatting
825 may mismatch the author's intent in minor ways.
826 Additionally, syntax errors are classified at least as warnings,
827 even if they do not usually cause misformatting.
828 .It Cm style
829 An input file uses dubious or discouraged style.
830 This is not a complaint about the syntax, and probably neither
831 formatting nor portability are in danger.
832 While great care is taken to avoid false positives on the higher
833 message levels, the
834 .Cm style
835 level tries to reduce the probability that issues go unnoticed,
836 so it may occasionally issue bogus suggestions.
837 Use your judgement to decide whether any particular
838 .Cm style
839 suggestion really justifies a change to the input file.
840 .It Cm base
841 A convention used in the base system of a specific operating system
842 is not adhered to.
843 These are not markup mistakes, and neither the quality of formatting
844 nor portability are in danger.
845 Messages of the
846 .Cm base
847 level are printed with the more intuitive
848 .Cm style
849 .Ar level
850 tag.
851 .El
852 .Pp
853 Messages of the
854 .Cm base ,
855 .Cm style ,
856 .Cm warning ,
857 .Cm error ,
858 and
859 .Cm unsupp
860 levels are hidden unless their level, or a lower level, is requested using a
861 .Fl W
862 option or
863 .Fl T Cm lint
864 output mode.
865 .Pp
866 As indicated below, all
867 .Cm base
868 and some
869 .Cm style
870 checks are only performed if a specific operating system name occurs
871 in the arguments of the
872 .Fl W
873 command line option, of the
874 .Ic \&Os
875 macro, of the
876 .Fl Ios
877 command line option, or, if neither are present, in the return value
878 of the
879 .Xr uname 3
880 function.
881 .Ss Conventions for base system manuals
882 .Bl -ohang
883 .It Sy "Mdocdate found"
884 .Pq mdoc , Nx
885 The
886 .Ic \&Dd
887 macro uses CVS
888 .Ic Mdocdate
889 keyword substitution, which is not supported by the
890 .Nx
891 base system.
892 Consider using the conventional
893 .Dq "Month dd, yyyy"
894 format instead.
895 .It Sy "Mdocdate missing"
896 .Pq mdoc , Ox
897 The
898 .Ic \&Dd
899 macro does not use CVS
900 .Ic Mdocdate
901 keyword substitution, but using it is conventionally expected in the
902 .Ox
903 base system.
904 .It Sy "unknown architecture"
905 .Pq mdoc , Ox , Nx
906 The third argument of the
907 .Ic \&Dt
908 macro does not match any of the architectures this operating system
909 is running on.
910 .It Sy "operating system explicitly specified"
911 .Pq mdoc , Ox , Nx
912 The
913 .Ic \&Os
914 macro has an argument.
915 In the base system, it is conventionally left blank.
916 .It Sy "RCS id missing"
917 .Pq Ox , Nx
918 The manual page lacks the comment line with the RCS identifier
919 generated by CVS
920 .Ic OpenBSD
921 or
922 .Ic NetBSD
923 keyword substitution as conventionally used in these operating systems.
924 .El
925 .Ss Style suggestions
926 .Bl -ohang
927 .It Sy "legacy man(7) date format"
928 .Pq mdoc
929 The
930 .Ic \&Dd
931 macro uses the legacy
932 .Xr man 7
933 date format
934 .Dq yyyy-dd-mm .
935 Consider using the conventional
936 .Xr mdoc 7
937 date format
938 .Dq "Month dd, yyyy"
939 instead.
940 .It Sy "normalizing date format to" : No ...
941 .Pq mdoc , man
942 The
943 .Ic \&Dd
944 or
945 .Ic \&TH
946 macro provides an abbreviated month name or a day number with a
947 leading zero.
948 In the formatted output, the month name is written out in full
949 and the leading zero is omitted.
950 .It Sy "lower case character in document title"
951 .Pq mdoc , man
952 The title is still used as given in the
953 .Ic \&Dt
954 or
955 .Ic \&TH
956 macro.
957 .It Sy "duplicate RCS id"
958 A single manual page contains two copies of the RCS identifier for
959 the same operating system.
960 Consider deleting the later instance and moving the first one up
961 to the top of the page.
962 .It Sy "possible typo in section name"
963 .Pq mdoc
964 Fuzzy string matching revealed that the argument of an
965 .Ic \&Sh
966 macro is similar, but not identical to a standard section name.
967 .It Sy "unterminated quoted argument"
968 .Pq roff
969 Macro arguments can be enclosed in double quote characters
970 such that space characters and macro names contained in the quoted
971 argument need not be escaped.
972 The closing quote of the last argument of a macro can be omitted.
973 However, omitting it is not recommended because it makes the code
974 harder to read.
975 .It Sy "useless macro"
976 .Pq mdoc
977 A
978 .Ic \&Bt ,
979 .Ic \&Tn ,
980 or
981 .Ic \&Ud
982 macro was found.
983 Simply delete it: it serves no useful purpose.
984 .It Sy "consider using OS macro"
985 .Pq mdoc
986 A string was found in plain text or in a
987 .Ic \&Bx
988 macro that could be represented using
989 .Ic \&Ox ,
990 .Ic \&Nx ,
991 .Ic \&Fx ,
992 or
993 .Ic \&Dx .
994 .It Sy "errnos out of order"
995 .Pq mdoc, Nx
996 The
997 .Ic \&Er
998 items in a
999 .Ic \&Bl
1000 list are not in alphabetical order.
1001 .It Sy "duplicate errno"
1002 .Pq mdoc, Nx
1003 A
1004 .Ic \&Bl
1005 list contains two consecutive
1006 .Ic \&It
1007 entries describing the same
1008 .Ic \&Er
1009 number.
1010 .It Sy "referenced manual not found"
1011 .Pq mdoc
1012 An
1013 .Ic \&Xr
1014 macro references a manual page that was not found.
1015 When running with
1016 .Fl W Cm base ,
1017 the search is restricted to the base system, by default to
1018 .Pa /usr/share/man : Ns Pa /usr/X11R6/man .
1019 This path can be configured at compile time using the
1020 .Dv MANPATH_BASE
1021 preprocessor macro.
1022 When running with
1023 .Fl W Cm style ,
1024 the search is done along the full search path as described in the
1025 .Xr man 1
1026 manual page, respecting the
1027 .Fl m
1028 and
1029 .Fl M
1030 command line options, the
1031 .Ev MANPATH
1032 environment variable, the
1033 .Xr man.conf 5
1034 file and falling back to the default of
1035 .Pa /usr/share/man : Ns Pa /usr/X11R6/man : Ns Pa /usr/local/man ,
1036 also configurable at compile time using the
1037 .Dv MANPATH_DEFAULT
1038 preprocessor macro.
1039 .It Sy "trailing delimiter"
1040 .Pq mdoc
1041 The last argument of an
1042 .Ic \&Ex , \&Fo , \&Nd , \&Nm , \&Os , \&Sh , \&Ss , \&St ,
1043 or
1044 .Ic \&Sx
1045 macro ends with a trailing delimiter.
1046 This is usually bad style and often indicates typos.
1047 Most likely, the delimiter can be removed.
1048 .It Sy "no blank before trailing delimiter"
1049 .Pq mdoc
1050 The last argument of a macro that supports trailing delimiter
1051 arguments is longer than one byte and ends with a trailing delimiter.
1052 Consider inserting a blank such that the delimiter becomes a separate
1053 argument, thus moving it out of the scope of the macro.
1054 .It Sy "fill mode already enabled, skipping"
1055 .Pq man
1056 A
1057 .Ic \&fi
1058 request occurs even though the document is still in fill mode,
1059 or already switched back to fill mode.
1060 It has no effect.
1061 .It Sy "fill mode already disabled, skipping"
1062 .Pq man
1063 An
1064 .Ic \&nf
1065 request occurs even though the document already switched to no-fill mode
1066 and did not switch back to fill mode yet.
1067 It has no effect.
1068 .It Sy "input text line longer than 80 bytes"
1069 Consider breaking the input text line
1070 at one of the blank characters before column 80.
1071 .It Sy "verbatim \(dq--\(dq, maybe consider using \e(em"
1072 .Pq mdoc
1073 Even though the ASCII output device renders an em-dash as
1074 .Qq \-\- ,
1075 that is not a good way to write it in an input file
1076 because it renders poorly on all other output devices.
1077 .It Sy "function name without markup"
1078 .Pq mdoc
1079 A word followed by an empty pair of parentheses occurs on a text line.
1080 Consider using an
1081 .Ic \&Fn
1082 or
1083 .Ic \&Xr
1084 macro.
1085 .It Sy "whitespace at end of input line"
1086 .Pq mdoc , man , roff
1087 Whitespace at the end of input lines is almost never semantically
1088 significant \(em but in the odd case where it might be, it is
1089 extremely confusing when reviewing and maintaining documents.
1090 .It Sy "bad comment style"
1091 .Pq roff
1092 Comment lines start with a dot, a backslash, and a double-quote character.
1093 The
1094 .Nm
1095 utility treats the line as a comment line even without the backslash,
1096 but leaving out the backslash might not be portable.
1097 .El
1098 .Ss Warnings related to the document prologue
1099 .Bl -ohang
1100 .It Sy "missing manual title, using UNTITLED"
1101 .Pq mdoc
1102 A
1103 .Ic \&Dt
1104 macro has no arguments, or there is no
1105 .Ic \&Dt
1106 macro before the first non-prologue macro.
1107 .It Sy "missing manual title, using \(dq\(dq"
1108 .Pq man
1109 There is no
1110 .Ic \&TH
1111 macro, or it has no arguments.
1112 .It Sy "missing manual section, using \(dq\(dq"
1113 .Pq mdoc , man
1114 A
1115 .Ic \&Dt
1116 or
1117 .Ic \&TH
1118 macro lacks the mandatory section argument.
1119 .It Sy "unknown manual section"
1120 .Pq mdoc
1121 The section number in a
1122 .Ic \&Dt
1123 line is invalid, but still used.
1124 .It Sy "filename/section mismatch"
1125 .Pq mdoc , man
1126 The name of the input file being processed is known and its file
1127 name extension starts with a non-zero digit, but the
1128 .Ic \&Dt
1129 or
1130 .Ic \&TH
1131 macro contains a
1132 .Ar section
1133 argument that starts with a different non-zero digit.
1134 The
1135 .Ar section
1136 argument is used as provided anyway.
1137 Consider checking whether the file name or the argument need a correction.
1138 .It Sy "missing date, using \(dq\(dq"
1139 .Pq mdoc, man
1140 The document was parsed as
1141 .Xr mdoc 7
1142 and it has no
1143 .Ic \&Dd
1144 macro, or the
1145 .Ic \&Dd
1146 macro has no arguments or only empty arguments;
1147 or the document was parsed as
1148 .Xr man 7
1149 and it has no
1150 .Ic \&TH
1151 macro, or the
1152 .Ic \&TH
1153 macro has less than three arguments or its third argument is empty.
1154 .It Sy "cannot parse date, using it verbatim"
1155 .Pq mdoc , man
1156 The date given in a
1157 .Ic \&Dd
1158 or
1159 .Ic \&TH
1160 macro does not follow the conventional format.
1161 .It Sy "date in the future, using it anyway"
1162 .Pq mdoc , man
1163 The date given in a
1164 .Ic \&Dd
1165 or
1166 .Ic \&TH
1167 macro is more than a day ahead of the current system
1168 .Xr time 3 .
1169 .It Sy "missing Os macro, using \(dq\(dq"
1170 .Pq mdoc
1171 The default or current system is not shown in this case.
1172 .It Sy "late prologue macro"
1173 .Pq mdoc
1174 A
1175 .Ic \&Dd
1176 or
1177 .Ic \&Os
1178 macro occurs after some non-prologue macro, but still takes effect.
1179 .It Sy "prologue macros out of order"
1180 .Pq mdoc
1181 The prologue macros are not given in the conventional order
1182 .Ic \&Dd ,
1183 .Ic \&Dt ,
1184 .Ic \&Os .
1185 All three macros are used even when given in another order.
1186 .El
1187 .Ss Warnings regarding document structure
1188 .Bl -ohang
1189 .It Sy ".so is fragile, better use ln(1)"
1190 .Pq roff
1191 Including files only works when the parser program runs with the correct
1192 current working directory.
1193 .It Sy "no document body"
1194 .Pq mdoc , man
1195 The document body contains neither text nor macros.
1196 An empty document is shown, consisting only of a header and a footer line.
1197 .It Sy "content before first section header"
1198 .Pq mdoc , man
1199 Some macros or text precede the first
1200 .Ic \&Sh
1201 or
1202 .Ic \&SH
1203 section header.
1204 The offending macros and text are parsed and added to the top level
1205 of the syntax tree, outside any section block.
1206 .It Sy "first section is not NAME"
1207 .Pq mdoc
1208 The argument of the first
1209 .Ic \&Sh
1210 macro is not
1211 .Sq NAME .
1212 This may confuse
1213 .Xr makewhatis 8
1214 and
1215 .Xr apropos 1 .
1216 .It Sy "NAME section without Nm before Nd"
1217 .Pq mdoc
1218 The NAME section does not contain any
1219 .Ic \&Nm
1220 child macro before the first
1221 .Ic \&Nd
1222 macro.
1223 .It Sy "NAME section without description"
1224 .Pq mdoc
1225 The NAME section lacks the mandatory
1226 .Ic \&Nd
1227 child macro.
1228 .It Sy "description not at the end of NAME"
1229 .Pq mdoc
1230 The NAME section does contain an
1231 .Ic \&Nd
1232 child macro, but other content follows it.
1233 .It Sy "bad NAME section content"
1234 .Pq mdoc
1235 The NAME section contains plain text or macros other than
1236 .Ic \&Nm
1237 and
1238 .Ic \&Nd .
1239 .It Sy "missing comma before name"
1240 .Pq mdoc
1241 The NAME section contains an
1242 .Ic \&Nm
1243 macro that is neither the first one nor preceded by a comma.
1244 .It Sy "missing description line, using \(dq\(dq"
1245 .Pq mdoc
1246 The
1247 .Ic \&Nd
1248 macro lacks the required argument.
1249 The title line of the manual will end after the dash.
1250 .It Sy "description line outside NAME section"
1251 .Pq mdoc
1252 An
1253 .Ic \&Nd
1254 macro appears outside the NAME section.
1255 The arguments are printed anyway and the following text is used for
1256 .Xr apropos 1 ,
1257 but none of that behaviour is portable.
1258 .It Sy "sections out of conventional order"
1259 .Pq mdoc
1260 A standard section occurs after another section it usually precedes.
1261 All section titles are used as given,
1262 and the order of sections is not changed.
1263 .It Sy "duplicate section title"
1264 .Pq mdoc
1265 The same standard section title occurs more than once.
1266 .It Sy "unexpected section"
1267 .Pq mdoc
1268 A standard section header occurs in a section of the manual
1269 where it normally isn't useful.
1270 .It Sy "cross reference to self"
1271 .Pq mdoc
1272 An
1273 .Ic \&Xr
1274 macro refers to a name and section matching the section of the present
1275 manual page and a name mentioned in an
1276 .Ic \&Nm
1277 macro in the NAME or SYNOPSIS section, or in an
1278 .Ic \&Fn
1279 or
1280 .Ic \&Fo
1281 macro in the SYNOPSIS.
1282 Consider using
1283 .Ic \&Nm
1284 or
1285 .Ic \&Fn
1286 instead of
1287 .Ic \&Xr .
1288 .It Sy "unusual Xr order"
1289 .Pq mdoc
1290 In the SEE ALSO section, an
1291 .Ic \&Xr
1292 macro with a lower section number follows one with a higher number,
1293 or two
1294 .Ic \&Xr
1295 macros referring to the same section are out of alphabetical order.
1296 .It Sy "unusual Xr punctuation"
1297 .Pq mdoc
1298 In the SEE ALSO section, punctuation between two
1299 .Ic \&Xr
1300 macros differs from a single comma, or there is trailing punctuation
1301 after the last
1302 .Ic \&Xr
1303 macro.
1304 .It Sy "AUTHORS section without An macro"
1305 .Pq mdoc
1306 An AUTHORS sections contains no
1307 .Ic \&An
1308 macros, or only empty ones.
1309 Probably, there are author names lacking markup.
1310 .El
1311 .Ss "Warnings related to macros and nesting"
1312 .Bl -ohang
1313 .It Sy "obsolete macro"
1314 .Pq mdoc
1315 See the
1316 .Xr mdoc 7
1317 manual for replacements.
1318 .It Sy "macro neither callable nor escaped"
1319 .Pq mdoc
1320 The name of a macro that is not callable appears on a macro line.
1321 It is printed verbatim.
1322 If the intention is to call it, move it to its own input line;
1323 otherwise, escape it by prepending
1324 .Sq \e& .
1325 .It Sy "skipping paragraph macro"
1326 In
1327 .Xr mdoc 7
1328 documents, this happens
1329 .Bl -dash -compact
1330 .It
1331 at the beginning and end of sections and subsections
1332 .It
1333 right before non-compact lists and displays
1334 .It
1335 at the end of items in non-column, non-compact lists
1336 .It
1337 and for multiple consecutive paragraph macros.
1338 .El
1339 In
1340 .Xr man 7
1341 documents, it happens
1342 .Bl -dash -compact
1343 .It
1344 for empty
1345 .Ic \&P ,
1346 .Ic \&PP ,
1347 and
1348 .Ic \&LP
1349 macros
1350 .It
1351 for
1352 .Ic \&IP
1353 macros having neither head nor body arguments
1354 .It
1355 for
1356 .Ic \&br
1357 or
1358 .Ic \&sp
1359 right after
1360 .Ic \&SH
1361 or
1362 .Ic \&SS
1363 .El
1364 .It Sy "moving paragraph macro out of list"
1365 .Pq mdoc
1366 A list item in a
1367 .Ic \&Bl
1368 list contains a trailing paragraph macro.
1369 The paragraph macro is moved after the end of the list.
1370 .It Sy "skipping no-space macro"
1371 .Pq mdoc
1372 An input line begins with an
1373 .Ic \&Ns
1374 macro, or the next argument after an
1375 .Ic \&Ns
1376 macro is an isolated closing delimiter.
1377 The macro is ignored.
1378 .It Sy "blocks badly nested"
1379 .Pq mdoc
1380 If two blocks intersect, one should completely contain the other.
1381 Otherwise, rendered output is likely to look strange in any output
1382 format, and rendering in SGML-based output formats is likely to be
1383 outright wrong because such languages do not support badly nested
1384 blocks at all.
1385 Typical examples of badly nested blocks are
1386 .Qq Ic \&Ao \&Bo \&Ac \&Bc
1387 and
1388 .Qq Ic \&Ao \&Bq \&Ac .
1389 In these examples,
1390 .Ic \&Ac
1391 breaks
1392 .Ic \&Bo
1393 and
1394 .Ic \&Bq ,
1395 respectively.
1396 .It Sy "nested displays are not portable"
1397 .Pq mdoc
1398 A
1399 .Ic \&Bd ,
1400 .Ic \&D1 ,
1401 or
1402 .Ic \&Dl
1403 display occurs nested inside another
1404 .Ic \&Bd
1405 display.
1406 This works with
1407 .Nm ,
1408 but fails with most other implementations.
1409 .It Sy "moving content out of list"
1410 .Pq mdoc
1411 A
1412 .Ic \&Bl
1413 list block contains text or macros before the first
1414 .Ic \&It
1415 macro.
1416 The offending children are moved before the beginning of the list.
1417 .It Sy "first macro on line"
1418 Inside a
1419 .Ic \&Bl Fl column
1420 list, a
1421 .Ic \&Ta
1422 macro occurs as the first macro on a line, which is not portable.
1423 .It Sy "line scope broken"
1424 .Pq man
1425 While parsing the next-line scope of the previous macro,
1426 another macro is found that prematurely terminates the previous one.
1427 The previous, interrupted macro is deleted from the parse tree.
1428 .El
1429 .Ss "Warnings related to missing arguments"
1430 .Bl -ohang
1431 .It Sy "skipping empty request"
1432 .Pq roff , eqn
1433 The macro name is missing from a macro definition request,
1434 or an
1435 .Xr eqn 7
1436 control statement or operation keyword lacks its required argument.
1437 .It Sy "conditional request controls empty scope"
1438 .Pq roff
1439 A conditional request is only useful if any of the following
1440 follows it on the same logical input line:
1441 .Bl -dash -compact
1442 .It
1443 The
1444 .Sq \e{
1445 keyword to open a multi-line scope.
1446 .It
1447 A request or macro or some text, resulting in a single-line scope.
1448 .It
1449 The immediate end of the logical line without any intervening whitespace,
1450 resulting in next-line scope.
1451 .El
1452 Here, a conditional request is followed by trailing whitespace only,
1453 and there is no other content on its logical input line.
1454 Note that it doesn't matter whether the logical input line is split
1455 across multiple physical input lines using
1456 .Sq \e
1457 line continuation characters.
1458 This is one of the rare cases
1459 where trailing whitespace is syntactically significant.
1460 The conditional request controls a scope containing whitespace only,
1461 so it is unlikely to have a significant effect,
1462 except that it may control a following
1463 .Ic \&el
1464 clause.
1465 .It Sy "skipping empty macro"
1466 .Pq mdoc
1467 The indicated macro has no arguments and hence no effect.
1468 .It Sy "empty block"
1469 .Pq mdoc , man
1470 A
1471 .Ic \&Bd ,
1472 .Ic \&Bk ,
1473 .Ic \&Bl ,
1474 .Ic \&D1 ,
1475 .Ic \&Dl ,
1476 .Ic \&MT ,
1477 .Ic \&RS ,
1478 or
1479 .Ic \&UR
1480 block contains nothing in its body and will produce no output.
1481 .It Sy "empty argument, using 0n"
1482 .Pq mdoc
1483 The required width is missing after
1484 .Ic \&Bd
1485 or
1486 .Ic \&Bl
1487 .Fl offset
1488 or
1489 .Fl width .
1490 .It Sy "missing display type, using -ragged"
1491 .Pq mdoc
1492 The
1493 .Ic \&Bd
1494 macro is invoked without the required display type.
1495 .It Sy "list type is not the first argument"
1496 .Pq mdoc
1497 In a
1498 .Ic \&Bl
1499 macro, at least one other argument precedes the type argument.
1500 The
1501 .Nm
1502 utility copes with any argument order, but some other
1503 .Xr mdoc 7
1504 implementations do not.
1505 .It Sy "missing -width in -tag list, using 8n"
1506 .Pq mdoc
1507 Every
1508 .Ic \&Bl
1509 macro having the
1510 .Fl tag
1511 argument requires
1512 .Fl width ,
1513 too.
1514 .It Sy "missing utility name, using \(dq\(dq"
1515 .Pq mdoc
1516 The
1517 .Ic \&Ex Fl std
1518 macro is called without an argument before
1519 .Ic \&Nm
1520 has first been called with an argument.
1521 .It Sy "missing function name, using \(dq\(dq"
1522 .Pq mdoc
1523 The
1524 .Ic \&Fo
1525 macro is called without an argument.
1526 No function name is printed.
1527 .It Sy "empty head in list item"
1528 .Pq mdoc
1529 In a
1530 .Ic \&Bl
1531 .Fl diag ,
1532 .Fl hang ,
1533 .Fl inset ,
1534 .Fl ohang ,
1535 or
1536 .Fl tag
1537 list, an
1538 .Ic \&It
1539 macro lacks the required argument.
1540 The item head is left empty.
1541 .It Sy "empty list item"
1542 .Pq mdoc
1543 In a
1544 .Ic \&Bl
1545 .Fl bullet ,
1546 .Fl dash ,
1547 .Fl enum ,
1548 or
1549 .Fl hyphen
1550 list, an
1551 .Ic \&It
1552 block is empty.
1553 An empty list item is shown.
1554 .It Sy "missing argument, using next line"
1555 .Pq mdoc
1556 An
1557 .Ic \&It
1558 macro in a
1559 .Ic \&Bd Fl column
1560 list has no arguments.
1561 While
1562 .Nm
1563 uses the text or macros of the following line, if any, for the cell,
1564 other formatters may misformat the list.
1565 .It Sy "missing font type, using \efR"
1566 .Pq mdoc
1567 A
1568 .Ic \&Bf
1569 macro has no argument.
1570 It switches to the default font.
1571 .It Sy "unknown font type, using \efR"
1572 .Pq mdoc
1573 The
1574 .Ic \&Bf
1575 argument is invalid.
1576 The default font is used instead.
1577 .It Sy "nothing follows prefix"
1578 .Pq mdoc
1579 A
1580 .Ic \&Pf
1581 macro has no argument, or only one argument and no macro follows
1582 on the same input line.
1583 This defeats its purpose; in particular, spacing is not suppressed
1584 before the text or macros following on the next input line.
1585 .It Sy "empty reference block"
1586 .Pq mdoc
1587 An
1588 .Ic \&Rs
1589 macro is immediately followed by an
1590 .Ic \&Re
1591 macro on the next input line.
1592 Such an empty block does not produce any output.
1593 .It Sy "missing section argument"
1594 .Pq mdoc
1595 An
1596 .Ic \&Xr
1597 macro lacks its second, section number argument.
1598 The first argument, i.e. the name, is printed, but without subsequent
1599 parentheses.
1600 .It Sy "missing -std argument, adding it"
1601 .Pq mdoc
1602 An
1603 .Ic \&Ex
1604 or
1605 .Ic \&Rv
1606 macro lacks the required
1607 .Fl std
1608 argument.
1609 The
1610 .Nm
1611 utility assumes
1612 .Fl std
1613 even when it is not specified, but other implementations may not.
1614 .It Sy "missing option string, using \(dq\(dq"
1615 .Pq man
1616 The
1617 .Ic \&OP
1618 macro is invoked without any argument.
1619 An empty pair of square brackets is shown.
1620 .It Sy "missing resource identifier, using \(dq\(dq"
1621 .Pq man
1622 The
1623 .Ic \&MT
1624 or
1625 .Ic \&UR
1626 macro is invoked without any argument.
1627 An empty pair of angle brackets is shown.
1628 .It Sy "missing eqn box, using \(dq\(dq"
1629 .Pq eqn
1630 A diacritic mark or a binary operator is found,
1631 but there is nothing to the left of it.
1632 An empty box is inserted.
1633 .El
1634 .Ss "Warnings related to bad macro arguments"
1635 .Bl -ohang
1636 .It Sy "duplicate argument"
1637 .Pq mdoc
1638 A
1639 .Ic \&Bd
1640 or
1641 .Ic \&Bl
1642 macro has more than one
1643 .Fl compact ,
1644 more than one
1645 .Fl offset ,
1646 or more than one
1647 .Fl width
1648 argument.
1649 All but the last instances of these arguments are ignored.
1650 .It Sy "skipping duplicate argument"
1651 .Pq mdoc
1652 An
1653 .Ic \&An
1654 macro has more than one
1655 .Fl split
1656 or
1657 .Fl nosplit
1658 argument.
1659 All but the first of these arguments are ignored.
1660 .It Sy "skipping duplicate display type"
1661 .Pq mdoc
1662 A
1663 .Ic \&Bd
1664 macro has more than one type argument; the first one is used.
1665 .It Sy "skipping duplicate list type"
1666 .Pq mdoc
1667 A
1668 .Ic \&Bl
1669 macro has more than one type argument; the first one is used.
1670 .It Sy "skipping -width argument"
1671 .Pq mdoc
1672 A
1673 .Ic \&Bl
1674 .Fl column ,
1675 .Fl diag ,
1676 .Fl ohang ,
1677 .Fl inset ,
1678 or
1679 .Fl item
1680 list has a
1681 .Fl width
1682 argument.
1683 That has no effect.
1684 .It Sy "wrong number of cells"
1685 In a line of a
1686 .Ic \&Bl Fl column
1687 list, the number of tabs or
1688 .Ic \&Ta
1689 macros is less than the number expected from the list header line
1690 or exceeds the expected number by more than one.
1691 Missing cells remain empty, and all cells exceeding the number of
1692 columns are joined into one single cell.
1693 .It Sy "unknown AT&T UNIX version"
1694 .Pq mdoc
1695 An
1696 .Ic \&At
1697 macro has an invalid argument.
1698 It is used verbatim, with
1699 .Qq "AT&T UNIX "
1700 prefixed to it.
1701 .It Sy "comma in function argument"
1702 .Pq mdoc
1703 An argument of an
1704 .Ic \&Fa
1705 or
1706 .Ic \&Fn
1707 macro contains a comma; it should probably be split into two arguments.
1708 .It Sy "parenthesis in function name"
1709 .Pq mdoc
1710 The first argument of an
1711 .Ic \&Fc
1712 or
1713 .Ic \&Fn
1714 macro contains an opening or closing parenthesis; that's probably wrong,
1715 parentheses are added automatically.
1716 .It Sy "unknown library name"
1717 .Pq mdoc, not on Ox
1718 An
1719 .Ic \&Lb
1720 macro has an unknown name argument and will be rendered as
1721 .Qq library Dq Ar name .
1722 .It Sy "invalid content in Rs block"
1723 .Pq mdoc
1724 An
1725 .Ic \&Rs
1726 block contains plain text or non-% macros.
1727 The bogus content is left in the syntax tree.
1728 Formatting may be poor.
1729 .It Sy "invalid Boolean argument"
1730 .Pq mdoc
1731 An
1732 .Ic \&Sm
1733 macro has an argument other than
1734 .Cm on
1735 or
1736 .Cm off .
1737 The invalid argument is moved out of the macro, which leaves the macro
1738 empty, causing it to toggle the spacing mode.
1739 .It Sy "argument contains two font escapes"
1740 .Pq roff
1741 The second argument of a
1742 .Ic char
1743 request contains more than one font escape sequence.
1744 A wrong font may remain active after using the character.
1745 .It Sy "unknown font, skipping request"
1746 .Pq man , tbl
1747 A
1748 .Xr roff 7
1749 .Ic \&ft
1750 request or a
1751 .Xr tbl 7
1752 .Ic \&f
1753 layout modifier has an unknown
1754 .Ar font
1755 argument.
1756 .It Sy "ignoring distance argument"
1757 .Pq roff
1758 In addition to the margin character, an
1759 .Ic \&mc
1760 request has a second argument supposed to represent a distance, but the
1761 .Nm
1762 implementation of
1763 .Ic \&mc
1764 always ignores the second argument.
1765 .It Sy "odd number of characters in request"
1766 .Pq roff
1767 A
1768 .Ic \&tr
1769 request contains an odd number of characters.
1770 The last character is mapped to the blank character.
1771 .El
1772 .Ss "Warnings related to plain text"
1773 .Bl -ohang
1774 .It Sy "blank line in fill mode, using .sp"
1775 .Pq mdoc
1776 The meaning of blank input lines is only well-defined in non-fill mode:
1777 In fill mode, line breaks of text input lines are not supposed to be
1778 significant.
1779 However, for compatibility with groff, blank lines in fill mode
1780 are formatted like
1781 .Ic \&sp
1782 requests.
1783 To request a paragraph break, use
1784 .Ic \&Pp
1785 instead of a blank line.
1786 .It Sy "tab in filled text"
1787 .Pq mdoc , man
1788 The meaning of tab characters is only well-defined in non-fill mode:
1789 In fill mode, whitespace is not supposed to be significant
1790 on text input lines.
1791 As an implementation dependent choice, tab characters on text lines
1792 are passed through to the formatters in any case.
1793 Given that the text before the tab character will be filled,
1794 it is hard to predict which tab stop position the tab will advance to.
1795 .It Sy "new sentence, new line"
1796 .Pq mdoc
1797 A new sentence starts in the middle of a text line.
1798 Start it on a new input line to help formatters produce correct spacing.
1799 .It Sy "invalid escape sequence argument"
1800 .Pq roff
1801 The argument of an escape sequence is of an invalid form.
1802 Invalid escape sequences are ignored.
1803 .It Sy "undefined escape, printing literally"
1804 .Pq roff
1805 In an escape sequence, the first character
1806 right after the leading backslash is invalid.
1807 That character is printed literally,
1808 which is equivalent to ignoring the backslash.
1809 .It Sy "undefined string, using \(dq\(dq"
1810 .Pq roff
1811 If a string is used without being defined before,
1812 its value is implicitly set to the empty string.
1813 However, defining strings explicitly before use
1814 keeps the code more readable.
1815 .El
1816 .Ss "Warnings related to tables"
1817 .Bl -ohang
1818 .It Sy "tbl line starts with span"
1819 .Pq tbl
1820 The first cell in a table layout line is a horizontal span
1821 .Pq Sq Cm s .
1822 Data provided for this cell is ignored, and nothing is printed in the cell.
1823 .It Sy "tbl column starts with span"
1824 .Pq tbl
1825 The first line of a table layout specification
1826 requests a vertical span
1827 .Pq Sq Cm ^ .
1828 Data provided for this cell is ignored, and nothing is printed in the cell.
1829 .It Sy "skipping vertical bar in tbl layout"
1830 .Pq tbl
1831 A table layout specification contains more than two consecutive vertical bars.
1832 A double bar is printed, all additional bars are discarded.
1833 .El
1834 .Ss "Errors related to tables"
1835 .Bl -ohang
1836 .It Sy "non-alphabetic character in tbl options"
1837 .Pq tbl
1838 The table options line contains a character other than a letter,
1839 blank, or comma where the beginning of an option name is expected.
1840 The character is ignored.
1841 .It Sy "skipping unknown tbl option"
1842 .Pq tbl
1843 The table options line contains a string of letters that does not
1844 match any known option name.
1845 The word is ignored.
1846 .It Sy "missing tbl option argument"
1847 .Pq tbl
1848 A table option that requires an argument is not followed by an
1849 opening parenthesis, or the opening parenthesis is immediately
1850 followed by a closing parenthesis.
1851 The option is ignored.
1852 .It Sy "wrong tbl option argument size"
1853 .Pq tbl
1854 A table option argument contains an invalid number of characters.
1855 Both the option and the argument are ignored.
1856 .It Sy "empty tbl layout"
1857 .Pq tbl
1858 A table layout specification is completely empty,
1859 specifying zero lines and zero columns.
1860 As a fallback, a single left-justified column is used.
1861 .It Sy "invalid character in tbl layout"
1862 .Pq tbl
1863 A table layout specification contains a character that can neither
1864 be interpreted as a layout key character nor as a layout modifier,
1865 or a modifier precedes the first key.
1866 The invalid character is discarded.
1867 .It Sy "unmatched parenthesis in tbl layout"
1868 .Pq tbl
1869 A table layout specification contains an opening parenthesis,
1870 but no matching closing parenthesis.
1871 The rest of the input line, starting from the parenthesis, has no effect.
1872 .It Sy "ignoring excessive spacing in tbl layout"
1873 .Pq tbl
1874 A spacing modifier in a table layout is unreasonably large.
1875 The default spacing of 3n is used instead.
1876 .It Sy "tbl without any data cells"
1877 .Pq tbl
1878 A table does not contain any data cells.
1879 It will probably produce no output.
1880 .It Sy "ignoring data in spanned tbl cell"
1881 .Pq tbl
1882 A table cell is marked as a horizontal span
1883 .Pq Sq Cm s
1884 or vertical span
1885 .Pq Sq Cm ^
1886 in the table layout, but it contains data.
1887 The data is ignored.
1888 .It Sy "ignoring extra tbl data cells"
1889 .Pq tbl
1890 A data line contains more cells than the corresponding layout line.
1891 The data in the extra cells is ignored.
1892 .It Sy "data block open at end of tbl"
1893 .Pq tbl
1894 A data block is opened with
1895 .Cm T{ ,
1896 but never closed with a matching
1897 .Cm T} .
1898 The remaining data lines of the table are all put into one cell,
1899 and any remaining cells stay empty.
1900 .El
1901 .Ss "Errors related to roff, mdoc, and man code"
1902 .Bl -ohang
1903 .It Sy "duplicate prologue macro"
1904 .Pq mdoc
1905 One of the prologue macros occurs more than once.
1906 The last instance overrides all previous ones.
1907 .It Sy "skipping late title macro"
1908 .Pq mdoc
1909 The
1910 .Ic \&Dt
1911 macro appears after the first non-prologue macro.
1912 Traditional formatters cannot handle this because
1913 they write the page header before parsing the document body.
1914 Even though this technical restriction does not apply to
1915 .Nm ,
1916 traditional semantics is preserved.
1917 The late macro is discarded including its arguments.
1918 .It Sy "input stack limit exceeded, infinite loop?"
1919 .Pq roff
1920 Explicit recursion limits are implemented for the following features,
1921 in order to prevent infinite loops:
1922 .Bl -dash -compact
1923 .It
1924 expansion of nested escape sequences
1925 including expansion of strings and number registers,
1926 .It
1927 expansion of nested user-defined macros,
1928 .It
1929 and
1930 .Ic \&so
1931 file inclusion.
1932 .El
1933 When a limit is hit, the output is incorrect, typically losing
1934 some content, but the parser can continue.
1935 .It Sy "skipping bad character"
1936 .Pq mdoc , man , roff
1937 The input file contains a byte that is not a printable
1938 .Xr ascii 7
1939 character.
1940 The message mentions the character number.
1941 The offending byte is replaced with a question mark
1942 .Pq Sq \&? .
1943 Consider editing the input file to replace the byte with an ASCII
1944 transliteration of the intended character.
1945 .It Sy "skipping unknown macro"
1946 .Pq mdoc , man , roff
1947 The first identifier on a request or macro line is neither recognized as a
1948 .Xr roff 7
1949 request, nor as a user-defined macro, nor, respectively, as an
1950 .Xr mdoc 7
1951 or
1952 .Xr man 7
1953 macro.
1954 It may be mistyped or unsupported.
1955 The request or macro is discarded including its arguments.
1956 .It Sy "skipping request outside macro"
1957 .Pq roff
1958 A
1959 .Ic shift
1960 or
1961 .Ic return
1962 request occurs outside any macro definition and has no effect.
1963 .It Sy "skipping insecure request"
1964 .Pq roff
1965 An input file attempted to run a shell command
1966 or to read or write an external file.
1967 Such attempts are denied for security reasons.
1968 .It Sy "skipping item outside list"
1969 .Pq mdoc , eqn
1970 An
1971 .Ic \&It
1972 macro occurs outside any
1973 .Ic \&Bl
1974 list, or an
1975 .Xr eqn 7
1976 .Ic above
1977 delimiter occurs outside any pile.
1978 It is discarded including its arguments.
1979 .It Sy "skipping column outside column list"
1980 .Pq mdoc
1981 A
1982 .Ic \&Ta
1983 macro occurs outside any
1984 .Ic \&Bl Fl column
1985 block.
1986 It is discarded including its arguments.
1987 .It Sy "skipping end of block that is not open"
1988 .Pq mdoc , man , eqn , tbl , roff
1989 Various syntax elements can only be used to explicitly close blocks
1990 that have previously been opened.
1991 An
1992 .Xr mdoc 7
1993 block closing macro, a
1994 .Xr man 7
1995 .Ic \&ME , \&RE
1996 or
1997 .Ic \&UE
1998 macro, an
1999 .Xr eqn 7
2000 right delimiter or closing brace, or the end of an equation, table, or
2001 .Xr roff 7
2002 conditional request is encountered but no matching block is open.
2003 The offending request or macro is discarded.
2004 .It Sy "fewer RS blocks open, skipping"
2005 .Pq man
2006 The
2007 .Ic \&RE
2008 macro is invoked with an argument, but less than the specified number of
2009 .Ic \&RS
2010 blocks is open.
2011 The
2012 .Ic \&RE
2013 macro is discarded.
2014 .It Sy "inserting missing end of block"
2015 .Pq mdoc , tbl
2016 Various
2017 .Xr mdoc 7
2018 macros as well as tables require explicit closing by dedicated macros.
2019 A block that doesn't support bad nesting
2020 ends before all of its children are properly closed.
2021 The open child nodes are closed implicitly.
2022 .It Sy "appending missing end of block"
2023 .Pq mdoc , man , eqn , tbl , roff
2024 At the end of the document, an explicit
2025 .Xr mdoc 7
2026 block, a
2027 .Xr man 7
2028 next-line scope or
2029 .Ic \&MT , \&RS
2030 or
2031 .Ic \&UR
2032 block, an equation, table, or
2033 .Xr roff 7
2034 conditional or ignore block is still open.
2035 The open block is closed implicitly.
2036 .It Sy "escaped character not allowed in a name"
2037 .Pq roff
2038 Macro, string and register identifiers consist of printable,
2039 non-whitespace ASCII characters.
2040 Escape sequences and characters and strings expressed in terms of them
2041 cannot form part of a name.
2042 The first argument of an
2043 .Ic \&am ,
2044 .Ic \&as ,
2045 .Ic \&de ,
2046 .Ic \&ds ,
2047 .Ic \&nr ,
2048 or
2049 .Ic \&rr
2050 request, or any argument of an
2051 .Ic \&rm
2052 request, or the name of a request or user defined macro being called,
2053 is terminated by an escape sequence.
2054 In the cases of
2055 .Ic \&as ,
2056 .Ic \&ds ,
2057 and
2058 .Ic \&nr ,
2059 the request has no effect at all.
2060 In the cases of
2061 .Ic \&am ,
2062 .Ic \&de ,
2063 .Ic \&rr ,
2064 and
2065 .Ic \&rm ,
2066 what was parsed up to this point is used as the arguments to the request,
2067 and the rest of the input line is discarded including the escape sequence.
2068 When parsing for a request or a user-defined macro name to be called,
2069 only the escape sequence is discarded.
2070 The characters preceding it are used as the request or macro name,
2071 the characters following it are used as the arguments to the request or macro.
2072 .It Sy "using macro argument outside macro"
2073 .Pq roff
2074 The escape sequence \e$ occurs outside any macro definition
2075 and expands to the empty string.
2076 .It Sy "argument number is not numeric"
2077 .Pq roff
2078 The argument of the escape sequence \e$ is not a digit;
2079 the escape sequence expands to the empty string.
2080 .It Sy "negative argument, using 0"
2081 .Pq roff
2082 A
2083 .Ic \&shift
2084 request has a negative argument
2085 or an argument that is negative due to integer overflow.
2086 Macro argument numbering remains unchanged.
2087 .It Sy "NOT IMPLEMENTED: Bd -file"
2088 .Pq mdoc
2089 For security reasons, the
2090 .Ic \&Bd
2091 macro does not support the
2092 .Fl file
2093 argument.
2094 By requesting the inclusion of a sensitive file, a malicious document
2095 might otherwise trick a privileged user into inadvertently displaying
2096 the file on the screen, revealing the file content to bystanders.
2097 The argument is ignored including the file name following it.
2098 .It Sy "skipping display without arguments"
2099 .Pq mdoc
2100 A
2101 .Ic \&Bd
2102 block macro does not have any arguments.
2103 The block is discarded, and the block content is displayed in
2104 whatever mode was active before the block.
2105 .It Sy "missing list type, using -item"
2106 .Pq mdoc
2107 A
2108 .Ic \&Bl
2109 macro fails to specify the list type.
2110 .It Sy "argument is not numeric, using 1"
2111 .Pq roff
2112 The argument of a
2113 .Ic \&ce
2114 request is not a number.
2115 .It Sy "argument is not a character"
2116 .Pq roff
2117 The first argument of a
2118 .Ic char
2119 request is neither a single ASCII character
2120 nor a single character escape sequence.
2121 The request is ignored including all its arguments.
2122 .It Sy "skipping unusable escape sequence"
2123 .Pq roff
2124 The first argument of an
2125 .Ic mc
2126 request is neither a single ASCII character
2127 nor a single character escape sequence.
2128 All arguments are ignored and printing of a margin character is disabled.
2129 .It Sy "missing manual name, using \(dq\(dq"
2130 .Pq mdoc
2131 The first call to
2132 .Ic \&Nm ,
2133 or any call in the NAME section, lacks the required argument.
2134 .It Sy "uname(3) system call failed, using UNKNOWN"
2135 .Pq mdoc
2136 The
2137 .Ic \&Os
2138 macro is called without arguments, and the
2139 .Xr uname 3
2140 system call failed.
2141 As a workaround,
2142 .Nm
2143 can be compiled with
2144 .Sm off
2145 .Fl D Cm OSNAME=\(dq\e\(dq Ar string Cm \e\(dq\(dq .
2146 .Sm on
2147 .It Sy "unknown standard specifier"
2148 .Pq mdoc
2149 An
2150 .Ic \&St
2151 macro has an unknown argument and is discarded.
2152 .It Sy "skipping request without numeric argument"
2153 .Pq roff , eqn
2154 An
2155 .Ic \&it
2156 request or an
2157 .Xr eqn 7
2158 .Ic \&size
2159 or
2160 .Ic \&gsize
2161 statement has a non-numeric or negative argument or no argument at all.
2162 The invalid request or statement is ignored.
2163 .It Sy "excessive shift"
2164 .Pq roff
2165 The argument of a
2166 .Ic shift
2167 request is larger than the number of arguments of the macro that is
2168 currently being executed.
2169 All macro arguments are deleted and \en(.$ is set to zero.
2170 .It Sy "NOT IMPLEMENTED: .so with absolute path or \(dq..\(dq"
2171 .Pq roff
2172 For security reasons,
2173 .Nm
2174 allows
2175 .Ic \&so
2176 file inclusion requests only with relative paths
2177 and only without ascending to any parent directory.
2178 By requesting the inclusion of a sensitive file, a malicious document
2179 might otherwise trick a privileged user into inadvertently displaying
2180 the file on the screen, revealing the file content to bystanders.
2181 .Nm
2182 only shows the path as it appears behind
2183 .Ic \&so .
2184 .It Sy ".so request failed"
2185 .Pq roff
2186 Servicing a
2187 .Ic \&so
2188 request requires reading an external file, but the file could not be
2189 opened.
2190 .Nm
2191 only shows the path as it appears behind
2192 .Ic \&so .
2193 .It Sy "skipping all arguments"
2194 .Pq mdoc , man , eqn , roff
2195 An
2196 .Xr mdoc 7
2197 .Ic \&Bt ,
2198 .Ic \&Ed ,
2199 .Ic \&Ef ,
2200 .Ic \&Ek ,
2201 .Ic \&El ,
2202 .Ic \&Lp ,
2203 .Ic \&Pp ,
2204 .Ic \&Re ,
2205 .Ic \&Rs ,
2206 or
2207 .Ic \&Ud
2208 macro, an
2209 .Ic \&It
2210 macro in a list that don't support item heads, a
2211 .Xr man 7
2212 .Ic \&LP ,
2213 .Ic \&P ,
2214 or
2215 .Ic \&PP
2216 macro, an
2217 .Xr eqn 7
2218 .Ic \&EQ
2219 or
2220 .Ic \&EN
2221 macro, or a
2222 .Xr roff 7
2223 .Ic \&br ,
2224 .Ic \&fi ,
2225 or
2226 .Ic \&nf
2227 request or
2228 .Sq \&..
2229 block closing request is invoked with at least one argument.
2230 All arguments are ignored.
2231 .It Sy "skipping excess arguments"
2232 .Pq mdoc , man , roff
2233 A macro or request is invoked with too many arguments:
2234 .Bl -dash -offset 2n -width 2n -compact
2235 .It
2236 .Ic \&Fo ,
2237 .Ic \&MT ,
2238 .Ic \&PD ,
2239 .Ic \&RS ,
2240 .Ic \&UR ,
2241 .Ic \&ft ,
2242 or
2243 .Ic \&sp
2244 with more than one argument
2245 .It
2246 .Ic \&An
2247 with another argument after
2248 .Fl split
2249 or
2250 .Fl nosplit
2251 .It
2252 .Ic \&RE
2253 with more than one argument or with a non-integer argument
2254 .It
2255 .Ic \&OP
2256 or a request of the
2257 .Ic \&de
2258 family with more than two arguments
2259 .It
2260 .Ic \&Dt
2261 with more than three arguments
2262 .It
2263 .Ic \&TH
2264 with more than five arguments
2265 .It
2266 .Ic \&Bd ,
2267 .Ic \&Bk ,
2268 or
2269 .Ic \&Bl
2270 with invalid arguments
2271 .El
2272 The excess arguments are ignored.
2273 .El
2274 .Ss "Errors related to escape sequences"
2275 .Bl -ohang
2276 .It Sy "incomplete escape sequence"
2277 .Pq roff
2278 The end of the input line is encountered
2279 while parsing the argument of an escape sequence.
2280 In this case,
2281 .Ic \e*
2282 and
2283 .Ic \en
2284 expand to an empty string,
2285 .Ic \eB
2286 to the digit
2287 .Sq 0 ,
2288 and
2289 .Ic \ew
2290 to the length of the incomplete argument.
2291 All other incomplete escape sequences are ignored.
2292 .It Sy "invalid special character"
2293 .Pq roff
2294 A special character escape sequence is invalid,
2295 for example a Unicode sequence pointing to a surrogate
2296 or beyond the Unicode range, a \e[char...] escape sequence
2297 representing a control character or pointing beyond the
2298 .Vt unsigned char
2299 range, or an invalid variable-length form
2300 of a single-byte character escape sequence, for example writing
2301 .Qq \e[e]
2302 or
2303 .Qq \e[~]
2304 instead of
2305 .Qq \ee
2306 or
2307 .Qq \e~ ,
2308 respectively.
2309 The escape sequence is ignored.
2310 .It Sy "unknown special character"
2311 .Pq roff
2312 The name given in a special character escape sequence is not known to
2313 .Nm .
2314 The escape sequence is ignored.
2315 .It Sy "invalid escape argument delimiter"
2316 .Pq roff
2317 An escape sequence that expects a numerical argument
2318 attempts to employ one of the characters
2319 .Qq " %&()*+-./0123456789:<=>"
2320 as an argument delimiter.
2321 The escape sequence is ignored including the invalid opening delimiter
2322 and the rest of the argument may appear as output text.
2323 While various charcters can be used as argument delimiters,
2324 using the apostrophe-quote character
2325 .Pq Sq \(aq
2326 is recommended for readability and robustness.
2327 .El
2328 .Ss Unsupported features
2329 .Bl -ohang
2330 .It Sy "input too large"
2331 .Pq mdoc , man
2332 Currently,
2333 .Nm
2334 cannot handle input files larger than its arbitrary size limit
2335 of 2^31 bytes (2 Gigabytes).
2336 Since useful manuals are always small, this is not a problem in practice.
2337 Parsing is aborted as soon as the condition is detected.
2338 .It Sy "unsupported control character"
2339 .Pq roff
2340 An ASCII control character supported by other
2341 .Xr roff 7
2342 implementations but not by
2343 .Nm
2344 was found in an input file.
2345 It is replaced by a question mark.
2346 .It Sy "unsupported escape sequence"
2347 .Pq roff
2348 An input file contains an escape sequence supported by GNU troff
2349 or Heirloom troff but not by
2350 .Nm ,
2351 and it is likely that this will cause information loss
2352 or considerable misformatting.
2353 .It Sy "unsupported roff request"
2354 .Pq roff
2355 An input file contains a
2356 .Xr roff 7
2357 request supported by GNU troff or Heirloom troff but not by
2358 .Nm ,
2359 and it is likely that this will cause information loss
2360 or considerable misformatting.
2361 .It Sy "eqn delim option in tbl"
2362 .Pq eqn , tbl
2363 The options line of a table defines equation delimiters.
2364 Any equation source code contained in the table will be printed unformatted.
2365 .It Sy "unsupported table layout modifier"
2366 .Pq tbl
2367 A table layout specification contains an
2368 .Sq Cm m
2369 modifier.
2370 The modifier is discarded.
2371 .It Sy "ignoring macro in table"
2372 .Pq tbl , mdoc , man
2373 A table contains an invocation of an
2374 .Xr mdoc 7
2375 or
2376 .Xr man 7
2377 macro or of an undefined macro.
2378 The macro is ignored, and its arguments are handled
2379 as if they were a text line.
2380 .It Sy "skipping tbl in -Tman mode"
2381 .Pq mdoc , tbl
2382 An input file contains the
2383 .Ic \&TS
2384 macro.
2385 This message is only generated in
2386 .Fl T Cm man
2387 output mode, where
2388 .Xr tbl 7
2389 input is not supported.
2390 .It Sy "skipping eqn in -Tman mode"
2391 .Pq mdoc , eqn
2392 An input file contains the
2393 .Ic \&EQ
2394 macro.
2395 This message is only generated in
2396 .Fl T Cm man
2397 output mode, where
2398 .Xr eqn 7
2399 input is not supported.
2400 .El
2401 .Ss Bad command line arguments
2402 .Bl -ohang
2403 .It Sy "bad command line argument"
2404 The argument following one of the
2405 .Fl IKMmOTW
2406 command line options is invalid, or a
2407 .Ar file
2408 given as a command line argument cannot be opened.
2409 .It Sy "duplicate command line argument"
2410 The
2411 .Fl I
2412 command line option was specified twice.
2413 .It Sy "option has a superfluous value"
2414 An argument to the
2415 .Fl O
2416 option has a value but does not accept one.
2417 .It Sy "missing option value"
2418 An argument to the
2419 .Fl O
2420 option has no argument but requires one.
2421 .It Sy "bad option value"
2422 An argument to the
2423 .Fl O
2424 .Cm indent
2425 or
2426 .Cm width
2427 option has an invalid value.
2428 .It Sy "duplicate option value"
2429 The same
2430 .Fl O
2431 option is specified more than once.
2432 .It Sy "no such tag"
2433 The
2434 .Fl O Cm tag
2435 option was specified but the tag was not found in any of the displayed
2436 manual pages.
2437 .It Sy "\-Tmarkdown unsupported for man(7) input"
2438 .Pq man
2439 The
2440 .Fl T Cm markdown
2441 option was specified but an input file uses the
2442 .Xr man 7
2443 language.
2444 No output is produced for that input file.
2445 .El
2446 .Sh SEE ALSO
2447 .Xr apropos 1 ,
2448 .Xr man 1 ,
2449 .Xr eqn 7 ,
2450 .Xr man 7 ,
2451 .Xr mandoc_char 7 ,
2452 .Xr mdoc 7 ,
2453 .Xr roff 7 ,
2454 .Xr tbl 7
2455 .Sh HISTORY
2456 The
2457 .Nm
2458 utility first appeared in
2459 .Ox 4.8 .
2460 The option
2461 .Fl I
2462 appeared in
2463 .Ox 5.2 ,
2464 and
2465 .Fl aCcfhKklMSsw
2466 in
2467 .Ox 5.7 .
2468 .Sh AUTHORS
2469 .An -nosplit
2470 The
2471 .Nm
2472 utility was written by
2473 .An Kristaps Dzonsons Aq Mt kristaps@bsd.lv
2474 and is maintained by
2475 .An Ingo Schwarze Aq Mt schwarze@openbsd.org .