-$Id: INSTALL,v 1.20 2017/07/28 14:57:56 schwarze Exp $
+$Id: INSTALL,v 1.23 2019/03/06 15:58:10 schwarze Exp $
About the portable mandoc distribution
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Enjoy using the mandoc toolset!
-Ingo Schwarze, Karlsruhe, July 2017
+Ingo Schwarze, Karlsruhe, March 2019
Installation
wish, read the file "configure.local.example", create and edit
a file "configure.local", and re-run "./configure" until the
result seems right to you.
-On Solaris 10 and earlier, you may have to run "ksh ./configure"
-because the native /bin/sh lacks some POSIX features.
5. Run "make".
Any POSIX-compatible make, in particular both BSD make and GNU make,
7. Optionally run the regression suite.
Basically, that amounts to "cd regress && ./regress.pl".
But you should probably look at "./mandoc -l regress/regress.pl.1"
-first.
+first. In particular, regarding Solaris systems, look at the BUGS
+section of that manual page.
8. Run "sudo make install". If you intend to build a binary
package using some kind of fake root mechanism, you may need a
10. To set up a man.cgi(8) server, read its manual page.
-Note that some man(7) pages may contain low-level roff(7) markup
-that mandoc does not yet understand. On some BSD systems using
-mandoc, third-party software is vetted on whether it may be formatted
-with mandoc. If not, groff(1) is pulled in as a dependency and
-used to install a pre-formatted "catpage" instead of directly as
-manual page source.
+Note that a very small number of man(7) pages contain low-level
+roff(7) markup that mandoc does not yet understand. On some BSD
+systems using mandoc, third-party software is vetted on whether it
+may be formatted with mandoc. If not, groff(1) is pulled in as a
+dependency and used to install pre-formatted "catpages" instead of
+manual page sources. This mechanism is used much less frequently
+than in the past. On OpenBSD, only 25 out of about 10000 ports
+still require formatting with groff(1).
Understanding mandoc dependencies