man(1)man(1)NAMEman - Displays reference pages
SYNOPSISman [-] [-M | -P search_path] [-l] {[section[suffix]] title...}...
man [-M | -P search_path] -f title...
man [-M | -P search_path] -k keyword...
STANDARDS
Interfaces documented on this reference page conform to industry stan‐
dards as follows:
man: POSIX.2, XCU5.0
Refer to the standards(5) reference page for more information about
industry standards and associated tags.
OPTIONS
[Tru64 UNIX] Does not pipe output through more for display [Tru64
UNIX] Describes the specified command, call, function, or file name if
the whatis keyword database exists. Performs the same function as the
whatis command. You can specify more than one title. Locates refer‐
ence pages whose NAME section contains the specified keyword if the
whatis database exists. Performs the same function as the apropos com‐
mand. You can specify more than one keyword. [Tru64 UNIX] Specifies
that the reference page resides in a section directory subordinate to
the /usr/local/man area rather than one subordinate to the
/usr/share/man or /usr/dt/share/man area. [Tru64 UNIX] Specifies an
alternative search path. The search_path argument contains one or more
pathnames for directories that contain section directories (directories
named man1, man2, man3, and so forth) where reference pages reside.
Use a colon (:) to separate multiple pathnames. By default, the man
command searches for section directories in /usr/share/locale_name/man
(if it exists), /usr/share/man, /usr/dt/share/man, and /usr/local/man
(if it exists) in that order. The /usr/share/locale_name/man directory
is created when reference page translations for a particular locale are
installed. The man command determines locale_name from the setting of
the LC_MESSAGES environment variable. [Tru64 UNIX] Specifies an
alternative search path. (Performs the same function as -M search_path
and is provided for compatibility with other systems.)
OPERANDS
[Tru64 UNIX] Specifies the optional section and suffix identifiers for
the reference page.
[Tru64 UNIX] The section parameter is either a number (0-9),
the number/letter combination 1m, or one of the letters C, L, F,
n, l, p, or o. The numbers 1 to 8 and the number/letter combina‐
tion 1m are most appropriate to use with reference pages
installed for the Tru64 UNIX product. (The number 9 is also
appropriate if reference pages are available for the device-
driver programming kit, which is separately installed.) You usu‐
ally specify section to identify a reference page that has the
same title as another reference page in a different section.
[Tru64 UNIX] The suffix parameter is a string of one or more
characters, starting with a letter. You usually specify suffix
in addition to section to identify a reference page that has the
same title as another reference page in the same section. Spec‐
ifies the name of the reference page.
DESCRIPTION
The man command provides online access to the system's reference pages.
For example, if reference pages are available on your system, the fol‐
lowing command displays the first screenful of reference information
for the ls command: % man ls
You can press the space bar to see the next screen or press other keys
to control or search the display. For more information, see the subsec‐
tion entitled Controlling the Pager Used by the man Command.
The industry standards listed in the STANDARDS section specify the man
command's exit values and require the command to support the -k option,
one or more title parameters, and certain environment variables. Much
of the command's behavior is implementation defined, as indicated by
the [Tru64 UNIX] tag that precedes most of the information on this ref‐
erence page.
[Tru64 UNIX] Most reference pages reside in section directories subor‐
dinate to /usr/share/man. Your system manager can optionally create the
/usr/local/man area as a location for site-specific reference pages.
In addition, the area for reference pages provided for the Common Desk‐
top Environment (CDE) is /usr/dt/share/man. When all three areas exist
on a system, the default behavior of the man command is to search for
reference pages first in /usr/share/man, then in /usr/dt/share/man, and
finally in /usr/local/man.
[Tru64 UNIX] Within a given reference page area, multiple reference
pages can have the same title. Duplicate titles can be encountered
across section directories, within section directories, or both. When
two reference pages have the same title within a section directory, one
or both reference pages include a suffix in the section identifier.
[Tru64 UNIX] If you specify only title in the man command, it displays
the first title encountered in the section order 1, 8, 6, 2, 3, 4, 5,
7, C, L, F, n, l, p, o, 1m, 9. If there is more than one title in the
same section, the reference page without a section suffix has prece‐
dence over reference pages that have section suffixes. When duplicate
titles are encountered with the same section and different suffixes,
suffixes are ordered alphabetically. In this case, the reference page
whose suffix occurs earliest in alphabetical order has precedence. The
section and suffix operands are available to specify which reference
page you want to see when more than one instance of titles is avail‐
able.
[Tru64 UNIX] If you specify section, the man command looks for the
specified titles only in the directories for the specified sections.
For all number sections and all but one of the letter section identi‐
fiers, the command must find the title in a directory that corresponds
to the specified section. For example, when you enter the command man 3
printf, the command looks for the printf title only in a man3 direc‐
tory. The exception to this rule is that if you specify the section as
the number 1 or letter C, the man command searches sections C, n, l, p,
o, and 1 in that order.
[Tru64 UNIX] A section identifier corresponds to a particular category
of information and, with the exception of C, to only one corresponding
directory. In the following list, an asterisk (*) follows the section
description when it applies to reference pages installed for the Tru64
UNIX product: Not used. Reference pages for commands that all users
can enter (*). Reference pages for commands related to system mainte‐
nance and operation (*, for Common Desktop Environment only). Refer‐
ence pages for system calls, or program interfaces to the operating
system kernel (*). Reference pages for program interfaces found in
various libraries (*). Reference pages for include files, program out‐
put files, and some system files (*). Reference pages on miscellaneous
topics, such as text-processing macro packages (*). Reference pages
for games. Reference pages for device special files, related driver
functions, and networking support (*). Reference pages for commands
related to system maintenance and operation (*). Reference pages used
for writing device drivers. Reference pages for commands. Reference
pages for files. Reference pages for libraries. Reference pages with
local (site-specific) information. New reference pages. Old reference
pages. Public reference pages.
Note
Almost all implementations of a UNIX operating system use refer‐
ence page sections 4, 5, and 7 to describe different types of
files. However, the type of file described in each section
varies from one implementation to another. For example, on
ULTRIX and some other UNIX implementations, Section 4 describes
device special files rather than include files, Section 5
describes include files rather than macro packages, and Section
7 describes macro packages rather than device special files.
[Tru64 UNIX] You need to specify section only if either of the follow‐
ing conditions is true: The reference page is in section 0. There are
two reference pages with the same name (title) in different sections,
and the reference page you want to see is not the one that the man com‐
mand displays by default.
[Tru64 UNIX] If you specify suffix along with section, the man command
looks only for the reference page that has both the specified section
and the specified suffix. You need to specify suffix in addition to
section only when both of the following conditions are true: There is
more than one reference page with the same title in the same section
The reference page you want to see is not the one that the man command
displays by default.
For example, if both abort(3) and abort(3f) exist in a man3
directory, the command man 3 abort displays abort(3). In this
case, you would need to enter the command man 3f abort to dis‐
play abort(3f).
[Tru64 UNIX] In the man command's default search path are two loca‐
tions intended for site-specific reference pages: A section directory
named manl (l for local) in the /usr/share/man area Section directories
subordinate to the /usr/local/man area
[Tru64 UNIX] One, both, or neither of these locations may exist on
your system. They are created by the system administrator.
[Tru64 UNIX] If you include the -l option in the man command, you
specify reference pages in the /usr/local/man area. If you include the
l section identifier, you specify reference pages in a manl section
directory. For example, the command man-l 5 print specifies print(5),
whose file resides in /usr/local/man/man5. The command man l print
specifies print(1), whose file resides in /usr/share/man/manl.
[Tru64 UNIX] The man command's section and title arguments can be
paired so that a series of titles can be searched for in a section, or
multiple sections can be searched for one or more titles.
Changing the man Command's Search Path
[Tru64 UNIX] By default, the man command checks for reference pages
first in the /usr/share/man area, then in the /usr/dt/share/man area,
and finally in the /usr/local/man area. You can change this behavior by
supplying a search path with the -M or -P option or by defining the
MANPATH variable. You can define the MANPATH variable on the command
line or in a file, such as your file or file (if you want the path
change to always apply to your process). The search path is a colon-
separated list of directories in which man expects to find the section
subdirectories. The string
/usr/share/%L/man:/usr/dt/share/man:/usr/local/man represents the
default search path. The default path includes %L, which is one of the
following locale directives that can be included in pathnames: The cur‐
rent locale name (for example, zh_CN.dechanzi@radical) that is the
value of the LC_MESSAGES environment variable The same as %L except
that the @ suffix is removed if the locale name has such a suffix (for
example, zh_CN.dechanzi)
A few locales have one or more variants to support different
collating orders and these variants include an @ suffix. Users
may assign a locale variant name to the LANG or LC_ALL variable
rather than specifically to the LC_COLLATE variable. In this
case, the LC_MESSAGES variable would inherit its value from the
LANG or LC_ALL variable. The %P ensures that the man command
does not expect to find a reference page directory whose name
includes the @ suffix. The language element of the locale name
currently assigned to the LC_MESSAGES variable (for example, zh)
The territory element of the locale name currently assigned to
the LC_MESSAGES variable (for example, CN) The codeset element
of the locale name currently assigned to the LC_MESSAGES vari‐
able (for example, dechanzi) A single percent sign (%) character
[Tru64 UNIX] The following search path example changes the order in
which reference page areas are searched. It also adds support for
installations of reference page translations within the CDE and site-
specific areas: % setenv MANPATH \
/usr/local/%L/man:/usr/dt/share/%L/man:/usr/share/%L/man
[Tru64 UNIX] The following search path example adds the directory
/usr/share/doclib/annex/man: % setenv MANPATH \
/usr/share/%L/man:/usr/dt/share/%L/man:/usr/share/doclib/annex/man
[Tru64 UNIX] The following search path example is a more elaborate one
and is likely to cater to everyone's needs: % setenv MANPATH \
/usr/share/doclib/annex/man:/usr/share/%L/man:/usr/share/man: \
/usr/dt/share/%L/man:/usr/dt/share/man:/usr/share/man:/usr/local/man
[Tru64 UNIX] The /usr/share/doclib/annex/man area is the location of
supplementary reference pages for certain components, such as perl,
which have been obtained from the public domain or the Free Software
Foundation. Files installed under /usr/share/doclib/annex/man are not
checked for technical accuracy and coding by us, nor are they main‐
tained by us. These files are included for the convenience of customers
without Internet access. (In all cases, the same files can be down‐
loaded over the Internet from the contributing third-party site without
charge.)
[Tru64 UNIX] The /usr/share/doclib/annex/man directory is not part of
the default search path for the man and catman commands because of the
higher probability of processing problems, particularly for catman when
producing the whatis database. However, it is easy to adjust MANPATH on
a user-specific basis so that the installed reference pages are auto‐
matically found by the man command.
Note
[Tru64 UNIX] Some users indirectly use the webman script, also con‐
trolled by the MANPATH setting, to dynamically convert reference page
source files to HTML format for viewing in a web browser. These users
should be aware that the webman script may not convert to HTML all of
the man coding constructs that can be found in third-party reference
pages.
Enabling Codeset Conversion of Translated Reference Pages
[Tru64 UNIX] The man command can automatically invoke the iconv util‐
ity to perform codeset conversion of reference page files. This capa‐
bility allows you to install one set of reference pages to support
locales that have the same language and territory but different code‐
sets, thereby reducing file redundancy on the system. To enable codeset
conversion, the following conditions must be met: The LC_MESSAGES
locale category of the process running the man command must be set to
the locale name to which the reference pages will be converted. The
underlying iconv utility must have a converter available for the source
and destination codesets. Refer to the iconv(1) reference page for more
information about codeset converters. An appropriate locale mapping
file must exist in the /usr/share directory.
A locale mapping file is a hidden file whose name has the format
locale_name is a complete locale name that includes the name of
the destination codeset. The content of the locale mapping file
is the locale with the source codeset for which translated man‐
pages are available.
[Tru64 UNIX] For example, after installing Tru64 UNIX subsets of soft‐
ware and translated reference pages for Japanese, the eucJP_SJIS code‐
set converter is installed in the /usr/lib/nls/loc/iconv directory,
manpages for the ja_JP.eucJP locale are installed in the
/usr/share/ja_JP.eucJP/man directory, and the file, which contains the
ja_JP.eucJP locale name, is moved to the /usr/share directory. When
users set locale to ja_JP.SJIS and run the man command, it accesses the
reference pages in the /usr/share/ja_JP.eucJP/man directory and con‐
verts them to the SJIS codeset for display.
Controlling the Pager Used by the man Command
[Tru64 UNIX] By default, you can use the following keys to control and
navigate the reference page display: Advances the display by one line.
Advances the display by one screen. Backs up the display by one half
screen. Searches for the first instance of the specified string.
Searches for the next instance of the string specified by a preceding
/string directive. Stops the display.
[Tru64 UNIX] Refer to the more(1) reference page for a complete dis‐
cussion of pager subcommands.
[Tru64 UNIX] By default, if the standard output is a teletype and the
- (single minus sign) option is not provided, man uses the more -svf
command to display formatted output. The -vf options are present in
case the lp nroff device driver generates special device control codes.
The following conditions also affect how the man command displays out‐
put: If the MORE environment variable is defined, the man command uses
the defined command line in place of more -svf. If the -v and -f
options are missing, reference pages may not display properly. If
another pager is defined for the PAGER environment variable, the man
command uses that pager in place of the more command.
Formatted Reference Pages
[Tru64 UNIX] A reference page area may or may not contain cat? direc‐
tories with formatted reference pages. Your system administrator can
create these directories and preformat reference page source files by
using the catman command (see catman(8)). The man command checks to
see if a preformatted version of a reference page exists and, if it
does and has a more recent date than the corresponding source file, the
command simply displays the preformatted file using the more command or
the defined pager.
[Tru64 UNIX] If the specified reference page exists only as a source
file, the man command processes the file through a pipeline of com‐
mands. This pipeline includes: [Tru64 UNIX] If the file is com‐
pressed, the gunzip command to uncompress the file [Tru64 UNIX] The
tbl and neqn commands to preprocess source markup for tables and equa‐
tions [Tru64 UNIX] The nroff command to create formatted output The
more command or an alternative pager command (if defined) to display
the file
[Tru64 UNIX] This last step does not occur if you specify the -
option on the man command line or if standard output is not a
teletype device (for example, if you pipe man command output to
another command or redirect it to a file).
[Tru64 UNIX] When processing the reference page through nroff, the man
command specifies the -m option with the name of the macro package
described in man(5). Most Tru64 UNIX reference pages require not only
this macro package but also those described in rsml(5). The additional
macro packages are applied using entries in the reference page source
files and not through the nroff command line invoked by the man com‐
mand.
[Tru64 UNIX] The nroff command invoked by man also includes the -Tde‐
vice option. The value for device differs, depending on whether cat?
directories are present when the source file is formatted. When the
appropriate cat? directory is present and does not contain a formatted
version of the reference page, the man command formats source by creat‐
ing output for the nroff lp device. It also saves the formatted output
in the cat? directory. If the cat? directory is absent, the man com‐
mand formats a reference page by creating output for the nroff lpr
device and does not save the formatted output.
[Tru64 UNIX] If a preformatted version of the reference page exists,
but the source version is more recent than the preformatted one, the
man command does not use the preformatted file. The command formats the
source file and replaces the preformatted file with a new version.
[Tru64 UNIX] When a specified reference page is not formatted or is
being formatted again, the man command displays an appropriate status
message, unless the standard output is not a teletype device. For exam‐
ple, the status message is not displayed when output from the man com‐
mand is redirected to a file or piped to another command.
Reference Pages in Compressed Format
[Tru64 UNIX] The man command supports reference page files in either
compressed or uncompressed format. Compressed files can save a signif‐
icant amount of disk space in the file system where reference page sub‐
sets are installed. The reference page files for the operating system
product are installed as files, which are compressed files created by
the gzip command.
[Tru64 UNIX] To display a compressed reference page, the man command
temporarily uncompresses the file by invoking the gunzip utility with
the -c option before invoking other commands to format (if necessary)
and display the reference page.
[Tru64 UNIX] There are a number of requirements and restrictions that
apply to reference pages in compressed format. For more information,
refer to both the Reference Page Pointers section in this DESCRIPTION
and the RESTRICTIONS section.
Reference Page Pointers
[Tru64 UNIX] Reference page directories can contain cross-reference
(pointer) reference pages. Pointers, which invoke another reference
page, support those reference page files that contain multiple names in
the NAME section. The pointers allow users to invoke a reference page
by specifying any of the names in the NAME section, not only the name
of the reference page itself.
[Tru64 UNIX] The man command supports different kinds of pointers,
depending on whether reference page files are compressed or uncom‐
pressed, source files, or preformatted files.
[Tru64 UNIX] When reference page files are compressed (either source
files in man? directories or preformatted files in cat? directories),
their associated pointers must be implemented as hard links. Further‐
more, each pointer file name must end with the same compression exten‐
sion as the file that the pointer invokes. For example, if a reference
page was compressed by the gzip command, both the reference page file
name and those of its pointers, must end in
[Tru64 UNIX] When uncompressed reference pages reside in cat? direc‐
tories, pointers are symbolic links to the files that the command dis‐
plays. When uncompressed reference pages reside in man? directories,
pointers are one-line files. The one line is an nroff include direc‐
tive that has one of the following formats:
[Tru64 UNIX] In this case, the man command will reformat the title2
reference page, if necessary, and save the output in the file
title2.section in the appropriate cat? directory, assuming the cat?
directory exists.
RESTRICTIONS
This section contains restrictions that apply to the man command and
the files that it processes.
Pathnames in Uncompressed Pointer Files Must Start With man?
[Tru64 UNIX] The man command changes directory to /usr/share/man,
/usr/dt/share/man, /usr/local/man, or to those directories specified
with the MANPATH variable, the -M option, or -P option. Some reference
pages assume this change of directory. Therefore, an attempt to format
uncompressed reference pages can fail if any directives specifying par‐
tial pathnames do not start with man?/. For example, a cross-reference
file that includes the cat(1) reference page must specify man1 in the
pathname:
.so man1/cat.1
Pointers Must Reside in Same Area as Related Files
[Tru64 UNIX] The man command does not support cross-references to
files outside the current reference page area. For example, a pointer
that resides in the /usr/local/man area cannot include or invoke a file
that resides in the /usr/share/man area.
Compressed Pointers Cannot Be Copied Across File Systems
[Tru64 UNIX] A pointer associated with a compressed reference page is
a hard link, which is not a file but an alternative entry in a file
system table for a particular file. Hard links cannot be transferred
from one file system to another by using commands, such as cp, rcp, or
mv. These commands cannot determine which entries in a file system ta‐
ble point to the same file, and so copy the file that is pointed to
into the destination area each time a hard link is encountered. Refer‐
ence pages can have many associated pointers. Therefore, an operation
that moves directories of compressed reference pages from one file sys‐
tem to another consumes far more disk space in the destination area
than was required in the source area.
The cat? Directories May Not Exist
[Tru64 UNIX] The .../man/cat? directories are not required. It is the
option of the system administrator to create these directories and pre‐
format reference page source files using the catman command. If you are
creating reference pages to be installed on multiple systems, be sure
to supply the files in source file format so they can reside in the
man? directories.
Most Commands Cannot Work Directly on Compressed Files
[Tru64 UNIX] Most reference page files are installed in compressed
format, which means that they cannot be processed directly by most com‐
mands. However, you can use the gunzip -c (or gzip -u -c) command to
uncompress the files and direct the result to standard output for addi‐
tional processing.
[Tru64 UNIX] The following examples search the man8 directory to find
reference pages that contain the string “install”.
For POSIX (including Korn) and Bourne shells: $ cd /usr/share/man/man8
$ for i in *.gz; do > gunzip -c $i | grep 'install' >&- && echo "***
$i" > gunzip -c $i | grep 'install' > done
For C shell: % cd /usr/share/man/man8 % foreach i (*.gz) > gunzip -c $i
| grep 'install' >/dev/null && echo "*** $i" > gunzip -c $i | grep
'install' > end
The whatis Database Is Required for Some Commands
[Tru64 UNIX] The man-f (whatis) and man-k (apropos) commands fail
unless a whatis keyword database exists in one or more of the reference
page areas in the man command search path. A default whatis database is
included in the Tru64 UNIX product and can be optionally installed by
your system administrator. This database is copied to the
/usr/share/man directory and includes entries for all the Tru64 UNIX
reference page subsets that are installed on the system.
[Tru64 UNIX] The whatis database is not updated automatically when
reference pages for layered products and other kinds of optional soft‐
ware are installed. Therefore, your system administrator should
rebuild the whatis database after installation of reference pages for
optional products by invoking catman with the -w option.
Changing Setting for lp Device Affects Preformatted Reference Pages
[Tru64 UNIX] When cat? directories are present, source reference
pages are formatted for the nroff lp device rather than the nroff lpr
device. The nroff lp device driver supplied with Tru64 UNIX is set to
generate output for our devices as specified in term(4). If your sys‐
tem administrator changes the supplied setting for the nroff lp device,
all preformatted reference page files created by man or catman should
be deleted and reformatted for the new setting.
Preformatted Reference Pages May Not Be Suitable for Printing
[Tru64 UNIX] Preformatted reference pages may not be in a format suit‐
able for printing on your hardcopy printers because of embedded control
characters that the printers do not recognize. To format a reference
page for a specific printer, move to the reference page directory and
issue commands such as the following: % cd /usr/share/man % gunzip -c
man1/ls.1.gz |tbl |neqn |nroff -Tdevice -man | \ lpr -Pmyprinter
[Tru64 UNIX] Replace the device argument with /usr/share/lib/term/tab‐
device, where device is the name of a device listed in term(4). Specify
lpr for device when producing output suitable for a lineprinter. For
example: % cd /usr/share/man % gunzip -c man1/ls.1.gz |tbl |neqn |nroff
-Tlpr -man | \ lpr -Pmyprinter
[Tru64 UNIX] When cat? directories are absent, the man command
invokes nroff by specifying the lpr device. In this case, you can usu‐
ally pipe man command output directly to a printer or redirect the out‐
put to a file that you can print. For example: % man 1 ls | lpr
-Pmyprinter % man 1 ls > ~harry/ls.1.txt
[Tru64 UNIX] If the reference page has tables and the hardcopy device
is not capable of reverse line movements, the reference page may not
print properly. There is no workaround for this problem.
Non-HP Terminals May Not Display Preformatted Files Correctly
[Tru64 UNIX] Preformatted reference pages may not be in a format suit‐
able for display on non-HP terminals. To format a reference page for a
specific terminal, move to the reference page directory and issue com‐
mands such as the following: % cd /usr/share/man % gunzip -c
man1/ls.1.gz |tbl |neqn |nroff -Tdevice -man -h | more -svf
[Tru64 UNIX] Replace the device argument with /usr/share/lib/term/tab‐
device, where device is the name of a device listed in term(4) and is
one appropriate for your terminal.
Nondefault Tab Settings Can Corrupt man Command Displays
[Tru64 UNIX] You can view reference pages only on devices for which
default tab boundaries are in effect.
[Tru64 UNIX] To format reference page source files, the man and catman
commands invoke nroff with the -h option. This option causes nroff to
substitute a a tab character for each string of one or more spaces that
ends on a default tab boundary. This operation reduces the number of
characters sent to devices for printing or display and also reduces the
size of files saved in the cat? directories.
[Tru64 UNIX] Default tab boundaries are set after every eight charac‐
ter positions. If nondefault tab boundaries have been set on the device
or system on which reference pages are displayed, the tab characters
embedded by nroff corrupt reference page displays with inappropriate
sequences of spaces. If you encounter this problem after using the man
command, enter the command tabs (to restore default tab boundaries on
your display device) and then enter the man command again.
EXIT STATUS
The man command returns the following exit values: Success. Failure.
EXAMPLES
Display the printf(1) reference page: % man printf [Tru64 UNIX] Dis‐
play the printf(3) reference page: % man 3 printf [Tru64 UNIX] Display
the mgr_helper(8) reference page that you created in a man8 section
directory under $HOME/mgr: % man-M $HOME/mgr mgr_helper [Tru64
UNIX] Display reference pages with the title locale in sections 1 and
4: % man 1 locale 4 locale Query the whatis database for reference
pages whose NAME sections include the string “core”: % man-k core
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
The following environment variables affect the behavior of the man com‐
mand: Provides a default value for other locale variables when these
are unset or null. If set to a non-empty string, overrides the values
of all other locale variables, including LANG. Determines the locale
for the interpretation of byte sequences as characters in text data.
Determines the locale used for text written to standard error or stan‐
dard output. Determines the root directory for message catalogs con‐
taining informational, diagnostic, and other messages returned by the
command. The NLSPATH value, in combination with the setting of LC_MES‐
SAGES, specifies the directory in which a locale-specific message cata‐
log is found. Determines the command (pager) that man invokes to fil‐
ter output when writing output to a terminal.
A default pager must exist and is implementation defined. On
Tru64 UNIX systems, the default pager used by man is the more
command.
FILES
[Tru64 UNIX] Standard location for reference page section directories
[Tru64 UNIX] Section directories containing nroff source files for
reference pages [Tru64 UNIX] Section directories containing formatted
files for reference pages [Tru64 UNIX] Standard location for CDE ref‐
erence page section directories [Tru64 UNIX] Section directories con‐
taining nroff source files for CDE reference pages [Tru64 UNIX] Sec‐
tion directories containing formatted files for CDE reference pages
[Tru64 UNIX] Location of section directories for site-specific, or
local, reference pages [Tru64 UNIX] Section directories containing
nroff source files for local reference pages [Tru64 UNIX] Section
directories containing formatted files for local reference pages [Tru64
UNIX] The default whatis keyword database maintained by using catman
SEE ALSO
Commands: apropos(1), gzip(1), iconv(1), locale(1), more(1), neqn(1),
nroff(1), pcat(1), tbl(1), whatis(1), catman(8)
Files: man(5), rsml(5)man(1)