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Sophie

distrib > Mandriva > 2010.0 > x86_64 > media > main-release > by-pkgid > 877f623eeb45dbc68e2d7c9597f55468 > files > 3

man-1.6e-10mdv2010.0.x86_64.rpm

#
# Generated automatically from man.conf.in by the
# configure script.
#
# man.conf from man-1.6e
#
# For more information about this file, see the man pages man(1)
# and man.conf(5).
#
# This file is read by man to configure the default manpath (also used
# when MANPATH contains an empty substring), to find out where the cat
# pages corresponding to given man pages should be stored,
# and to map each PATH element to a manpath element.
# It may also record the pathname of the man binary. [This is unused.]
# The format is:
#
# MANBIN		pathname
# MANPATH		manpath_element	[corresponding_catdir]
# MANPATH_MAP		path_element	manpath_element
#
# If no catdir is given, it is assumed to be equal to the mandir
# (so that this dir has both man1 etc. and cat1 etc. subdirs).
# This is the traditional Unix setup.
# Certain versions of the FSSTND recommend putting formatted versions
# of /usr/.../man/manx/page.x into /var/catman/.../catx/page.x.
# The keyword FSSTND will cause this behaviour.
# Certain versions of the FHS recommend putting formatted versions of
# /usr/.../share/man/[locale/]manx/page.x into
# /var/cache/man/.../[locale/]catx/page.x.
# The keyword FHS will cause this behaviour (and overrides FSSTND).
# Explicitly given catdirs override.
#
# FSSTND
FHS
#
# This file is also read by man in order to find how to call nroff, less, etc.,
# and to determine the correspondence between extensions and decompressors.
#
# MANBIN		/usr/local/bin/man
#
# Every automatically generated MANPATH includes these fields
#
MANPATH	/usr/share/man
MANPATH	/usr/X11R6/man
MANPATH	/usr/local/man
MANPATH	/usr/local/share/man
MANPATH	/usr/kerberos/man
MANPATH	/usr/man
#
# Uncomment if you want to include one of these by default
#
# MANPATH	/opt/*/man
# MANPATH	/usr/lib/*/man
# MANPATH	/usr/share/*/man
# MANPATH	/usr/kerberos/man
#
# Set up PATH to MANPATH mapping
#
# If people ask for "man foo" and have "/dir/bin/foo" in their PATH
# and the docs are found in "/dir/man", then no mapping is required.
#
# The below mappings are superfluous when the right hand side is
# in the mandatory manpath already, but will keep man from statting
# lots of other nearby files and directories.
#
MANPATH_MAP	/bin			/usr/share/man
MANPATH_MAP	/sbin			/usr/share/man
MANPATH_MAP	/usr/bin		/usr/share/man
MANPATH_MAP	/usr/sbin		/usr/share/man
MANPATH_MAP	/usr/local/bin		/usr/local/share/man
MANPATH_MAP	/usr/local/sbin		/usr/local/share/man
MANPATH_MAP	/usr/X11R6/bin		/usr/X11R6/man
MANPATH_MAP	/usr/bin/X11		/usr/X11R6/man
MANPATH_MAP	/usr/bin/mh		/usr/share/man
MANPATH_MAP	/usr/kerberos/bin		/usr/kerberos/man
MANPATH_MAP	/usr/kerberos/sbin		/usr/kerberos/man

#
# NOAUTOPATH keeps man from automatically adding directories that look like
# manual page directories to the path.
#
#NOAUTOPATH
#
# NOCACHE keeps man from creating cache pages ("cat pages")
# (generally one enables/disable cat page creation by creating/deleting
# the directory they would live in - man never does mkdir)
# 
#NOCACHE
#
# NOCACHE keeps man from creating cache pages
NOCACHE
#
# Useful paths - note that COL should not be defined when
# NROFF is defined as "groff -Tascii" or "groff -Tlatin1";
# not only is it superfluous, but it actually damages the output.
# For use with utf-8, NROFF should be "nroff -mandoc" without -T option.
# (Maybe - but today I need -Tlatin1 to prevent double conversion to utf8.)
#
# If you have a new troff (version 1.18.1?) and its colored output
# causes problems, add the -c option to TROFF, NROFF, JNROFF.
#
TROFF		/usr/bin/groff -Tps -mandoc -c
NROFF		/usr/bin/nroff -Tutf8 -mandoc
JNROFF		/usr/bin/nroff -Tutf8 -mandocj
EQN		/usr/bin/geqn -Tps
NEQN		/usr/bin/geqn -Tutf8
JNEQN		/usr/bin/geqn -Tutf8
TBL		/usr/bin/gtbl
# COL		/usr/bin/col
REFER		/usr/bin/grefer
PIC		/usr/bin/gpic
VGRIND		
GRAP		
PAGER		/usr/bin/less -isr
BROWSER		/usr/bin/less -isr
HTMLPAGER	/bin/cat
CAT		/bin/cat
#
# The command "man -a xyzzy" will show all man pages for xyzzy.
# When CMP is defined man will try to avoid showing the same
# text twice. (But compressed pages compare unequal.)
#
CMP		/usr/bin/cmp -s
#
# Compress cat pages
#
COMPRESS	/usr/bin/xz
COMPRESS_EXT	.xz
#
# Default manual sections (and order) to search if -S is not specified
# and the MANSECT environment variable is not set.
#
MANSECT		1:1p:8:2:3:3p:3pm:4:5:6:7:9:0p:tcl:n:l:p:o
#
# Default options to use when man is invoked without options
# This is mainly for the benefit of those that think -a should be the default
# Note that some systems have /usr/man/allman, causing pages to be shown twice.
#
#MANDEFOPTIONS	-a
#
# Decompress with given decompressor when input file has given extension
# The command given must act as a filter.
#
.gz		/bin/gunzip -c
.bz2		/usr/bin/bzip2 -c -d
.lzma		/usr/bin/unlzma -c -d
.xz		/usr/bin/unxz -c -d
.z		
.Z		/bin/zcat
.F		
.Y