Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Diplaying man pages
Homework and Emergencies Homework & Coursework Questions Diplaying man pages Post 302933578 by Don Cragun on Friday 30th of January 2015 08:16:02 PM
Old 01-30-2015
On most systems, the command:
man socket read connect
should display the man pages for all three interfaces. Note that if you are using man interactively, man will display each page separately using the utility named by the PAGER (or on some systems, the MANPAGER) environment variable. If the environment variable used by your version of man is not set, the man man page on your system will tell you what utility is used as the default pager on your system. In most pager utilities, a q or :q command will exit the pager, and then man will display the man page for the next interface named on the command line.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Man pages

Hello , I just installed openssh in my system . I actually tried to man sshd but it says no entry , though there is a man directory in the installation which have the man pages for sshd . Can anyone tell me how should i install these man pages . DP (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: DPAI
2 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

man pages

Hi, I've written now a man pages, but I don't knwo how to get 'man' to view them. Where have I to put this files, which directories are allowed?? THX Bensky (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: bensky
3 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

man pages

Hi folks, I want to know all the commands for which man pages are available. How do i get it? Cheers, Nisha (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Nisha
4 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

man pages

When reading man pages, I notice that sometimes commands are follwed by a number enclosed in parenthesis. such as: mkdir calls the mkdir(2) system call. What exactly does this mean? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: dangral
4 Replies

5. AIX

man pages in AIX

Hi all. A friend of mine just recently gave me an old RISC 6000 machine to learn on for my AIX certification. I installed AIX 4.3.3 and everything seems to work fine, except there are no man pages. Is there a way to generate man pages on this machine? Thanks alot in advance. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: dlynch912
5 Replies

6. Fedora

why do we have .1 extension in MAN PAGES?

Hello sir, I am using FEDORA 9. I wanted to know why do we have ".1" extension in the archives of man pages. I know we are giving format. I want to know the importance or purpose of this format. Can you please tell me :confused: (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nsharath
2 Replies

7. Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators

Extended man pages

Hi, Any chance we could have an input pane in the forums that targets a man page and whose content is output to the bottom of the man page in this way forming extended man pages with additional know how? Thanks, Steve (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: spaesani
9 Replies

8. Solaris

man pages issue

hi all i have installed veritas storage foundation 5.1 in my sun blade 150 which running with sun solaris 5.10. Veritas commands manual pages are located in /opt/VRTS/man/man1m directory. But if i give "man vxassist" It says "no manual entry for vxassist". How to resolve this? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kingston
2 Replies

9. Solaris

MAN PAGES

Hi everyone, I have a small query, in solaris the man pages get displayed on half of the terminal , can i get a full terminal or full screen display ?:) (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: M.Choudhury
2 Replies

10. HP-UX

Looking for some man pages.

Can anyone supply me with the man pages for: omnidatalist omnibarlist omnisap.exe I prefer the source man pages in nroff format. A clue about the software bundles which supply these man pages is fine as well. OS: HP-UX TIA (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: sb008
11 Replies
MAN(1)							    BSD General Commands Manual 						    MAN(1)

NAME
man -- display the on-line manual pages (aka ``man pages'') SYNOPSIS
man [-acw|-h] [-C file] [-M path] [-m path] [-S srch] [[-s] section] name ... man -k [-C file] [-M path] [-m path] keyword ... man -p DESCRIPTION
The man utility displays the manual pages named on the command line. Its options are as follows: -a Display all of the man pages for a specified section and name combination. (Normally, only the first man page found is displayed.) -C Use the specified file instead of the default configuration file. This permits users to configure their own man environment. See man.conf(5) for a description of the contents of this file. -c Copy the man page to the standard output instead of using more(1) to paginate it. This is done by default if the standard output is not a terminal device. -h Display only the ``SYNOPSIS'' lines of the requested man pages. For commands, this is typically the command line usage information. For library functions, this usually contains the required include files and function prototypes. -k Display the header lines for any man pages matching keyword(s), in the same manner as apropos(1). -M Override the list of standard directories which man searches for man pages. The supplied path must be a colon (``:'') separated list of directories. This search path may also be set using the environment variable MANPATH. The subdirectories to be searched, and their search order, is specified by the ``_subdir'' line in the man configuration file. -m Augment the list of standard directories which man searches for man pages. The supplied path must be a colon (``:'') separated list of directories. These directories will be searched before the standard directories or the directories specified using the -M option or the MANPATH environment variable. The subdirectories to be searched, and their search order, is specified by the ``_subdir'' line in the man configuration file. -p Print the search path for the manual pages. -s Restrict the directories that man will search to the specified section. The man configuration file (see man.conf(5)) specifies the possible section values that are currently available. -S Display only man pages that have the specified string in the directory part of their filenames. This allows the man page search process criteria to be narrowed without having to change the MANPATH or ``_default'' variables. -w List the pathnames of the man pages which man would display for the specified section and name combination. If the '-s' option is not specified, there is more than one argument, the '-k' option is not used, and the first argument is a valid section, then that argument will be used as if specified by the '-s' option. If name is given with a full or relative path then man interprets it as a file specification, so that you can do man ./foo.5 or even man /cd/foo/bar.1.gz. ENVIRONMENT
MACHINE As some man pages are intended only for specific architectures, man searches any subdirectories, with the same name as the current architecture, in every directory which it searches. Machine specific areas are checked before general areas. The current machine type may be overridden by setting the environment variable MACHINE to the name of a specific architecture. MANPATH The standard search path used by man may be overridden by specifying a path in the MANPATH environment variable. The format of the path is a colon (``:'') separated list of directories. The subdirectories to be searched as well as their search order is speci- fied by the ``_subdir'' line in the man configuration file. PAGER The pagination command used for writing the output. If the PAGER environment variable is null or not set, the standard pagination program more(1) will be used. FILES
/etc/man.conf default man configuration file. /usr/{share,X11R7,pkg,local}/man/whatis.db standard whatis/apropos database search path, set in /etc/man.conf. SEE ALSO
apropos(1), whatis(1), whereis(1), man.conf(5), mdoc(7), mdoc.samples(7) STANDARDS
man conforms to X/Open Commands and Utilities Issue 5 (``XCU5''). BUGS
The on-line man pages are, by necessity, forgiving toward stupid display devices, causing a few man pages to be not as nicely formatted as their typeset counterparts. BSD
October 7, 2011 BSD
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:44 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy