Provided by: mandoc_1.14.6-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       man - display manual pages

SYNOPSIS


       man [-acfhklw] [-C file] [-M path] [-m path] [-S subsection] [[-s] section] name ...

DESCRIPTION

       The man utility displays the manual page entitled name.  Pages may be selected according to a specific
       category (section) or machine architecture (subsection).

       The options are as follows:

       -a      Display all matching manual pages.

       -C file Use  the  specified  file  instead  of  the  default  configuration  file.  This permits users to
               configure their own manual environment.  See man.conf(5) for a description  of  the  contents  of
               this file.

       -c      Copy  the  manual  page  to the standard output instead of using less(1) to paginate it.  This is
               done by default if the standard output is not a terminal device.

               When using -c, most terminal devices are unable to show the markup.  To print the output  of  man
               to  the  terminal with markup but without using a pager, pipe it to ul(1).  To remove the markup,
               pipe the output to col(1) -b instead.

       -f      A synonym for whatis(1).  It searches for name in manual page names and displays the header lines
               from all matching pages.  The search is case insensitive and matches whole words only.

       -h      Display only the SYNOPSIS lines of the requested manual pages.  Implies -a and -c.

       -k      A synonym for apropos(1).  Instead of name, an  expression  can  be  provided  using  the  syntax
               described  in  the  apropos(1)  manual.  By default, it displays the header lines of all matching
               pages.

       -l      A synonym for mandoc(1).  The name arguments are interpreted as filenames.  No search is done and
               file, path, section, subsection, and -w are ignored.  This option implies -a.

       -M path Override the list of directories to search for manual pages.  The supplied path must be  a  colon
               (‘:’) separated list of directories.  This option also overrides the environment variable MANPATH
               and any directories specified in the man.conf(5) file.

       -m path Augment  the  list  of directories to search for manual pages.  The supplied path must be a colon
               (‘:’) separated list of directories.  These directories will be searched before  those  specified
               using  the  -M  option,  the  MANPATH  environment variable, the man.conf(5) file, or the default
               directories.

       -S subsection
               Only show pages for the specified machine(1) architecture.  subsection is case insensitive.

               By default manual pages for all architectures are installed.  Therefore this option can  be  used
               to view pages for one architecture whilst using another.

               This option overrides the MACHINE environment variable.

       [-s] section
               Only select manuals from the specified section.  The currently available sections are:

                     1         General commands (tools and utilities).
                     2         System calls and error numbers.
                     3         Library functions.
                     3p        perl(1) programmer's reference guide.
                     4         Device drivers.
                     5         File formats.
                     6         Games.
                     7         Miscellaneous information.
                     8         System maintenance and operation commands.
                     9         Kernel internals.

       -w      List the pathnames of all matching manual pages instead of displaying any of them.  If no name is
               given, list the directories that would be searched.

       The  options  -IKOTW  are  also supported and are documented in mandoc(1).  The options -fkl are mutually
       exclusive and override each other.

       The search starts with the -m argument if provided, then continues with  the  -M  argument,  the  MANPATH
       variable,      the      manpath      entries      in      the      man.conf(5)      file,     or     with
       /usr/share/man:/usr/X11R6/man:/usr/local/man by default.  Within each of these, directories are  searched
       in  the  order  provided.   Within each directory, the search proceeds according to the following list of
       sections: 1, 8, 6, 2, 3, 5, 7, 4, 9, 3p.  The first match found is shown.

       The mandoc.db(5) database is used for looking up manual page entries.  In cases  where  the  database  is
       absent,  outdated,  or  corrupt,  man  falls  back  to  looking for files called name.section.  If both a
       formatted and an unformatted version of the same manual page,  for  example  cat1/foo.0  and  man1/foo.1,
       exist  in the same directory, only the unformatted version is used.  The database is kept up to date with
       makewhatis(8), which is run by the weekly(8) maintenance script.

       Guidelines for writing man pages can be found in mdoc(7).

ENVIRONMENT

       MACHINE   As  some  manual  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, or with the -S option.  MACHINE is case insensitive.

       MANPAGER  Any non-empty value of the environment variable  MANPAGER  is  used  instead  of  the  standard
                 pagination  program, less(1).  If less(1) is used, the interactive :t command can be used to go
                 to the definitions of various terms, for  example  command  line  options,  command  modifiers,
                 internal commands, environment variables, function names, preprocessor macros, errno(2) values,
                 and some other emphasized words.  Some terms may have defining text at more than one place.  In
                 that  case, the less(1) interactive commands t and T can be used to move to the next and to the
                 previous place providing information about  the  term  last  searched  for  with  :t.   The  -O
                 tag[=term] option documented in the mandoc(1) manual opens a manual page at the definition of a
                 specific term rather than at the beginning.

       MANPATH   Override the standard search path which is either specified in man.conf(5) or the default path.
                 The  format of MANPATH is a colon (‘:’) separated list of directories.  Invalid directories are
                 ignored.  Overridden by -M, ignored if -l is specified.

                 If MANPATH begins with a colon, it is appended to the standard path; if it ends with  a  colon,
                 it  is prepended to the standard path; or if it contains two adjacent colons, the standard path
                 is inserted between the colons.

       PAGER     Specifies the pagination program to use when MANPAGER is not defined.   If  neither  PAGER  nor
                 MANPAGER is defined, less(1) is used.

FILES

       /etc/man.conf  default man configuration file

EXIT STATUS

       The man utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.  See mandoc(1) for details.

EXAMPLES

       Format  a  page  for pasting extracts into an email message — avoid printing any UTF-8 characters, reduce
       the width to ease quoting in replies, and remove markup:

             $ man -T ascii -O width=65 pledge | col -b

       Read a typeset page in a PDF viewer:

             $ MANPAGER=mupdf man -T pdf lpd

SEE ALSO

       apropos(1), col(1), mandoc(1), ul(1), whereis(1), man.conf(5), mdoc(7)

STANDARDS

       The man utility is compliant with the IEEE Std 1003.1-2008 (“POSIX.1”) specification.

       The flags [-aCcfhIKlMmOSsTWw], as well as the environment variables MACHINE, MANPAGER, and  MANPATH,  are
       extensions to that specification.

HISTORY

       A man command first appeared in Version 2 AT&T UNIX.

       The -w option first appeared in Version 7 AT&T UNIX; -f and -k in 4BSD; -M in 4.3BSD; -a in 4.3BSD-Tahoe;
       -c and -m in 4.3BSD-Reno; -h in 4.3BSD-Net/2; -C in NetBSD 1.0; -s and -S in OpenBSD 2.3; and -I, -K, -l,
       -O,  and  -W  in OpenBSD 5.7.  The -T option first appeared in AT&T System III UNIX and was also added in
       OpenBSD 5.7.

Debian                                            July 20, 2020                                           MAN(1)