Provided by: mandoc_1.14.6-3_amd64 bug

NAME

       man.conf — configuration file for man

DESCRIPTION

       This  is  the  configuration file for the man(1), apropos(1), and makewhatis(8) utilities.  Its presence,
       and all directives, are optional.

       This file is an ASCII text file.  Leading whitespace on lines, lines starting with ‘#’, and  blank  lines
       are  ignored.   Words  are  separated  by  whitespace.   The  first  word  on  each line is the name of a
       configuration directive.

       The following directives are supported:

       manpath path
               Override the default search path for man(1), apropos(1),  and  makewhatis(8).   It  can  be  used
               multiple  times  to  specify  multiple  paths,  with the order determining the manual page search
               order.

               Each path is a tree containing subdirectories whose names consist of  the  strings  ‘man’  and/or
               ‘cat’  followed  by  the  names  of  sections, usually single digits.  The former are supposed to
               contain unformatted manual pages in mdoc(7) and/or man(7) format; file names should end with  the
               name of the section preceded by a dot.  The latter should contain preformatted manual pages; file
               names should end with ‘.0’.

               Creating  a mandoc.db(5) database with makewhatis(8) in each directory configured with manpath is
               recommended and necessary for apropos(1) to work, and also for man(1) on operating  systems  like
               OpenBSD  that  install  each  manual  page with only one file name in the file system, even if it
               documents multiple utilities or functions.

       output option [value]
               Configure the default value of an output option.  These  directives  are  overridden  by  the  -O
               command line options of the same names.  For details, see the mandoc(1) manual.

               option      value      used by -T     purpose

               fragment    none       html           print only body
               includes    string     html           path to header files
               indent      integer    ascii, utf8    left margin
               man         string     html           path for Xr links
               paper       string     ps, pdf        paper size
               style       string     html           CSS file
               toc         none       html           print table of contents
               width       integer    ascii, utf8    right margin

FILES

       /etc/man.conf

EXAMPLES

       The  following  configuration  file  reproduces the defaults: installing it is equivalent to not having a
       man.conf file at all.

             manpath /usr/share/man
             manpath /usr/X11R6/man
             manpath /usr/local/man

SEE ALSO

       apropos(1), man(1), makewhatis(8)

HISTORY

       A relatively complicated man.conf file format first appeared in 4.3BSD-Reno.  For  OpenBSD  5.8,  it  was
       redesigned from scratch, aiming for simplicity.

AUTHORS

       Ingo Schwarze <schwarze@openbsd.org>

Debian                                          February 10, 2020                                    MAN.CONF(5)