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MAN-PAGES(7)               Linux Programmer's Manual              MAN-PAGES(7)

NAME
       man-pages - conventions for writing Linux man pages

SYNOPSIS
       man [section] title

DESCRIPTION
       This  page describes the conventions that should be employed when writ-
       ing man pages for the Linux  man-pages  project,  which  documents  the
       user-space API provided by the Linux kernel and the GNU C library.  The
       project thus provides most of the pages in Section 2, as well  as  many
       of the pages that appear in Sections 3, 4, 5, and 7 of the man pages on
       a Linux system.  The conventions described on this  page  may  also  be
       useful for authors writing man pages for other projects.

   Sections of the manual pages
       The manual Sections are traditionally defined as follows:

       1 Commands (Programs)
                 Those commands that can be executed by the user from within a
                 shell.

       2 System calls
                 Those functions which must be performed by the kernel.

       3 Library calls
                 Most of the libc functions.

       4 Special files (devices)
                 Files found in /dev.

       5 File formats and conventions
                 The format for /etc/passwd and other human-readable files.

       6 Games

       7 Overview, conventions, and miscellaneous
                 Overviews of various topics, conventions and protocols, char-
                 acter set standards, and miscellaneous other things.

       8 System management commands
                 Commands like mount(8), many of which only root can execute.

   Macro package
       New  manual  pages  should be marked up using the groff an.tmac package
       described in man(7).  This choice is mainly for consistency:  the  vast
       majority  of  existing  Linux  manual  pages  are marked up using these
       macros.

   Conventions for source file layout
       Please limit source code line length to no more than about  75  charac-
       ters  wherever  possible.   This helps avoid line-wrapping in some mail
       clients when patches are submitted inline.

       New sentences should be started on new lines.  This makes it easier  to
       see the effect of patches, which often operate at the level of individ-
       ual sentences.

   Title line
       The first command in a man page should be a TH command:

              .TH title section date source manual

       where:

              title     The title of the man page, written in all caps  (e.g.,
                        MAN-PAGES).

              section   The  section  number  in  which the man page should be
                        placed (e.g., 7).

              date      The date of the last nontrivial change that  was  made
                        to  the  man page.  (Within the man-pages project, the
                        necessary updates to these timetamps are handled auto-
                        matically  by scripts, so there is no need to manually
                        update them as part of  a  patch.)   Dates  should  be
                        written in the form YYYY-MM-DD.

              source    The source of the command, function, or system call.

                        For  those  few  man-pages  pages in Sections 1 and 8,
                        probably you just want to write GNU.

                        For system calls, just write Linux.  (An earlier prac-
                        tice  was  to  write  the version number of the kernel
                        from which the manual page was being  written/checked.
                        However,  this was never done consistently, and so was
                        probably  worse  than  including  no  version  number.
                        Henceforth, avoid including a version number.)

                        For library calls that are part of glibc or one of the
                        other common GNU libraries, just use  GNU  C  Library,
                        GNU, or an empty string.

                        For Section 4 pages, use Linux.

                        In cases of doubt, just write Linux, or GNU.

              manual    The  title  of  the  manual (e.g., for Section 2 and 3
                        pages in the man-pages package, use Linux Programmer's
                        Manual).

   Sections within a manual page
       The  list  below shows conventional or suggested sections.  Most manual
       pages should include at least the highlighted sections.  Arrange a  new
       manual page so that sections are placed in the order shown in the list.

            NAME
            SYNOPSIS
            CONFIGURATION      [Normally only in Section 4]
            DESCRIPTION
            OPTIONS            [Normally only in Sections 1, 8]
            EXIT STATUS        [Normally only in Sections 1, 8]
            RETURN VALUE       [Normally only in Sections 2, 3]
            ERRORS             [Typically only in Sections 2, 3]
            ENVIRONMENT
            FILES
            VERSIONS           [Normally only in Sections 2, 3]
            ATTRIBUTES         [Normally only in Sections 2, 3]
            CONFORMING TO
            NOTES
            BUGS
            EXAMPLE
            SEE ALSO

       Where  a  traditional  heading would apply, please use it; this kind of
       consistency can make the information  easier  to  understand.   If  you
       must,  you  can  create your own headings if they make things easier to
       understand (this can be especially useful for pages in Sections  4  and
       5).   However,  before  doing  this, consider whether you could use the
       traditional headings, with some subsections  (.SS)  within  those  sec-
       tions.

       The following list elaborates on the contents of each of the above sec-
       tions.

       NAME          The name of this manual page.  See man(7)  for  important
                     details  of  the  line(s) that should follow the .SH NAME
                     command.  All words in  this  line  (including  the  word
                     immediately  following  the "\-") should be in lowercase,
                     except where English or technical terminological  conven-
                     tion dictates otherwise.

       SYNOPSIS      briefly  describes  the  command or function's interface.
                     For commands, this shows the syntax of  the  command  and
                     its  arguments  (including options); boldface is used for
                     as-is text and italics are used to  indicate  replaceable
                     arguments.   Brackets  ([])  surround optional arguments,
                     vertical bars (|) separate choices,  and  ellipses  (...)
                     can  be  repeated.   For functions, it shows any required
                     data declarations or #include directives, followed by the
                     function declaration.

                     Where  a  feature  test macro must be defined in order to
                     obtain the declaration of a function (or a variable) from
                     a header file, then the SYNOPSIS should indicate this, as
                     described in feature_test_macros(7).

       CONFIGURATION Configuration details for a device.   This  section  nor-
                     mally appears only in Section 4 pages.

       DESCRIPTION   gives  an  explanation  of what the program, function, or
                     format does.  Discuss how it  interacts  with  files  and
                     standard  input,  and what it produces on standard output
                     or standard error.   Omit  internals  and  implementation
                     details  unless  they're  critical  for understanding the
                     interface.  Describe the usual case; for  information  on
                     command-line  options  of  a program use the OPTIONS sec-
                     tion.

                     When describing new behavior or new flags  for  a  system
                     call  or  library function, be careful to note the kernel
                     or C library version that  introduced  the  change.   The
                     preferred  method of noting this information for flags is
                     as part of a .TP list, in the following form (here, for a
                     new system call flag):

                             XYZ_FLAG (since Linux 3.7)
                                    Description of flag...

                     Including  version  information  is  especially useful to
                     users who are constrained to  using  older  kernel  or  C
                     library  versions  (which is typical in embedded systems,
                     for example).

       OPTIONS       describes the command-line options accepted by a  program
                     and  how  they  change its behavior.  This section should
                     appear only for Section 1 and 8 manual pages.

       EXIT STATUS   lists the possible exit status values of  a  program  and
                     the  conditions  that  cause these values to be returned.
                     This section should appear only for Section 1 and 8  man-
                     ual pages.

       RETURN VALUE  For  Section  2 and 3 pages, this section gives a list of
                     the values the library routine will return to the  caller
                     and   the  conditions  that  cause  these  values  to  be
                     returned.

       ERRORS        For Section 2 and 3 manual pages, this is a list  of  the
                     values  that  may  be  placed in errno in the event of an
                     error, along with information  about  the  cause  of  the
                     errors.  The error list should be in alphabetical order.

       ENVIRONMENT   lists  all  environment variables that affect the program
                     or function and how they affect it.

       FILES         lists the files the program or  function  uses,  such  as
                     configuration files, startup files, and files the program
                     directly operates on.  Give the full  pathname  of  these
                     files,  and  use  the  installation process to modify the
                     directory part to match user preferences.  For many  pro-
                     grams,   the   default   installation   location   is  in
                     /usr/local,  so  your  base  manual   page   should   use
                     /usr/local as the base.

       ATTRIBUTES    A  summary of various attributes of the function(s) docu-
                     mented on this page, broken into subsections.   The  fol-
                     lowing subsections are defined:

                     Multithreading (see pthreads(7))
                            This  subsection notes attributes relating to mul-
                            tithreaded applications:

                            *  Whether the function is thread-safe.

                            *  Whether the function is a cancellation point.

                            *  Whether the function is async-cancel-safe.

                            Details  of  these  attributes  can  be  found  in
                            pthreads(7).

       VERSIONS      A  brief  summary  of  the Linux kernel or glibc versions
                     where a system call  or  library  function  appeared,  or
                     changed  significantly  in  its  operation.  As a general
                     rule, every new interface should include a VERSIONS  sec-
                     tion  in  its  manual page.  Unfortunately, many existing
                     manual pages don't include this information (since  there
                     was  no policy to do so when they were written).  Patches
                     to remedy this are welcome, but, from the perspective  of
                     programmers  writing  new code, this information probably
                     matters only in the case of kernel interfaces  that  have
                     been  added  in  Linux  2.4 or later (i.e., changes since
                     kernel 2.2), and library functions that have  been  added
                     to  glibc  since  version  2.1 (i.e., changes since glibc
                     2.0).

                     The syscalls(2) manual  page  also  provides  information
                     about kernel versions in which various system calls first
                     appeared.

       CONFORMING TO describes any standards or conventions that relate to the
                     function  or  command  described by the manual page.  The
                     preferred terms to use  for  the  various  standards  are
                     listed  as  headings in standards(7).  For a page in Sec-
                     tion 2 or 3, this section should note  the  POSIX.1  ver-
                     sion(s)  that  the call conforms to, and also whether the
                     call is specified in C99.  (Don't worry  too  much  about
                     other standards like SUS, SUSv2, and XPG, or the SVr4 and
                     4.xBSD implementation  standards,  unless  the  call  was
                     specified  in  those  standards, but isn't in the current
                     version of POSIX.1.)  (See standards(7).)

                     If the call is not governed by any standards but commonly
                     exists  on  other  systems,  note  them.   If the call is
                     Linux-specific, note this.

                     If this section consists of  just  a  list  of  standards
                     (which  it  commonly  does),  terminate  the  list with a
                     period ('.').

       NOTES         provides miscellaneous notes.  For Section 2  and  3  man
                     pages  you may find it useful to include subsections (SS)
                     named Linux Notes and Glibc Notes.

       BUGS          lists limitations, known defects or  inconveniences,  and
                     other questionable activities.

       EXAMPLE       provides  one  or more examples describing how this func-
                     tion, file or command is used.  For  details  on  writing
                     example programs, see Example Programs below.

       AUTHORS       lists authors of the documentation or program.  Use of an
                     AUTHORS section is strongly discouraged.   Generally,  it
                     is  better not to clutter every page with a list of (over
                     time potentially numerous) authors; if you write or  sig-
                     nificantly amend a page, add a copyright notice as a com-
                     ment in the source file.  If you  are  the  author  of  a
                     device  driver and want to include an address for report-
                     ing bugs, place this under the BUGS section.

       SEE ALSO      provides a comma-separated list  of  related  man  pages,
                     ordered  by  section  number  and  then alphabetically by
                     name, possibly followed by other related pages  or  docu-
                     ments.  Do not terminate this with a period.

                     Where  the  SEE  ALSO list contains many long manual page
                     names, to improve the visual result of the output, it may
                     be  useful  to employ the .ad l (don't right justify) and
                     .nh (don't hyphenate) directives.  Hyphenation  of  indi-
                     vidual  page  names  can  be prevented by preceding words
                     with the string "\%".

STYLE GUIDE
       The following subsections describe the preferred  style  for  the  man-
       pages  project.   For  details not covered below, the Chicago Manual of
       Style is usually a good source; try also grepping for preexisting usage
       in the project source tree.

   Use of gender-neutral language
       As  far  as  possible,  use  gender-neutral language in the text of man
       pages.  Use of "they" ("them", "themself", "their") as a gender-neutral
       singular pronoun is acceptable.

   Font conventions
       For  functions,  the arguments are always specified using italics, even
       in the SYNOPSIS section, where the rest of the function is specified in
       bold:

           int myfunction(int argc, char **argv);

       Variable names should, like argument names, be specified in italics.

       Filenames (whether pathnames, or references to header files) are always
       in italics (e.g., <stdio.h>), except in  the  SYNOPSIS  section,  where
       included  files are in bold (e.g., #include <stdio.h>).  When referring
       to a standard header file include, specify the header  file  surrounded
       by angle brackets, in the usual C way (e.g., <stdio.h>).

       Special macros, which are usually in uppercase, are in bold (e.g., MAX-
       INT).  Exception: don't boldface NULL.

       When enumerating a list of error codes, the codes  are  in  bold  (this
       list usually uses the .TP macro).

       Complete  commands  should,  if long, be written as an indented line on
       their own, with a blank line before and after the command, for example

           man 7 man-pages

       If the command is short, then it can be included inline in the text, in
       italic  format,  for example, man 7 man-pages.  In this case, it may be
       worth using nonbreaking spaces ("\ ") at suitable places  in  the  com-
       mand.  Command options should be written in italics (e.g., -l).

       Expressions,  if  not  written  on  a separate indented line, should be
       specified in italics.  Again, the use  of  nonbreaking  spaces  may  be
       appropriate if the expression is inlined with normal text.

       Any reference to the subject of the current manual page should be writ-
       ten with the name in bold.  If the subject is a function (i.e., this is
       a  Section  2 or 3 page), then the name should be followed by a pair of
       parentheses in Roman (normal) font.  For example, in the  fcntl(2)  man
       page,  references  to  the  subject  of  the  page would be written as:
       fcntl().  The preferred way to write this in the source file is:

           .BR fcntl ()

       (Using this format, rather than the use of "\fB...\fP()" makes it  eas-
       ier to write tools that parse man page source files.)

       Any  reference  to  another man page should be written with the name in
       bold, always followed by the section number, formatted in  Roman  (nor-
       mal)  font,  without  any separating spaces (e.g., intro(2)).  The pre-
       ferred way to write this in the source file is:

           .BR intro (2)

       (Including the section number  in  cross  references  lets  tools  like
       man2html(1) create properly hyperlinked pages.)

       Control  characters should be written in bold face, with no quotes; for
       example, ^X.

   Spelling
       Starting with release 2.59, man-pages follows American spelling conven-
       tions  (previously,  there  was  a  random  mix of British and American
       spellings); please write all new pages and patches according  to  these
       conventions.

       Aside  from  the well-known spelling differences, there are a few other
       subtleties to watch for:

       *  American English  tends  to  use  the  forms  "backward",  "upward",
          "toward",  and  so  on  rather  than  the British forms "backwards",
          "upwards", "towards", and so on.

   BSD version numbers
       The classical scheme for writing BSD version numbers is  x.yBSD,  where
       x.y is the version number (e.g., 4.2BSD).  Avoid forms such as BSD 4.3.

   Capitalization
       In  subsection  ("SS") headings, capitalize the first word in the head-
       ing, but otherwise use lowercase, except  where  English  usage  (e.g.,
       proper  nouns)  or  programming language requirements (e.g., identifier
       names) dictate otherwise.  For example:

           .SS Unicode under Linux

   Indentation of structure definitions, shell session logs, and so on
       When structure definitions, shell session logs, and so on are  included
       in  running  text,  indent  them by 4 spaces (i.e., a block enclosed by
       .in +4n and .in).

   Preferred terms
       The following table lists some preferred terms to  use  in  man  pages,
       mainly to ensure consistency across pages.

       Term                 Avoid using              Notes
       ------------------------------------------------------------------

       bit mask             bitmask
       built-in             builtin
       Epoch                epoch                    For  the UNIX Epoch
                                                     (00:00:00,  1   Jan
                                                     1970 UTC)
       filename             file name
       filesystem           file system
       hostname             host name
       inode                i-node
       lowercase            lower case, lower-case
       pathname             path name
       pseudoterminal       pseudo-terminal
       privileged port      reserved  port, system
                            port
       real-time            realtime, real time
       run time             runtime
       saved set-group-ID   saved group ID,  saved
                            set-GID
       saved set-user-ID    saved  user  ID, saved
                            set-UID
       set-group-ID         set-GID, setgid
       set-user-ID          set-UID, setuid
       superuser            super user, super-user
       superblock           super  block,   super-
                            block
       timestamp            time stamp
       timezone             time zone
       uppercase            upper case, upper-case
       usable               useable
       user space           userspace
       username             user name
       zeros                zeroes

       See also the discussion Hyphenation of attributive compounds below.

   Terms to avoid
       The following table lists some terms to avoid using in man pages, along
       with some suggested alternatives, mainly to ensure  consistency  across
       pages.

       Avoid             Use instead           Notes
       ------------------------------------------------------------

       32bit             32-bit                same   for   8-bit,
                                               16-bit, etc.
       current process   calling process       A  common   mistake
                                               made by kernel pro-
                                               grammers when writ-
                                               ing man pages
       manpage           man   page,  manual
                         page
       minus infinity    negative infinity
       non-root          unprivileged user
       non-superuser     unprivileged user
       nonprivileged     unprivileged
       OS                operating system
       plus infinity     positive infinity
       pty               pseudoterminal
       tty               terminal
       Unices            UNIX systems
       Unixes            UNIX systems

   Trademarks
       Use the correct spelling and case for trademarks.  The following  is  a
       list  of  the correct spellings of various relevant trademarks that are
       sometimes misspelled:

            DG/UX
            HP-UX
            UNIX
            UnixWare

   NULL, NUL, null pointer, and null character
       A null pointer is a pointer that points to  nothing,  and  is  normally
       indicated  by  the  constant  NULL.  On the other hand, NUL is the null
       byte, a byte with the value 0, represented in C via the character  con-
       stant '\0'.

       The  preferred term for the pointer is "null pointer" or simply "NULL";
       avoid writing "NULL pointer".

       The preferred term for the byte is "null byte".  Avoid  writing  "NUL",
       since  it  is  too  easily  confused with "NULL".  Avoid also the terms
       "zero byte" and "null character".  The byte that terminates a C  string
       should  be  described  as  "the  terminating null byte"; strings may be
       described as "null-terminated", but avoid the use of "NUL-terminated".

   Hyperlinks
       For hyperlinks, use the .UR/.UE macro pair  (see  groff_man(7)).   This
       produces proper hyperlinks that can be used in a web browser, when ren-
       dering a page with, say:

            BROWSER=firefox man -H pagename

   Use of e.g., i.e., etc., a.k.a., and similar
       In general, the use of abbreviations such as  "e.g.",  "i.e.",  "etc.",
       "a.k.a."   should  be avoided, in favor of suitable full wordings ("for
       example", "that is", "and so on", "also known as").

       The only place where such abbreviations may be acceptable is  in  short
       parenthetical asides (e.g., like this one).

       Always  include periods in such abbreviations, as shown here.  In addi-
       tion, "e.g." and "i.e." should always be followed by a comma.

   Em-dashes
       The way to write an em-dash--the glyph that appears at  either  end  of
       this subphrase--in *roff is with the macro "\(em".  (On an ASCII termi-
       nal, an em-dash typically renders as two hyphens, but  in  other  typo-
       graphical  contexts  it  renders  as a long dash.)  Em-dashes should be
       written without surrounding spaces.

   Hyphenation of attributive compounds
       Compound terms should be hyphenated when used attributively  (i.e.,  to
       qualify a following noun). Some examples:

           32-bit value
           command-line argument
           floating-point number
           run-time check
           user-space function
           wide-character string

   Hyphenation with multi, non, pre, re, sub, and so on
       The  general  tendency in modern English is not to hyphenate after pre-
       fixes such as "multi", "non", "pre", "re", "sub", and  so  on.   Manual
       pages should generally follow this rule when these prefixes are used in
       natural English constructions with simple suffixes.  The following list
       gives some examples of the preferred forms:

           interprocess
           multithreaded
           multiprocess
           nonblocking
           nondefault
           nonempty
           noninteractive
           nonnegative
           nonportable
           nonzero
           preallocated
           precreate
           prerecorded
           reestablished
           reinitialize
           rearm
           reread
           subcomponent
           subdirectory
           subsystem

       Hyphens  should  be  retained when the prefixes are used in nonstandard
       English words, with trademarks, proper  nouns,  acronyms,  or  compound
       terms.  Some examples:

           non-ASCII
           non-English
           non-NULL
           non-real-time

       Finally,  note that "re-create" and "recreate" are two different verbs,
       and the former is probably what you want.

   Real minus character
       Where a real minus character is required (e.g., for numbers such as -1,
       or  when  writing  options that have a leading dash, such as in ls -l),
       use the following form in the man page source:

           \-

       This guideline applies also to code examples.

   Character constants
       To produce single quotes that render well in both ASCII and UTF-8,  use
       the following form for character constants in the man page source:

           \(aqC\(aq

       where  C is the quoted character.  This guideline applies also to char-
       acter constants used in code examples.

   Example programs and shell sessions
       Manual pages may include example programs demonstrating how  to  use  a
       system call or library function.  However, note the following:

       *  Example programs should be written in C.

       *  An  example  program is necessary and useful only if it demonstrates
          something beyond what can easily be provided in a  textual  descrip-
          tion  of  the interface.  An example program that does nothing other
          than call an interface usually serves little purpose.

       *  Example programs should be fairly short (preferably  less  than  100
          lines; ideally less than 50 lines).

       *  Example  programs  should  do  error checking after system calls and
          library function calls.

       *  Example programs should be complete, and  compile  without  warnings
          when compiled with cc -Wall.

       *  Where possible and appropriate, example programs should allow exper-
          imentation, by varying their behavior based on inputs (ideally  from
          command-line arguments, or alternatively, via input read by the pro-
          gram).

       *  Example programs should be  laid  out  according  to  Kernighan  and
          Ritchie  style, with 4-space indents.  (Avoid the use of TAB charac-
          ters in source code!)

       *  For consistency, all example programs should terminate using  either
          of:

               exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
               exit(EXIT_FAILURE);

          Avoid using the following forms to terminate a program:

              exit(0);
              exit(1);
              return n;

       *  If  there  is  extensive  explanatory text before the program source
          code, mark off the source code with  a  subsection  heading  Program
          source, as in:

              .SS Program source

          Always do this if the explanatory text includes a shell session log.

       If  you  include a shell session log demonstrating the use of a program
       or other system feature:

       *  Place the session log above the source code listing

       *  Indent the session log by four spaces.

       *  Boldface the user input text, to distinguish it from output produced
          by the system.

       For  some  examples  of  what  example  programs  should look like, see
       wait(2) and pipe(2).

EXAMPLE
       For canonical examples of how man pages in the man-pages package should
       look, see pipe(2) and fcntl(2).

SEE ALSO
       man(1), man2html(1), groff(7), groff_man(7), man(7), mdoc(7)

COLOPHON
       This  page  is  part of release 3.69 of the Linux man-pages project.  A
       description of the project, information about reporting bugs,  and  the
       latest     version     of     this    page,    can    be    found    at
       http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.

Linux                             2014-06-13                      MAN-PAGES(7)

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