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t-groff.bat |
This is a port of GNU Groff to DJGPP v2.03 or later. Groff is the GNU version of document formatting tools related to `troff'. This README file describes how to build and install Groff on MS-DOS or MS-Windows systems using the DJGPP port of GNU C/C++ compiler and development tools. I. Installing the pre-compiled binary package ------------------------------------------ 1. Unzip the file groNNNb.zip (where NNN is the version number) preserving the directory structure (-d switch to PKUNZIP) from the main DJGPP installation directory. If you will use Groff on Windows 9X or Windows2000, use an unzip program which supports long filenames. 2. Groff binaries were configured so that they will look for their standard directories under the directory pointed to by the DJDIR environment variable, so it should work automatically if you have DJGPP installed. If you don't have a standard DJGPP installation, set the variable DJDIR to point to the directory where you unzip Groff. In this latter case, you will need to set additional environment variables: GROFF_TMAC_PATH=%DJDIR%/share/groff/<version>/tmac:%DJDIR%/share/groff/site-tmac GROFF_TYPESETTER=ascii GROFF_FONT_PATH=%DJDIR%/share/groff/<version>/font <version> is something like `1.16.1' or `1.17'. In addition, you can set the variable GROFF_TMPDIR to point to a directory where you want Groff to create temporary files it needs for running its jobs (these files are automatically deleted when Groff exits). All of those variables are automatically set in the file DJGPP.ENV that is part of the standard DJGPP distribution djdevNNN.zip (where NNN is the DJGPP version number), so you only need to set them manually if you don't have DJGPP installed. Note that the GROFF_TYPESETTER variable sets the default Groff device to be `ascii', which is suitable for formatting man pages to be viewed on the terminal. Use the -T switch to generate output for other devices (e.g., -Tps for PostScript). 3. If your TMPDIR environment variable points to a RAM drive, you might consider changing GROFF_TMPDIR to point to a directory on a real disk drive, especially if you intend to generate PostScript output, because RAM disks are typically small (2-3 MBytes) which might be not enough for formatting large documents. 4. Read the docs. It comes as formatted manual pages called *.1, *.5 and *.7 which unzip into your man/ subdirectory. You can read them with a pager such as GNU Less (recommended, as Less will use colors for bold and underlined text) or with Info (which will remove the bold/underline attributes). Another alternative is to use Emacs built-in man page reader; the DJGPP FAQ lists other possibilities. Beginning with version 1.15, Groff comes with an Info manual; type "info -f groff" to read it. The Info manual is still under construction, so some sections are empty. If you want to add a Groff entry to the main Info menu in the file DIR, chdir to the `info' subdirectory of the main Groff installation directory and run this command: install-info --dir-file=dir groff.info After you do that, "info groff" will also work. 5. For those who only need Groff to format man pages and don't like reading the docs, here's a minimal cookbook: groff -man -s foo.1 > foo.man where `foo.1' is the troff source of the man page and `foo.man' is the formatted page. If you need to view the man page, say this: groff -man -s foo.1 | less You can also use the DJGPP clone of the Unix `man' command, in which case `man' runs the above command for you automatically. Here's how you print man pages on a PostScript printer: groff -man -s -Tps foo.1 > prn And this is for a LaserJet4 printer: groff -man -s -Tlj4 foo.1 > prn Printing the documents produced by Groff is possible either by redirecting Groff's standard output to the local printer device, like shown above, or by using the `-l' switch to Groff. The latter possibility causes Groff to pipe its output to a program whose name and arguments appear in the files named `DESC' in each of the `devFOO' subdirectories of the %DJDIR%/share/groff/<version>/font directory; for example, the file devps/DESC is used by "groff -Tps". The relevant line in these files begins with the word "print". As configured, when invoked with the `-l' switch, Groff will call `cat' (from GNU Textutils) to pipe its output to the default printer device for -Tps, -Tlbp and -Tlj4 options, and it will call `dvilj4' (from the dvljNNNb.zip package) for -Tdvi option. If you don't have these programs installed, you can edit the respective `DESC' files to replace these commands with something else. The replacement program must be able to read its standard input and send its output to whatever printer you want. The "print" entry is assumed to be a shell command, so it can use redirection, pipes, and other shell features. Beginning with version 1.15, Groff can create HTML output, like this: groff -man -s -Thtml foo.1 > foo.html Producing HTML files sometimes requires Ghostscript to be installed, and, for gif images, ppmquant and ppmtogif as well. If you do not have these programs installed, Groff will print an error message, and the produced file will have links which will fail to resolve when you view it with a Web browser. 6. Some programs in the package are supplied as Unix shell scripts. While it is relatively easy to write a DOS batch file which will do the same, DOS doesn't allow to redirect input and output of a batch file. Since Groff tools are meant to be invoked in a pipe, the batch files are not very useful. The batch files are included in the binary distribution nonetheless. These scripts need the following utilities to run (in addition to the Groff programs they invoke): - bash - gawk - egrep - sed The `afmtodit' and `mmroff' utilities are Perl scripts, so you will need a Perl port to run them. All of these ports should be available from the DJGPP sites. If you need to run these scripts and batch files, you have to install the port of bash (or another Unix-like shell) and the above-mentioned utilities called by the script. Alternatively, just look inside the shell script and invoke the programs it calls manually. To run the scripts with redirection, invoke them via the shell, like this: "sh mmroff > foo". 7. Note that Groff programs use floating point, so you will need an FP emulator if your machine doesn't have an FPU. The binary distribution includes the emulator, in case you don't have the DJGPP development environment installed. Please refer to the DJGPP FAQ list in case you have any problems with the emulator. 8. The package does not include the directories under share/groff/<version>/font whose names begin with "devX": these are needed on X-Windows for running the gxditview program, which is not supported by this port. 9. Due to 8+3 limitations of DOS filesystems, several files were renamed: - groff_mdoc.samples.7 was renamed to groff-mdoc_samples.7 and groff_mmse.7 to groff-mmse.7. The latter was also converted from Latin-1 encoding to codepage 437. II. Building Groff from sources --------------------------- 1. To build Groff, you will need the following tools (the file name in parentheses is what you need to download from one of the DJGPP sites): - Standard DJGPP development environment (djdev203.zip) - GNU C compiler (gcc2721b.zip) - GNU C++ compiler (gpp2721b.zip) - GNU Make 3.79 (mak379b.zip) - Bash v2.03 (bsh203b.zip) - Fileutils 3.16 (fil316b.zip) - Textutils 2.0 (txt20b.zip) - Sh-utils 1.12 (shl112b.zip) - Sed 3.02 (sed302b.zip) - Gawk 3.04 (gwk304b.zip) - Grep 2.4 (grep24b.zip) - Bison (only if you change one of the *.y files) Note that you don't need to install libg++ (lgpNNNb.zip) since Groff doesn't use any C++ classes except its own. Any versions of the utilities later than what's mentioned above should also do; in particular, GCC 2.95.2 was tested and Groff built okay with it. Versions older than in the above list might also work, but I don't guarantee that; you are on your own. Special considerations apply if you have GCC 2.8.1 installed, and cannot upgrade to a later version. See paragraph 4 below. After you install these tools, make sure you have a ``symlink'' to bash.exe called sh.exe and a ``symlink'' to gawk.exe called awk.exe. If not, go to the DJGPP bin/ subdirectory and type the following words of wisdom from the DOS prompt: ln -s bash.exe sh.exe ln -s gawk.exe awk.exe (`ln' is part of GNU Fileutils, see above.) 2. Unzip the source distribution groXYZs.zip (where XYZ is the version number) preserving the directory structure (-d switch to PKUNZIP) from the main DJGPP installation directory. (If you are building Groff on Windows 9X or Windows 2000, use an unzip program which supports long filenames.) This creates directory gnu/groff-X.YZ and unzips the sources there. If you are building from the official GNU distribution, unpack the .tar.gz archive like this: djtar -x groff-X.YZ.tar.gz (DJTAR is part of the standard DJGPP development distribution.) 3. Groff sources on DJGPP sites are already configured for the current version of DJGPP. If that is the version you have, then you can just chdir to gnu/groff-X.YZ and say "make" to build the entire package (if you have GCC 2.8.1, see the next paragraph). If you have version of DJGPP other than the current one, or if you build the official GNU distribution, or if you prefer to configure the package so that it defaults to the directory structure on your machine, or need to change some options (e.g., compile with different optimization options), you will have to reconfigure Groff. To this end, use the CONFIG.BAT batch file in the DJGPP subdirectory: arch\djgpp\config You can configure and build Groff from outside its source directory. In that case, you need to pass the full path to the source directory as an argument to CONFIG.BAT, like this: d:\gnu\groff-1.16\arch\djgpp\config d:/gnu/groff-1.16 Note that you MUST use forward slashes in the path you pass to CONFIG.BAT, or else it may fail. (For versions of Groff other than 1.16, change the above command accordingly.) 4. If your version of GCC is 2.8.1, you cannot build the preconfigured package without some tinkering. The DJGPP port of GCC 2.8.1 had a bug in its C++ configuration, whereby the file _G_config.h erroneously indicated that the header <sys/socket.h> is available, and also undefined the symbol NULL. This causes several files in the Groff distribution to fail to compile. The easiest way to solve this is to upgrade to a later version of GCC; then you can simply say "make" to build the preconfigured package. If this is not an option, you will have to edit the file lang/cxx/_G_config.h and change this line: #define _G_HAVE_SYS_SOCKET 1 to say this instead: #define _G_HAVE_SYS_SOCKET 0 The problem with redefining NULL should not happen with DJGPP v2.03 or later. But if you still see compilation errors which say "`NULL' undeclared", comment out the line in _G_config.h that says this: #undef NULL Alternatively, you can reconfigure the package as described in the previous paragraph, before building it. 5. After the configure script exits, say "make" to build Groff. Groff is a large package, and it might take a few minutes to build, depending on your CPU, so you might as well go for a coffee while it grinds away. 6. Test the package that you have built. A batch file T-GROFF.BAT in the DJGPP subdirectory is supplied for that purpose. Most of the commands there are commented out, since I cannot possibly know what kind of printer do you have and which additional programs, such as Less, do you have installed. The only command that runs by default will format a large document and print it to the screen. Read the comments in the batch file, uncomment additional lines as you see fit and run the batch file to see that you get the document printed as you'd expect. (Btw, the document that the batch file prints is an introduction to the entire Groff package, so you might as well read it to make yourself familiar with the programs.) Note that the batch file sets a lot of environment variables; if you get ``Out of environment space'' messages, launch a subsidiary COMMAND.COM with plenty of environment space, like so: command.com /e:3000 then invoke T-GROFF.BAT from that COMMAND.COM. 7. Install the package by typing "make install". This will copy all the binaries, the auxiliary files (fonts, macros, etc.) and the docs into their places. If you configured the package for your system, these are precisely the directories where the files should remain (with the exception of the man pages, see below). If you use the default configuration, the files will be installed under the top DJGPP installation directory. Alternatively, you could instruct Make explicitly where to install the package by setting the `prefix' variable. For example: make install prefix=c:/groff "make install" doesn't format the man pages, it just copies them into subdirectories of the %DJDIR%\MAN directory. If you need to keep formatted pages in your man/ subdirectory, you will need to format them. Use the commands shown in chapter I, section 5 above to do that, and redirect its output to the appropriate catN subdirectory. Alternatively, you could format the pages when you need to view them (the DJGPP clone of `man' will automatically format them). Consult the installation instructions for pre-compiled binaries above, for more info about installing and using Groff. 8. You can safely delete the directories under share/groff/<version>/font whose names begin with "devX": these are needed on X-Windows which is not supported by this port.