whatis(1) - phpMan

Command: man perldoc info search(apropos)  


WHATIS(1)                               Manual pager utils                              WHATIS(1)



NAME
       whatis - display manual page descriptions

SYNOPSIS
       whatis [-dlhV] [-r|-w] [-s section] [-m system[,...]] [-M path] [-L locale] [-C file] name
       ...

DESCRIPTION
       Each manual page has a short description available within it.  whatis searches the  manual
       page names and displays the manual page descriptions of any name matched.

       name  may contain wildcards (-w) or be a regular expression (-r).  Using these options, it
       may be necessary to quote the name or escape (\) the special characters to stop the  shell
       from interpreting them.

       index databases are used during the search, and are updated by the mandb program.  Depend-
       ing on your installation, this may be run by a periodic cron job, or may need  to  be  run
       manually  after new manual pages have been installed.  To produce an old style text whatis
       database from the relative index database, issue the command:

       whatis -M manpath -w '*' | sort > manpath/whatis

       where manpath is a manual page hierarchy such as /usr/man.

OPTIONS
       -d, --debug
              Print debugging information.

       -v, --verbose
              Print verbose warning messages.

       -r, --regex
              Interpret each name as a regular expression.  If a name matches any part of a  page
              name, a match will be made.  This option causes whatis to be somewhat slower due to
              the nature of database searches.

       -w, --wildcard
              Interpret each name as a pattern containing shell style wildcards.  For a match  to
              be  made,  an  expanded  name  must match the entire page name.  This option causes
              whatis to be somewhat slower due to the nature of database searches.

       -l, --long
              Do not trim output to the terminal width.  Normally, output will  be  truncated  to
              the terminal width to avoid ugly results from poorly-written NAME sections.

       -s section, --section section
              Search  only the given manual section.  If section is a simple section, for example
              "3", then the displayed list of descriptions will include pages  in  sections  "3",
              "3perl",  "3x",  and so on; while if section has an extension, for example "3perl",
              then the list will only include pages in that exact part of the manual section.

       -m system[,...], --systems=system[,...]
              If this system has access to other operating system's manual page names,  they  can
              be accessed using this option.  To search NewOS's manual page names, use the option
              -m NewOS.

              The system specified can be a  combination  of  comma  delimited  operating  system
              names.   To  include  a  search of the native operating system's manual page names,
              include the system name man in the argument string.  This option will override  the
              $SYSTEM environment variable.

       -M path, --manpath=path
              Specify  an alternate set of colon-delimited manual page hierarchies to search.  By
              default, whatis uses the $MANPATH environment  variable,  unless  it  is  empty  or
              unset,  in  which case it will determine an appropriate manpath based on your $PATH
              environment variable.  This option overrides the contents of $MANPATH.

       -L locale, --locale=locale
              whatis will normally determine your current locale by a call to the C function set-
              locale(3)  which  interrogates  various  environment  variables, possibly including
              $LC_MESSAGES and $LANG.  To temporarily override the  determined  value,  use  this
              option  to  supply  a locale string directly to whatis.  Note that it will not take
              effect until the search for pages actually begins.  Output such as the help message
              will always be displayed in the initially determined locale.

       -C file, --config-file=file
              Use this user configuration file rather than the default of ~/.manpath.

       -h, --help
              Print a help message and exit.

       -V, --version
              Display version information.

EXIT STATUS
       0      Successful program execution.

       1      Usage, syntax or configuration file error.

       2      Operational error.

       16     Nothing was found that matched the criteria specified.

ENVIRONMENT
       SYSTEM If  $SYSTEM is set, it will have the same effect as if it had been specified as the
              argument to the -m option.

       MANPATH
              If $MANPATH is set, its value is interpreted as  the  colon-delimited  manual  page
              hierarchy search path to use.

       MANWIDTH
              If  $MANWIDTH  is  set,  its  value  is  used as the terminal width (see the --long
              option).  If it is not set, the terminal width will be calculated using an ioctl(2)
              if  available,  the value of $COLUMNS, or falling back to 80 characters if all else
              fails.

FILES
       /usr/share/man/index.(bt|db|dir|pag)
              A traditional global index database cache.

       /var/cache/man/index.(bt|db|dir|pag)
              An FHS compliant global index database cache.

       /usr/share/man/.../whatis
              A traditional whatis text database.

SEE ALSO
       apropos(1), man(1), mandb(8).

AUTHOR
       Wilf. (G.Wilford AT ee.uk).
       Fabrizio Polacco (fpolacco AT debian.org).



2.5.2                                       2008-05-05                                  WHATIS(1)

Generated by $Id: phpMan.php,v 4.49 2006/02/26 13:18:18 chedong Exp $ Author: Che Dong
On Apache
Under GNU General Public License
2012-02-09 12:56 @38.107.179.238 Crawled by CCBot/1.0 (+http://www.commoncrawl.org/bot.html)
Valid XHTML 1.0!Valid CSS!