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PREFACE
Overview
A man page is provided for both the naive user, and sophisticated user who is familiar with the
SunOS operating system and is in need of on-line information. A man page is intended to answer concisely
the question "What does it do?" The man pages in general comprise a reference manual. They
are not intended to be a tutorial.
The following contains a brief description of each section in the man pages and the information
it references:
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Section 1 describes, in alphabetical order, commands available with the operating system.
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Section 1M describes, in alphabetical order, commands that are used chiefly
for system maintenance and administration purposes.
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Section 2 describes all of the system calls. Most of these calls have one
or more error returns. An error condition is indicated by an otherwise impossible returned value.
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Section 3 describes functions found in various libraries, other than those
functions that directly invoke UNIX system primitives, which are described in Section 2 of this volume.
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Section 4 outlines the formats of various files. The C structure declarations
for the file formats are given where applicable.
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Section 5 contains miscellaneous documentation such as character set tables.
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Section 6 contains available games and demos.
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Section 7 describes various special files that refer to specific hardware peripherals,
and device drivers. STREAMS software drivers, modules and the STREAMS-generic set of system calls are
also described.
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Section 9 provides reference information needed to write device drivers in
the kernel operating systems environment. It describes two device driver interface specifications: the
Device Driver Interface (DDI) and the Driver/Kernel Interface (DKI).
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Section 9E describes the DDI/DKI, DDI-only, and DKI-only entry-point routines
a developer may include in a device driver.
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Section 9F describes the kernel functions available for use by device drivers.
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Section 9S describes the data structures used by drivers to share information
between the driver and the kernel.
Below is a generic format for man pages. The man pages of each manual section generally follow this
order, but include only needed headings. For example, if there are no bugs to report, there is no BUGS
section. See the intro pages for more information and detail about each section, and man(1) for more information about man pages in general.
- NAME
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This section gives the names of the commands or functions documented,
followed by a brief description of what they do.
- SYNOPSIS
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This section shows the syntax of commands or functions.
When a command or file does not exist in the standard path, its full pathname is shown. Options and arguments
are alphabetized, with single letter arguments first, and options with arguments next, unless a different
argument order is required.
The following special characters are used in this section:
- [ ]
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The option or argument enclosed in these brackets
is optional. If the brackets are omitted, the argument must be specified.
- . . .
-
Ellipses. Several values may be provided
for the previous argument, or the previous argument can be specified multiple times, for example, ` "filename . . ." .
- |
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Separator. Only one of the arguments separated by this character
can be specified at time.
- { }
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Braces. The options and/or arguments enclosed within
braces are interdependent, such that everything enclosed must be treated as a unit.
- PROTOCOL
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This section occurs only in subsection 3R to indicate
the protocol description file.
- DESCRIPTION
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This section defines the functionality and behavior
of the service. Thus it describes concisely what the command does. It does not discuss OPTIONS or cite
EXAMPLES.. Interactive commands, subcommands, requests, macros, functions and such, are described under
USAGE.
- IOCTL
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This section appears on pages in Section 7 only. Only
the device class which supplies appropriate parameters to the ioctl (2) system call is called ioctl and generates its own heading. ioctl calls for a specific device are
listed alphabetically (on the man page for that specific device). ioctl calls are
used for a particular class of devices all of which have an io ending, such as mtio(7D)
- OPTIONS
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This lists the command options with a concise summary
of what each option does. The options are listed literally and in the order they appear in the SYNOPSIS
section. Possible arguments to options are discussed under the option, and where appropriate, default
values are supplied.
- OPERANDS
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This section lists the command operands and describes
how they affect the actions of the command.
- OUTPUT
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This section describes the output - standard output,
standard error, or output files - generated by the command.
- RETURN VALUES
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If the man page documents functions that return
values, this section lists these values and describes the conditions under which they are returned. If
a function can return only constant values, such as 0 or -1, these values are listed in tagged paragraphs.
Otherwise, a single paragraph describes the return values of each function. Functions declared void do
not return values, so they are not discussed in RETURN VALUES.
- ERRORS
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On failure, most functions place an error code in the
global variable errno indicating why they failed. This section lists alphabetically
all error codes a function can generate and describes the conditions that cause each error. When more
than one condition can cause the same error, each condition is described in a separate paragraph under
the error code.
- USAGE
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This section is provided as a guidance on use. This section
lists special rules, features and commands that require in-depth explanations. The subsections listed
below are used to explain built-in functionality:
- Commands
- Modifiers
- Variables
- Expressions
- Input Grammar
- EXAMPLES
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This section provides examples of usage or of how to
use a command or function. Wherever possible a complete example including command line entry and machine
response is shown. Whenever an example is given, the prompt is shown as example% or
if the user must be superuser, example#. Examples are followed by explanations, variable
substitution rules, or returned values. Most examples illustrate concepts from the SYNOPSIS,
DESCRIPTION, OPTIONS and USAGE sections.
- ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
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This section lists any environment variables
that the command or function affects, followed by a brief description of the effect.
- EXIT STATUS
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This section lists the values the command returns
to the calling program or shell and the conditions that cause these values to be returned. Usually, zero
is returned for successful completion and values other than zero for various error conditions.
- FILES
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This section lists all filenames referred to by the man
page, files of interest, and files created or required by commands. Each is followed by a descriptive
summary or explanation.
- ATTRIBUTES
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This section lists characteristics of commands, utilities,
and device drivers by defining the attribute type and its corresponding value. See attributes(5) for more information.
- SEE ALSO
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This section lists references to other man pages, in-house
documentation and outside publications.
- DIAGNOSTICS
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This section lists diagnostic messages with a brief
explanation of the condition causing the error.
- WARNINGS
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This section lists warnings about special conditions
which could seriously affect your working conditions. This is not a list of diagnostics.
- NOTES
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This section lists additional information that does not
belong anywhere else on the page. It takes the form of an aside to the user, covering points of special
interest. Critical information is never covered here.
- BUGS
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This section describes known bugs and wherever possible,
suggests workarounds.
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