Package: manpages-dev
Version: 6.9.1-1
Severity: minor
Tags: patch

   * What led up to the situation?

     Checking for defects with a new version

test-[g|n]roff -mandoc -t -K utf8 -rF0 -rHY=0 -rCHECKSTYLE=10 -ww -z < "man 
page"

  [Use "groff -e ' $' -e '\\~$' <file>" to find obvious trailing spaces.]

  ["test-groff" is a script in the repository for "groff"; is not shipped]
(local copy and "troff" slightly changed by me).

  [The fate of "test-nroff" was decided in groff bug #55941.]

   * What was the outcome of this action?


troff:<stdin>:171: warning: font name 'CW' is deprecated
troff:<stdin>:172: warning: trailing space in the line
troff:<stdin>:299: warning: trailing space in the line


   * What outcome did you expect instead?

     No output (no warnings).

-.-

  General remarks and further material, if a diff-file exist, are in the
attachments.


-- System Information:
Debian Release: trixie/sid
  APT prefers testing
  APT policy: (500, 'testing')
Architecture: amd64 (x86_64)

Kernel: Linux 6.12.10-amd64 (SMP w/2 CPU threads; PREEMPT)
Locale: LANG=is_IS.iso88591, LC_CTYPE=is_IS.iso88591 (charmap=ISO-8859-1), 
LANGUAGE not set
Shell: /bin/sh linked to /usr/bin/dash
Init: sysvinit (via /sbin/init)

Versions of packages manpages-dev depends on:
ii  manpages  6.9.1-1

manpages-dev recommends no packages.

Versions of packages manpages-dev suggests:
ii  man-db [man-browser]  2.13.0-1

-- no debconf information
Input file is syscall.2

Output from "mandoc -T lint  syscall.2": (shortened list)


-.-.

Output from "test-groff -mandoc -t -ww -z syscall.2": (shortened list)

      1 font name 'CW' is deprecated
      2 trailing space in the line

-.-.

End of a block is marked with a "\}" without a period in front of it.
That creates a space character, which forces "groff" to waste processing
time to remove.

172:\}
294:\}
299:\}
340:\}

-.-.

Put a parenthetical sentence, phrase on a separate line,
if not part of a code.
See man-pages(7), item "semantic newline".

Not considered in a patch, too many lines.


syscall.2:80:For system calls that have a glibc wrapper (e.g., most system 
calls),
syscall.2:271:entities with 4-byte pointers and sizes ("compat_iovec" in kernel 
terms),
syscall.2:279:use an additional register ("Retval2" in the above table)

-.-.

Output from "test-groff  -mandoc -t -K utf8 -rF0 -rHY=0 -rCHECKSTYLE=10 -ww -z 
":

troff:<stdin>:171: warning: font name 'CW' is deprecated
troff:<stdin>:172: warning: trailing space in the line
troff:<stdin>:299: warning: trailing space in the line

-.-

Additonally
                   
  Add lines to use the CR font for groff instead of CW.

.ie \n(.g .ft CR
.el .ft CW
--- syscall.2   2025-01-29 03:01:22.389844671 +0000
+++ syscall.2.new       2025-01-29 03:46:44.088349203 +0000
@@ -77,7 +77,8 @@ first appeared in
 .SS Architecture-specific requirements
 Each architecture ABI has its own requirements on how
 system call arguments are passed to the kernel.
-For system calls that have a glibc wrapper (e.g., most system calls),
+For system calls that have a glibc wrapper
+(e.g., most system calls),
 glibc handles the details of copying arguments to the right registers
 in a manner suitable for the architecture.
 However, when using
@@ -168,8 +169,9 @@ the register used to indicate the system
 the register(s) used to return the system call result,
 and the register used to signal an error.
 .if t \{\
-.ft CW
-\}
+.ie \n(.g .ft CR
+.el .ft CW
+.\}
 .TS
 l2     l2      l2      l2      l1      l2      l.
 Arch/ABI       Instruction     System  Ret     Ret     Error   Notes
@@ -268,7 +270,8 @@ There are some notable exceptions, howev
 .BR preadv2 (2),
 which uses
 .I struct iovec
-entities with 4-byte pointers and sizes ("compat_iovec" in kernel terms),
+entities with 4-byte pointers and sizes
+("compat_iovec" in kernel terms),
 but passes an 8-byte
 .I pos
 argument in a single register and not two, as is done in every other ABI.
@@ -276,7 +279,8 @@ argument in a single register and not tw
 .IP \[bu]
 Some architectures
 (namely, Alpha, IA-64, MIPS, SuperH, sparc/32, and sparc/64)
-use an additional register ("Retval2" in the above table)
+use an additional register
+("Retval2" in the above table)
 to pass back a second return value from the
 .BR pipe (2)
 system call;
@@ -291,12 +295,13 @@ in the system call interface, even if it
 .if t \{\
 .in
 .ft P
-\}
+.\}
 .P
 The second table shows the registers used to pass the system call arguments.
 .if t \{\
-.ft CW
-\}
+.ie \n(.g .ft CR
+.el .ft CW
+.\}
 .TS
 l      l2      l2      l2      l2      l2      l2      l2      l.
 Arch/ABI       arg1    arg2    arg3    arg4    arg5    arg6    arg7    Notes
@@ -337,7 +342,7 @@ arguments 5 through 8 on the user stack.
 .if t \{\
 .in
 .ft P
-\}
+.\}
 .P
 Note that these tables don't cover the entire calling convention\[em]some
 architectures may indiscriminately clobber other registers not listed here.
  Any program (person), that produces man pages, should check the output
for defects by using (both groff and nroff)

[gn]roff -mandoc -t -ww -b -z -K utf8  <man page>

  The same goes for man pages that are used as an input.

  For a style guide use

  mandoc -T lint

-.-

  Any "autogenerator" should check its products with the above mentioned
'groff', 'mandoc', and additionally with 'nroff ...'.

  It should also check its input files for too long (> 80) lines.

  This is just a simple quality control measure.

  The "autogenerator" may have to be corrected to get a better man page,
the source file may, and any additional file may.

  Common defects:

  Not removing trailing spaces (in in- and output).
  The reason for these trailing spaces should be found and eliminated.

  Not beginning each input sentence on a new line.
Line length should thus be reduced.

  The script "reportbug" uses 'quoted-printable' encoding when a line is
longer than 1024 characters in an 'ascii' file.

  See man-pages(7), item "semantic newline".

-.-

The difference between the formatted output of the original and patched file
can be seen with:

  nroff -mandoc <file1> > <out1>
  nroff -mandoc <file2> > <out2>
  diff -u <out1> <out2>

and for groff, using

\"printf '%s\n%s\n' '.kern 0' '.ss 12 0' | groff -mandoc -Z - \"

instead of 'nroff -mandoc'

  Add the option '-t', if the file contains a table.

  Read the output from 'diff -u ...' with 'less -R' or similar.

-.-.

  If 'man' (man-db) is used to check the manual for warnings,
the following must be set:

  The option \"-warnings=w\"

  The environmental variable:

export MAN_KEEP_STDERR=yes (or any non-empty value)

  or

  (produce only warnings):

export MANROFFOPT=\"-ww -b -z\"

export MAN_KEEP_STDERR=yes (or any non-empty value)

-.-

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