On Sun, Feb 9, 2014 at 3:02 PM, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:
> Question .. where do I get all the man pages? I have some of them
> but then others are absent :
>
>
> # man reboot
> REBOOT(8) OpenBSD System Manager's Manual REBOOT(8)
...
> SEE ALSO
> reboot(2), utmp(5), boot_alpha(8), boot_amd64(8), boot_hp300(8),
> boot_hppa(8), boot_hppa64(8), boot_i386(8), boot_luna88k(8),
> boot_macppc(8), boot_mvme68k(8), boot_mvme88k(8), boot_sparc(8),
> boot_sparc64(8), boot_vax(8), boot_zaurus(8), rc.d(8), rc.shutdown(8),
> savecore(8), shutdown(8), sync(8)
Hmm, that may be incorrect notation for the pages which are
architecture specific: the boot_*(8) manpages are in the architecture
specific sections. They can be seen on all platforms using the -S
option to man, ala:
man -S i386 boot_i386
man -S sparc boot_sparc
...etc
By default, man uses the architecture that you're running, so if
you're running on i386, you should be able to just say
man boot_i386
I'm not 100% sure if the cross-references in the SEE ALSO section
should be indicating that; I could have sworn that I saw syntax like
"whatever(8/i386)" elsewhere. Jason, Ingo, what the Right Thing here?
> # man boot_amd64
> man: no entry for boot_amd64 in the manual.
> # man boot_i386
> man: no entry for boot_i386 in the manual.
> # man boot_sparc
> man: no entry for boot_sparc in the manual.
> #
Hmm, you never actually came out and said it (no dmesg, ahem), but I'm
guessing that you're running on sparc64?
Philip Guenther