[svn] GnuPG - r4222 - in trunk: . doc

svn author wk cvs at cvs.gnupg.org
Thu Aug 17 20:01:27 CEST 2006


Author: wk
Date: 2006-08-17 20:01:25 +0200 (Thu, 17 Aug 2006)
New Revision: 4222

Added:
   trunk/doc/yat2m.c
Modified:
   trunk/AUTHORS
   trunk/ChangeLog
   trunk/THANKS
   trunk/TODO
   trunk/configure.ac
   trunk/doc/ChangeLog
   trunk/doc/Makefile.am
   trunk/doc/gnupg.texi
   trunk/doc/gpg-agent.texi
   trunk/doc/gpg.texi
   trunk/doc/gpgsm.texi
   trunk/doc/scdaemon.texi
Log:
More man pages.


Modified: trunk/AUTHORS
===================================================================
--- trunk/AUTHORS	2006-08-16 14:54:19 UTC (rev 4221)
+++ trunk/AUTHORS	2006-08-17 18:01:25 UTC (rev 4222)
@@ -3,9 +3,7 @@
 Bug reports: <bug-gnupg at gnu.org>
 Security related bug reports: <security at gnupg.org>
 
-Please note that this file is for the 1.9 branch of GnuPG.
 
-
 Authors
 =======
 

Modified: trunk/ChangeLog
===================================================================
--- trunk/ChangeLog	2006-08-16 14:54:19 UTC (rev 4221)
+++ trunk/ChangeLog	2006-08-17 18:01:25 UTC (rev 4222)
@@ -1,3 +1,11 @@
+2006-08-17  Werner Koch  <wk at g10code.com>
+
+	* THANKS: Merged with the 1.4 one.
+
+2006-08-16  Werner Koch  <wk at g10code.com>
+
+	* configure.ac: Removed test for capabilities and mlock.
+
 2006-08-15  Werner Koch  <wk at g10code.com>
 
 	* Makefile.am (keyserver): Enable building of keyserver helpers.

Modified: trunk/THANKS
===================================================================
--- trunk/THANKS	2006-08-16 14:54:19 UTC (rev 4221)
+++ trunk/THANKS	2006-08-17 18:01:25 UTC (rev 4222)
@@ -1,9 +1,272 @@
+GnuPG was originally written by Werner Koch.  Other people contributed
+by reporting problems, suggesting various improvements or submitting
+actual code.  Here is a list of those people.  Help us keep it
+complete and free of errors.
 
-Alexander Belopolsky      belopolsky at mac.com
-Andrew J. Schorr          aschorr at telemetry-investments.com
-Carl Meijer               carlm at prism.co.za
-Charly Avital             shavital at mac.com
-Kazu Yamamoto             kazu at iij.ad.jp
-Michael Nottebrock        michaelnottebrock at gmx.net
-Ray Link                  rlink at pitt.edu
-Richard Lefebvre          rick at cerca.umontreal.ca
+
+Adam Mitchell		   adam at cafe21.org
+Albert Chin                china at thewrittenword.com
+Alec Habig		   habig at budoe2.bu.edu
+Alexander Belopolsky       belopolsky at mac.com
+Allan Clark		   allanc at sco.com
+Anand Kumria		   wildfire at progsoc.uts.edu.au
+Andreas Haumer             andreas at xss.co.at
+Andrew J. Schorr           aschorr at telemetry-investments.com
+Anthony Carrico            acarrico at memebeam.org
+Anthony Mulcahy 	   anthony at kcn.ne.jp
+Ariel T Glenn		   ariel at columbia.edu
+Bernhard Herzog            bh at intevation.de
+Bernhard Reiter            bernhard de intevation.de
+Bob Mathews                bobmathews at mindspring.com
+Bodo Moeller		   Bodo_Moeller at public.uni-hamburg.de
+Brendan O'Dea              bod at debian.org
+Brenno de Winter	   brenno at dewinter.com
+Brian M. Carlson           karlsson at hal-pc.org
+Brian Moore		   bem at cmc.net
+Brian Warner		   warner at lothar.com
+Bryan Fullerton 	   bryanf at samurai.com
+Bryce Nichols              bryce at bnichols.org
+Carl Meijer                carlm at prism.co.za
+Caskey L. Dickson	   caskey at technocage.com
+Cees van de Griend	   cees-list at griend.xs4all.nl
+Charles Levert		   charles at comm.polymtl.ca
+Charly Avital              shavital at mac.com
+Chip Salzenberg 	   chip at valinux.com
+Chris Adams                cmadams at hiwaay.net
+Christian Biere            christianbiere at gmx.de
+Christian Kurz		   shorty at debian.org
+Christian von Roques	   roques at pond.sub.org
+Christopher Oliver	   oliver at fritz.traverse.net
+Christian Recktenwald	   chris at citecs.de
+Daiki Ueno                 ueno at unixuser.org
+Dan Winship                danw at helixcode.com
+Daniel Eisenbud 	   eisenbud at cs.swarthmore.edu
+Daniel Koening		   dan at chaosdorf.de
+Daniel Resare		   daniel at resare.com
+Dany Nativel               dany at natzo.com
+Dave Dykstra		   dwd at bell-labs.com
+David C Niemi              niemi at tuxers.net
+David Champion             dgc at uchicago.edu
+David D. Scribner          dscribner at bigfoot.com
+David Ellement		   ellement at sdd.hp.com
+David Hallinan		   hallinan at rtd.com
+David Hollenberg           dhollen at ISI.EDU
+David Mathog               MATHOG at seqaxp.bio.caltech.edu
+David R. Bergstein         dbergstein at home.com
+David Shaw                 dshaw at jabberwocky.com
+Detlef Lannert		   lannert at lannert.rz.uni-duesseldorf.de
+Dimitri 		   dmitri at advantrix.com
+Dirk Lattermann 	   dlatt at t-online.de
+Dirk Meyer                 dirk.meyer at dinoex.sub.org
+Disastry                   Disastry at saiknes.lv
+Douglas Calvert            dfc at anize.org
+Ed Boraas		   ecxjo at esperanto.org
+Edmund GRIMLEY EVANS	   edmundo at rano.org
+Edwin Woudt                edwin at woudt.nl
+Enzo Michelangeli	   em at MailAndNews.com
+Ernst Molitor		   ernst.molitor at uni-bonn.de
+Evgeny Legerov
+Fabio Coatti		   cova at ferrara.linux.it
+Felix von Leitner	   leitner at amdiv.de
+fish stiqz                 fish at analog.org
+Florian Weimer             Florian.Weimer at rus.uni-stuttgart.de
+Francesco Potorti          pot at gnu.org
+Frank Donahoe		   fdonahoe at wilkes1.wilkes.edu
+Frank Heckenbach	   heckenb at mi.uni-erlangen.de
+Frank Stajano		   frank.stajano at cl.cam.ac.uk
+Frank Tobin		   ftobin at uiuc.edu
+Gabriel Rosenkoetter	   gr at eclipsed.net
+Gaël Quéri		   gael at lautre.net
+Gene Carter                gcarter at lanier.com
+Geoff Keating		   geoffk at ozemail.com.au
+Georg Schwarz              georg.schwarz at iname.com
+Giampaolo Tomassoni        g.tomassoni at libero.it
+Gilbert Fernandes          gilbert_fernandes at hotmail.com
+Greg Louis		   glouis at dynamicro.on.ca
+Greg Troxel		   gdt at ir.bbn.com
+Gregory Steuck		   steuck at iname.com
+Harald Denker		   harry at hal.westfalen.de
+Holger Baust               Holger.Baust at freenet-ag.de
+Hendrik Buschkamp	   buschkamp at rheumanet.org
+Holger Schurig		   holger at d.om.org
+Holger Smolinski	   smolinsk at de.ibm.com
+Holger Trapp		   Holger.Trapp at informatik.tu-chemnitz.de
+Hugh Daniel		   hugh at toad.com
+Huy Le			   huyle at ugcs.caltech.edu
+Ian McKellar		   imckellar at harvestroad.com.au
+Ingo Klöcker               kloecker at kde.org
+Ivo Timmermans		   itimmermans at bigfoot.com
+Jan Krueger		   max at physics.otago.ac.nz
+Jan Niehusmann             jan at gondor.com  
+Jan-0liver Wagner          jan @ intevation.de
+Janusz A. Urbanowicz	   alex at bofh.torun.pl
+James Troup		   james at nocrew.org
+Jean-loup Gailly	   gzip at prep.ai.mit.edu
+Jeff Long		   long at kestrel.cc.ukans.edu
+Jeffery Von Ronne          jronne at ics.uci.edu
+Jens Bachem		   bachem at rrz.uni-koeln.de
+Jeroen C. van Gelderen     jeroen at vangelderen.org
+J Horacio MG		   homega at ciberia.es
+J. Michael Ashley          jashley at acm.org
+Jim Bauer                  jfbauer at home.com
+Jim Small                  cavenewt at my-deja.com
+Joachim Backes		   backes at rhrk.uni-kl.de
+Joe Rhett                  jrhett at isite.net
+Joerg Honegger             Joerg.Honegger at hp.com
+John A. Martin		   jam at jamux.com
+John Clizbe                JPClizbe at comcast.net
+John R. Shannon            john at johnrshannon.com
+Johnny Teveßen		   j.tevessen at gmx.de
+Jörg Schilling		   schilling at fokus.gmd.de
+Jos Backus		   Jos.Backus at nl.origin-it.com
+Joseph Walton              joe at kafsemo.org
+Juan F. Codagnone          juam at arnet.com.ar
+Jun Kuriyama		   kuriyama at sky.rim.or.jp
+Kahil D. Jallad            kdj4 at cs.columbia.edu
+Karl Fogel		   kfogel at guanabana.onshore.com
+Karsten Thygesen	   karthy at kom.auc.dk
+Katsuhiro Kondou	   kondou at nec.co.jp
+Kazu Yamamoto              kazu at iij.ad.jp
+Kazuyoshi Kakihara         
+Keith Clayton              keith at claytons.org
+Kevin Ryde                 user42 at zip.com.au
+Klaus Singvogel            ks at caldera.de
+Kurt Garloff               garloff at suse.de
+Lars Kellogg-Stedman	   lars at bu.edu
+L. Sassaman		   rabbi at quickie.net
+M Taylor                   mctaylor at privacy.nb.ca                 
+Marcel Waldvogel           mwa at arl.wustl.edu
+Marco d'Itri               md at linux.it
+Marco Parrone              marc0 at autistici.org
+Marcus Brinkmann           Marcus.Brinkmann at ruhr-uni-bochum.de	
+Mark Adler		   madler at alumni.caltech.edu
+Mark Elbrecht		   snowball3 at bigfoot.com
+Mark Pettit                pettit at yahoo-inc.com
+Markus Friedl		   Markus.Friedl at informatik.uni-erlangen.de
+Martin Kahlert		   martin.kahlert at provi.de
+Martin Hamilton
+Martin Schulte		   schulte at thp.uni-koeln.de
+Matt Kraai                 kraai at alumni.carnegiemellon.edu
+Matthew Skala		   mskala at ansuz.sooke.bc.ca
+Matthew Wilcox             matthew at wil.cx
+Matthias Urlichs	   smurf at noris.de
+Max Valianskiy		   maxcom at maxcom.ml.org
+Michael Engels             michael.engels at uni-duesseldorf.de
+Michael Fischer v. Mollard mfvm at gmx.de
+Michael Nottebrock         michaelnottebrock at gmx.net
+Michael Roth		   mroth at nessie.de
+Michael Sobolev 	   mss at despair.transas.com
+Michael Tokarev 	   mjt at tls.msk.ru
+Mike Dowling               ML.Dowling at tu-bs.de
+Mike McEwan		   mike at lotusland.demon.co.uk
+Moritz Schulte             moritz at chaosdorf.de
+Neal H Walfield            neal at cs.uml.edu
+Nelson H. F. Beebe         beebe at math.utah.edu
+Nicolas Graner		   Nicolas.Graner at cri.u-psud.fr
+NIIBE Yutaka		   gniibe at chroot.org
+Niklas Hernaeus
+Nimrod Zimerman 	   zimerman at forfree.at
+Norihiko Murase            skeleten at shillest.net
+N J Doye		   nic at niss.ac.uk
+Oliver Haakert		   haakert at hsp.de
+Oskari Jääskeläinen	   f33003a at cc.hut.fi
+Pascal Scheffers           Pascal at scheffers.net
+Paul D. Smith		   psmith at baynetworks.com
+Per Cederqvist             ceder at lysator.liu.se
+Phil Blundell              pb at debian.org
+Philippe Laliberte	   arsphl at oeil.qc.ca
+Peter Fales                psfales at lucent.com
+Peter Gutmann		   pgut001 at cs.auckland.ac.nz
+Peter Marschall 	   Peter.Marschall at gedos.de
+Peter Valchev              pvalchev at openbsd.org
+Phong Nguyen               Phong.Nguyen at ens.fr
+Piotr Krukowiecki          piotr at pingu.ii.uj.edu.pl
+QingLong		   qinglong at bolizm.ihep.su
+Ralph Gillen		   gillen at theochem.uni-duesseldorf.de
+Rat			   ratinox at peorth.gweep.net
+Ray Link                   rlink at pitt.edu
+Reinhard Wobst		   R.Wobst at ifw-dresden.de
+Rémi Guyomarch		   rguyom at mail.dotcom.fr
+Reuben Sumner		   rasumner at wisdom.weizmann.ac.il
+Richard Lefebvre           rick at cerca.umontreal.ca
+Richard Outerbridge	   outer at interlog.com
+Richard Patterson          vectro at yahoo.com
+Robert Joop                rj at rainbow.in-berlin.de
+Roddy Strachan		   roddy at satlink.com.au
+Roger Sondermann           r.so at bigfoot.com
+Roland Rosenfeld	   roland at spinnaker.rhein.de
+Roman Pavlik               rp at tns.cz
+Ross Golder		   rossigee at bigfoot.com
+Russell Coker              russell at coker.com.au
+Ryan Malayter              rmalayter at bai.org
+Sam Roberts		   sam at cogent.ca
+Sami Tolvanen              sami at tolvanen.com
+Sascha Kiefer              sk at intertivity.com
+Scott Worley               sworley at chkno.net
+Sean MacLennan		   seanm at netwinder.org
+Sebastian Klemke           packet at convergence.de
+Serge Munhoven		   munhoven at mema.ucl.ac.be
+SL Baur 		   steve at xemacs.org
+Stefan Bellon              sbellon at sbellon.de
+Dr.Stefan.Dalibor          Dr.Stefan.Dalibor at bfa.de
+Stefan Karrmann 	   S.Karrmann at gmx.net
+Stefan Keller		   dres at cs.tu-berlin.de
+Steffen Ullrich 	   ccrlphr at xensei.com
+Steffen Zahn		   zahn at berlin.snafu.de
+Steven Bakker		   steven at icoe.att.com
+Steven Murdoch             sjmurdoch at bigfoot.com
+Susanne Schultz 	   schultz at hsp.de
+Tavis Ormandy              taviso at gentoo.org
+Ted Cabeen		   secabeen at pobox.com
+Thiago Jung Bauermann	   jungmann at cwb.matrix.com.br
+Thijmen Klok               thijmen at xs4all.nl
+Thomas Roessler 	   roessler at guug.de
+Tim Mooney		   mooney at dogbert.cc.ndsu.nodak.edu
+Timo Schulz                twoaday at freakmail.de
+Tobias Winkler             tobias.winkler at s1998.tu-chemnitz.de
+Todd Vierling              tv at pobox.com
+TOGAWA Satoshi             Satoshi.Togawa at jp.yokogawa.com
+Tom Spindler		   dogcow at home.merit.edu
+Tom Zerucha		   tzeruch at ceddec.com
+Tomas Fasth		   tomas.fasth at twinspot.net
+Tommi Komulainen           Tommi.Komulainen at iki.fi
+Thomas Klausner 	   wiz at danbala.ifoer.tuwien.ac.at
+Tomasz Kozlowski           tomek at rentec.com
+Thomas Mikkelsen	   tbm at image.dk
+Ulf Möller		   3umoelle at informatik.uni-hamburg.de
+Urko Lusa		   ulusa at euskalnet.net
+Vincent P. Broman          broman at spawar.navy.mil
+Volker Quetschke           quetschke at scytek.de
+W Lewis                    wiml at hhhh.org
+Walter Hofmann		   Walter.Hofmann at physik.stud.uni-erlangen.de
+Walter Koch		   koch at hsp.de
+Wayne Chapeskie 	   waynec at spinnaker.com
+Werner Koch		   wk at gnupg.org
+Wim Vandeputte		   bunbun at reptile.rug.ac.be
+Winona Brown               win at huh.org
+Yosiaki IIDA		   iida at ring.gr.jp
+Yoshihiro Kajiki	   kajiki at ylug.org
+			   nbecker at hns.com
+
+
+Thanks to the German Unix User Group for sponsoring this project,
+Martin Hamilton for hosting the first mailing list and OpenIT for
+hosting the server.
+
+The development of this software has partly (i.e. the Windows port)
+been funded by the German Ministry for Economics and Technology under
+grant VIB3-68553.168-001/1999.
+
+Many thanks to my wife Gerlinde for having so much patience with
+me while hacking late in the evening.
+
+ Copyright 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004
+           2006  Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+
+ This file is free software; as a special exception the author gives
+ unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, with or without
+ modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
+
+ This file is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
+ WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law; without even the
+ implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Modified: trunk/TODO
===================================================================
--- trunk/TODO	2006-08-16 14:54:19 UTC (rev 4221)
+++ trunk/TODO	2006-08-17 18:01:25 UTC (rev 4222)
@@ -98,11 +98,14 @@
 
 * sm/
 ** check that we issue NO_SECKEY xxx if a -u key was not found
+   We don't. The messages retruned are also wrong (recipient vs. signer).
 
 * jnlib/
 ** provide jnlib_malloc and try to remove all jnlib_xmalloc.
+** Extend utf8conv.c to make use of iconv.
+   Need to merge with the code in 1.4/util/strgutil.c.
 
-* gpg/
+* g10/
 ** issue a NO_SECKEY xxxx if a -u key was not found.
 ** Replace DIGEST_ALGO_SHA224
    We can't do that right now because it is only defined by newer
@@ -121,7 +124,6 @@
   Update to gpg 1.4.3 version
 
 
-what about gnupg_use_iconv?  
-Extend selinux support to other modules
-Does the check for Linux capabilities still makes sense?
+* Extend selinux support to other modules
 
+

Modified: trunk/configure.ac
===================================================================
--- trunk/configure.ac	2006-08-16 14:54:19 UTC (rev 4221)
+++ trunk/configure.ac	2006-08-17 18:01:25 UTC (rev 4222)
@@ -988,42 +988,12 @@
 AC_CHECK_FUNCS([flockfile funlockfile fopencookie funopen])
 
 
-
-GNUPG_CHECK_MLOCK
-
-GNUPG_FUNC_MKDIR_TAKES_ONE_ARG
-
 #
-# Check whether we can use Linux capabilities as requested
+# W32 specific test
 #
-#  fixme: Still required?
-#
-if test "$use_capabilities" = "yes" ; then
-use_capabilities=no
-AC_CHECK_HEADERS(sys/capability.h)
-if test "$ac_cv_header_sys_capability_h" = "yes" ; then
-  AC_CHECK_LIB(cap, cap_init, ac_need_libcap=1)
-  if test "$ac_cv_lib_cap_cap_init" = "yes"; then
-     AC_DEFINE(USE_CAPABILITIES,1,
-               [define if capabilities should be used])
-     AC_SUBST(CAPLIBS,"-lcap")
-     use_capabilities=yes
-  fi
-fi
-if test "$use_capabilities" = "no" ; then
-    AC_MSG_WARN([[
-***
-*** The use of capabilities on this system is not possible.
-*** You need a recent Linux kernel and some patches:
-***   fcaps-2.2.9-990610.patch      (kernel patch for 2.2.9)
-***   fcap-module-990613.tar.gz     (kernel module)
-***   libcap-1.92.tar.gz            (user mode library and utilities)
-*** And you have to configure the kernel with CONFIG_VFS_CAP_PLUGIN
-*** set (filesystems menu). Be warned: This code is *really* ALPHA.
-***]])
-fi
-fi
+GNUPG_FUNC_MKDIR_TAKES_ONE_ARG
 
+
 #
 # Sanity check regex.  Tests adapted from mutt.
 # FIXME: We should use the the regex from gnulib

Modified: trunk/doc/ChangeLog
===================================================================
--- trunk/doc/ChangeLog	2006-08-16 14:54:19 UTC (rev 4221)
+++ trunk/doc/ChangeLog	2006-08-17 18:01:25 UTC (rev 4222)
@@ -1,3 +1,9 @@
+2006-08-17  Werner Koch  <wk at g10code.com>
+
+	* Makefile.am: Added rules to build man pages.
+
+	* yat2m.c: New.
+
 2006-02-14  Werner Koch  <wk at gnupg.org>
 
 	* gpgsm.texi (GPGSM Configuration): New section.

Modified: trunk/doc/Makefile.am
===================================================================
--- trunk/doc/Makefile.am	2006-08-16 14:54:19 UTC (rev 4221)
+++ trunk/doc/Makefile.am	2006-08-17 18:01:25 UTC (rev 4222)
@@ -27,6 +27,8 @@
 BUILT_SOURCES = gnupg-card-architecture.eps gnupg-card-architecture.png \
                 gnupg-card-architecture.pdf
 
+noinst_PROGRAMS = yat2m
+
 info_TEXINFOS = gnupg.texi
 
 dist_pkgdata_DATA = qualified.txt
@@ -36,10 +38,24 @@
 	tools.texi debugging.texi glossary.texi contrib.texi gpl.texi \
 	sysnotes.texi gnupg-card-architecture.fig
 
-DISTCLEANFILES = gnupg.tmp gnupg.ops
+YAT2M_OPTIONS = \
+        --release "GnuPG @PACKAGE_VERSION@" --source "GNU Privacy Guard"
 
+myman_sources = gpg.texi gpgsm.texi gpg-agent.texi scdaemon.texi tools.texi
+myman_pages   = gpg2.1 gpgsm.1 gpg-agent.1 scdaemon.1 \
+                watchgnupg.1 gpgconf.1 addgnupghome.8
 
+man_MANS = $(myman_pages)
 
+
+watchgnupg_SOURCE = gnupg.texi
+
+DISTCLEANFILES = gnupg.tmp gnupg.ops yat2m-stamp.tmp yat2m-stamp \
+		 $(myman_pages)
+
+yat2m_SOURCES = yat2m.c
+
+
 .fig.png:
 	fig2dev -L png `test -f '$<' || echo '$(srcdir)/'`$< $@
 
@@ -53,3 +69,26 @@
 	fig2dev -L pdf `test -f '$<' || echo '$(srcdir)/'`$< $@
 
 
+yat2m-stamp: $(myman_sources)
+	@rm -f yat2m-stamp.tmp
+	@touch yat2m-stamp.tmp
+	for file in $(myman_sources) ; do \
+              ./yat2m $(YAT2M_OPTIONS) --store \
+	          `test -f '$$file' || echo '$(srcdir)/'`$$file ; done
+	@mv -f yat2m-stamp.tmp $@
+
+yat2m-stamp: yat2m
+
+$(myman_pages) : yat2m-stamp
+	@if test -f $@; then :; else \
+            trap 'rm -rf yat2m-stamp yat2m-lock' 1 2 13 15; \
+               if mkdir yat2m-lock 2>/dev/null; then \
+                 rm -f yat2m-stamp; \
+                 $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) yat2m-stamp; \
+                 rmdir yat2m-lock; \
+               else \
+                 while test -d yat2m-lock; do sleep 1; done; \
+                 test -f yat2m-stamp; exit $$?; \
+               fi; \
+             fi
+

Modified: trunk/doc/gnupg.texi
===================================================================
--- trunk/doc/gnupg.texi	2006-08-16 14:54:19 UTC (rev 4221)
+++ trunk/doc/gnupg.texi	2006-08-17 18:01:25 UTC (rev 4222)
@@ -34,7 +34,7 @@
 Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
 @end iftex
 
-Copyright @copyright{} 2002, 2004, 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+Copyright @copyright{} 2002, 2004, 2005, 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
 
 @quotation
 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document

Modified: trunk/doc/gpg-agent.texi
===================================================================
--- trunk/doc/gpg-agent.texi	2006-08-16 14:54:19 UTC (rev 4221)
+++ trunk/doc/gpg-agent.texi	2006-08-17 18:01:25 UTC (rev 4222)
@@ -8,8 +8,40 @@
 @cindex command options
 @cindex options, GPG-AGENT command
 
- at c man begin DESCRIPTION
+ at manpage gpg-agent.1
+ at ifset manverb
+.B gpg-agent
+.R \- Secret key management for GnuPG
+ at end ifset
 
+ at mansect synopsis
+ at ifset manverb
+.B  gpg-agent
+.RB [ \-\-homedir
+.IR dir ]
+.RB [ \-\-options
+.IR file ]
+.RI [ options ]  
+.br
+.B  gpg-agent
+.RB [ \-\-homedir
+.IR dir ]
+.RB [ \-\-options
+.IR file ]
+.RI [ options ]  
+.B  \-\-server 
+.br
+.B  gpg-agent
+.RB [ \-\-homedir
+.IR dir ]
+.RB [ \-\-options
+.IR file ]
+.RI [ options ]  
+.B  \-\-daemon 
+.RI [ command_line ]
+ at end ifset
+
+ at mansect description
 @command{gpg-agent} is a daemon to manage secret (private) keys
 independently from any protocol.  It is used as a backend for
 @command{gpg} and @command{gpgsm} as well as for a couple of other
@@ -67,10 +99,10 @@
 pinentry (e.g. @file{/usr/bin/pinentry-gtk}) to the expected
 one (e.g. @file{/usr/bin/pinentry}).
 
- at c man end
-
+ at manpause
 @noindent
- at xref{Option Index}, for an index to @command{GPG-AGENT}'s commands and options.
+ at xref{Option Index},for an index to @command{GPG-AGENT}'s commands and options.
+ at mancont
 
 @menu
 * Agent Commands::      List of all commands.
@@ -81,8 +113,7 @@
 * Agent Protocol::      The protocol the agent uses.
 @end menu
 
- at c man begin COMMANDS
-
+ at mansect commands
 @node Agent Commands
 @section Commands
 
@@ -95,9 +126,10 @@
 Print the program version and licensing information.  Not that you can
 abbreviate this command.
 
- at item --help, -h
+ at item --help
+ at itemx -h
 @opindex help
-Print a usage message summarizing the most usefule command-line options.
+Print a usage message summarizing the most useful command-line options.
 Not that you can abbreviate this command.
 
 @item --dump-options
@@ -110,7 +142,7 @@
 Run in server mode and wait for commands on the @code{stdin}.  The
 default mode is to create a socket and listen for commands there.
 
- at item --daemon
+ at item --daemon [@var{command line}]
 @opindex daemon
 Run the program in the background.  This option is required to prevent
 it from being accidently running in the background.  A common way to do
@@ -121,8 +153,7 @@
 @end table
 
 
- at c man begin OPTIONS
-
+ at mansect options
 @node Agent Options
 @section Option Summary
 
@@ -152,7 +183,7 @@
 @opindex verbose
 Outputs additional information while running.
 You can increase the verbosity by giving several
-verbose commands to @sc{gpgsm}, such as @samp{-vv}.
+verbose commands to @command{gpgsm}, such as @samp{-vv}.
 
 @item -q
 @item --quiet
@@ -198,26 +229,26 @@
 any time without notice.  FLAGS are bit encoded and may be given in
 usual C-Syntax. The currently defined bits are:
 
-   @table @code
-   @item 0  (1)
-   X.509 or OpenPGP protocol related data
-   @item 1  (2)  
-   values of big number integers 
-   @item 2  (4)
-   low level crypto operations
-   @item 5  (32)
-   memory allocation
-   @item 6  (64)
-   caching
-   @item 7  (128)
-   show memory statistics.
-   @item 9  (512)
-   write hashed data to files named @code{dbgmd-000*}
-   @item 10 (1024)
-   trace Assuan protocol
-   @item 12 (4096)
-   bypass all certificate validation
-   @end table
+ at table @code
+ at item 0  (1)
+X.509 or OpenPGP protocol related data
+ at item 1  (2)  
+values of big number integers 
+ at item 2  (4)
+low level crypto operations
+ at item 5  (32)
+memory allocation
+ at item 6  (64)
+caching
+ at item 7  (128)
+show memory statistics.
+ at item 9  (512)
+write hashed data to files named @code{dbgmd-000*}
+ at item 10 (1024)
+trace Assuan protocol
+ at item 12 (4096)
+bypass all certificate validation
+ at end table
 
 @item --debug-all
 @opindex debug-all
@@ -359,9 +390,9 @@
 @itemx --keep-display
 @opindex keep-tty
 @opindex keep-display
-Ignore requests to change change the current @sc{tty} respective the X
+Ignore requests to change change the current @code{tty} respective the X
 window system's @code{DISPLAY} variable.  This is useful to lock the
-pinentry to pop up at the @sc{tty} or display you started the agent.
+pinentry to pop up at the @code{tty} or display you started the agent.
 
 @anchor{option --enable-ssh-support}
 @item --enable-ssh-support
@@ -405,8 +436,7 @@
 stripping off the two leading dashes.
 
 
- at c man begin FILES
-
+ at mansect files
 @node Agent Configuration
 @section Configuration
 
@@ -455,7 +485,7 @@
   even advisable to change the permissions to read-only so that this file
   can't be changed inadvertently.
   
-  @item sshcontrol
+ at item sshcontrol
 
   This file is used when support for the secure shell agent protocol has
   been enabled (@pxref{option --enable-ssh-support}). Only keys present in
@@ -488,6 +518,7 @@
 @c
 @c Agent Signals
 @c
+ at mansect signals
 @node Agent Signals
 @section Use of some signals.
 A running @command{gpg-agent} may be controlled by signals, i.e. using
@@ -533,19 +564,16 @@
 @c 
 @c  Examples
 @c
+ at mansect examples
 @node Agent Examples
 @section Examples
 
- at c man begin EXAMPLES
-
 The usual way to invoke @command{gpg-agent} is
 
 @example
 $ eval `gpg-agent --daemon`
 @end example
 
- at c man end
-
 An alternative way is by replacing @command{ssh-agent} with
 @command{gpg-agent}.  If for example @command{ssh-agent} is started as
 part of the Xsession intialization you may simply replace
@@ -580,6 +608,7 @@
 @c 
 @c  Assuan Protocol
 @c
+ at mansect assuan
 @node Agent Protocol
 @section Agent's Assuan Protocol
 

Modified: trunk/doc/gpg.texi
===================================================================
--- trunk/doc/gpg.texi	2006-08-16 14:54:19 UTC (rev 4221)
+++ trunk/doc/gpg.texi	2006-08-17 18:01:25 UTC (rev 4222)
@@ -9,14 +9,33 @@
 @cindex command options
 @cindex options, GPG command
 
- at c man begin DESCRIPTION
 
- at command{gpg2} is the OpenPGP part of GnuPG. It is a tool to provide
-digitla encryption and signing services using the OpenPGP
-standard. @command{gpg2} features complete key management and all bells
-and whistles you can expect from a decent OpenPGP implementation.
+ at manpage gpg2.1
+ at ifset manverb
+.B gpg2
+.R \- OpenPGP encryption and signing tool
+ at end ifset
 
-In contrast to the standalone version @command{gpg,} which is more
+ at mansect synopsis
+ at ifset manverb
+.B  gpg2
+.RB [ \-\-homedir
+.IR dir ]
+.RB [ \-\-options
+.IR file ]
+.RI [ options ]  
+.I command
+.RI [ args ]
+ at end ifset
+
+ at mansect description
+ at command{gpg2} is the OpenPGP part of the GNU Privacy Guard (GnuPG). It
+is a tool to provide digitla encryption and signing services using the
+OpenPGP standard. @command{gpg2} features complete key management and
+all bells and whistles you can expect from a decent OpenPGP
+implementation.
+
+In contrast to the standalone version @command{gpg}, which is more
 suited for server and embedded platforms, this version is installed
 under the name @command{gpg2} and more targeted to the desktop as it
 requires several other modules to be installed.  The standalone version
@@ -25,12 +44,12 @@
 should make use of something like @file{gpg.conf-2} instead of just
 @file{gpg.conf}.
 
+ at manpause
 Documentation for the old standard @command{gpg} is available as man page
 man page and at @inforef{Top,GnuPG 1,gpg}.
 
- at c man end
-
 @xref{Option Index}, for an index to @command{GPG}'s commands and options.
+ at mancont
 
 @menu
 * GPG Commands::        List of all commands.
@@ -44,13 +63,13 @@
 @end menu
 
 
+
 @c *******************************************
 @c ***************            ****************
 @c ***************  COMMANDS  ****************
 @c ***************            ****************
 @c *******************************************
- at c man begin COMMANDS
-
+ at mansect commands
 @node GPG Commands
 @section Commands
 
@@ -86,7 +105,8 @@
 Print the program version and licensing information.  Note that you
 cannot abbreviate this command.
 
- at item --help, -h
+ at item --help
+ at itemx -h
 @opindex help
 Print a usage message summarizing the most useful command line options.
 Not that you cannot abbreviate this command.
@@ -111,7 +131,7 @@
 
 @table @gnupgtabopt
 
- at item --sign 
+ at item --sign
 @itemx -s
 @opindex sign
 Make a signature. This command may be combined with --encrypt (for a
@@ -120,7 +140,7 @@
 together (for a signed message that may be decrypted via a secret key
 or a passphrase).
 
- at item --clearsign 
+ at item --clearsign
 @opindex clearsign
 Make a clear text signature. The content in a clear text signature is
 readable without any special software. OpenPGP software is only
@@ -128,12 +148,12 @@
 end-of-line whitespace for platform independence and are not intended
 to be reversible.
 
- at item --detach-sign 
+ at item --detach-sign
 @itemx -b
 @opindex detach-sign
 Make a detached signature.
 
- at item --encrypt 
+ at item --encrypt
 @itemx -e
 @opindex encrypt
 Encrypt data. This option may be combined with --sign (for a signed
@@ -142,7 +162,7 @@
 together (for a signed message that may be decrypted via a secret key
 or a passphrase).
 
- at item --symmetric 
+ at item --symmetric
 @itemx -c
 @opindex symmetric
 Encrypt with a symmetric cipher using a passphrase. The default
@@ -153,11 +173,11 @@
 --encrypt together (for a signed message that may be decrypted via a
 secret key or a passphrase).
 
- at item --store 
+ at item --store
 @opindex store
 Store only (make a simple RFC1991 literal data packet).
 
- at item --decrypt 
+ at item --decrypt
 @itemx -d
 @opindex decrypt
 Decrypt the file given on the command line (or @code{stdin} if no file
@@ -167,7 +187,7 @@
 writes to the filename which is included in the file and it rejects
 files which don't begin with an encrypted message.
 
- at item --verify 
+ at item --verify
 @opindex verify
 Assume that the first argument is a signed file or a detached signature
 and verify it without generating any output. With no arguments, the
@@ -189,21 +209,21 @@
 and --decrypt. Note that `--multifile --verify' may not be used with
 detached signatures.
 
- at item --verify-files 
+ at item --verify-files
 @opindex verify-files
 Identical to `--multifile --verify'.
 
- at item --encrypt-files 
+ at item --encrypt-files
 @opindex encrypt-files
 Identical to `--multifile --encrypt'.
 
- at item --decrypt-files 
+ at item --decrypt-files
 @opindex decrypt-files
 Identical to `--multifile --decrypt'.
 
- at item --list-keys 
+ at item --list-keys
 @itemx -k
- at itemx --list-public-keys 
+ at itemx --list-public-keys
 @opindex list-keys
 List all keys from the public keyrings, or just the ones given on the
 command line.
@@ -213,7 +233,7 @@
 machine-parseable key listing command that is appropriate for use in
 scripts and other programs.
 
- at item --list-secret-keys 
+ at item --list-secret-keys
 @itemx -K
 @opindex list-secret-keys
 List all keys from the secret keyrings, or just the ones given on the
@@ -221,7 +241,7 @@
 secret key is not usable (for example, if it was created via
 --export-secret-subkeys).
 
- at item --list-sigs 
+ at item --list-sigs
 @opindex list-sigs
 Same as --list-keys, but the signatures are listed too.
 
@@ -236,11 +256,11 @@
 --ask-cert-expire), and the numbers 1-9 or "T" for 10 and above to
 indicate trust signature levels (see the --edit-key command "tsign").
 
- at item --check-sigs 
+ at item --check-sigs
 @opindex check-sigs
 Same as --list-sigs, but the signatures are verified.
 
- at item --fingerprint 
+ at item --fingerprint
 @opindex fingerprint
 List all keys (or the specified ones) along with their
 fingerprints. This is the same output as --list-keys but with the
@@ -258,7 +278,7 @@
 @opindex card-edit
 Present a menu to work with a smartcard. The subcommand "help" provides
 an overview on available commands. For a detailed description, please
-see the Card HOWTO at 
+see the Card HOWTO at
 http://www.gnupg.org/documentation/howtos.html#GnuPG-cardHOWTO .
 
 @item --card-status
@@ -284,10 +304,10 @@
 
 @item --delete-secret-and-public-key @code{name}
 @opindex delete-secret-and-public-key
-Same as --delete-key, but if a secret key exists, it will be removed 
+Same as --delete-key, but if a secret key exists, it will be removed
 first. In batch mode the key must be specified by fingerprint.
 
- at item --export 
+ at item --export
 @opindex export
 Either export all keys from all keyrings (default keyrings and those
 registered via option --keyring), or if at least one name is given,
@@ -295,15 +315,15 @@
 file given with option "output". Use together with --armor to mail those
 keys.
 
- at item --send-keys 
+ at item --send-keys
 @opindex send-keys
 Same as --export but sends the keys to a keyserver.  Option --keyserver
 must be used to give the name of this keyserver. Don't send your
 complete keyring to a keyserver - select only those keys which are new
 or changed by you.
 
- at item --export-secret-keys 
- at itemx --export-secret-subkeys 
+ at item --export-secret-keys
+ at itemx --export-secret-subkeys
 @opindex export-secret-keys
 @opindex export-secret-subkeys
 Same as --export, but exports the secret keys instead.  This is normally
@@ -314,8 +334,8 @@
 --simple-sk-checksum if you want to import such an exported key with an
 older OpenPGP implementation.
 
- at item --import 
- at itemx --fast-import 
+ at item --import
+ at itemx --fast-import
 @opindex import
 Import/merge keys. This adds the given keys to the
 keyring. The fast version is currently just a synonym.
@@ -330,7 +350,7 @@
 Import the keys with the given key IDs from a keyserver. Option
 --keyserver must be used to give the name of this keyserver.
 
- at item --refresh-keys 
+ at item --refresh-keys
 @opindex refresh-keys
 Request updates from a keyserver for keys that already exist on the
 local keyring. This is useful for updating a key with the latest
@@ -386,7 +406,7 @@
 as these values are the only ones which can't be re-created from a
 corrupted trust DB.
 
- at item --import-ownertrust 
+ at item --import-ownertrust
 @opindex import-ownertrust
 Update the trustdb with the ownertrust values stored in @code{files} (or
 stdin if not given); existing values will be overwritten.
@@ -397,21 +417,21 @@
 to create signature caches in the keyring. It might be handy in other
 situations too.
 
- at item --print-md @code{algo} 
- at itemx --print-mds 
+ at item --print-md @code{algo}
+ at itemx --print-mds
 @opindex print-md
 Print message digest of algorithm ALGO for all given files or stdin.
 With the second form (or a deprecated "*" as algo) digests for all
 available algorithms are printed.
 
- at item --gen-random @code{0|1|2}  
+ at item --gen-random @code{0|1|2}
 @opindex gen-random
 Emit @var{count} random bytes of the given quality level. If count is
 not given or zero, an endless sequence of random bytes will be emitted.
 PLEASE, don't use this command unless you know what you are doing; it
 may remove precious entropy from the system!
 
- at item --gen-prime @code{mode}  @code{bits}  
+ at item --gen-prime @code{mode}  @code{bits}
 @opindex gen-prime
 Use the source, Luke :-). The output format is still subject to change.
 
@@ -449,7 +469,7 @@
 key.
 
 
- at item --edit-key 
+ at item --edit-key
 @opindex edit-key
 Present a menu which enables you to do most of the key management
 related tasks.  It expects the specification of a key on the command
@@ -486,9 +506,11 @@
 or groups.
 @end table
 
+ at c man:.RS
 Note that "l" (for local / non-exportable), "nr" (for non-revocable,
 and "t" (for trust) may be freely mixed and prefixed to "sign" to
 create a signature of any type desired.
+ at c man:.RE
 
 @table @asis
 
@@ -573,7 +595,7 @@
 a subkey, once it has been send to the public (i.e. to a keyserver).  In
 that case you better use @code{revkey}.
 
- at item addrevoker 
+ at item addrevoker
 @opindex keyedit:addrevoker
 Add a designated revoker. This takes one optional argument:
 "sensitive". If a designated revoker is marked as sensitive, it will not
@@ -698,11 +720,13 @@
 
 @end table
 
+ at c man:.RS
 The listing shows you the key with its secondary keys and all user
 ids. Selected keys or user ids are indicated by an asterisk. The trust
 value is displayed with the primary key: the first is the assigned owner
 trust and the second is the calculated trust value. Letters are used for
 the values:
+ at c man:.RE
 
 @table @asis
 
@@ -733,10 +757,10 @@
 @item --sign-key @code{name}
 @opindex sign-key
 Signs a public key with your secret key. This is a shortcut version of
-the subcommand "sign" from --edit. 
+the subcommand "sign" from --edit.
 
 @item --lsign-key @code{name}
- at opindex lsign-ket
+ at opindex lsign-key
 Signs a public key with your secret key but marks it as
 non-exportable. This is a shortcut version of the subcommand "lsign"
 from --edit.
@@ -750,13 +774,14 @@
 @c ***************  OPTIONS   ****************
 @c ***************            ****************
 @c *******************************************
+ at mansect options
 @node GPG Options
 @section Option Summary
 
 @command{GPG} comes features a bunch of options to control the exact
 behaviour and to change the default configuration.
 
- at menu 
+ at menu
 * GPG Configuration Options::   How to change the configuration.
 * GPG Key related Options::     Key related options.
 * GPG Input and Output::        Input and Output.
@@ -764,8 +789,6 @@
 * GPG Esoteric Options::        Doing things one usually don't want to do.
 @end menu
 
- at c man begin OPTIONS
-
 Long options can be put in an options file (default
 "~/.gnupg/gpg.conf"). Short option names will not work - for example,
 "armor" is a valid option for the options file, while "a" is not. Do not
@@ -1053,7 +1076,7 @@
 your own secret keys. This option is useful if you
 don't want to keep your secret keys (or one of them)
 online but still want to be able to check the validity of a given
-recipient's or signator's key. 
+recipient's or signator's key.
 
 @item --trust-model @code{pgp|classic|direct|always|auto}
 Set what trust model GnuPG should follow. The models are:
@@ -1124,7 +1147,7 @@
 16-character key ID. Add an "0x" to either to include an "0x" at the
 beginning of the key ID, as in 0x99242560.
 
- at item --keyserver @code{name} 
+ at item --keyserver @code{name}
 Use @code{name} as your keyserver. This is the server that
 --recv-keys, --send-keys, and --search-keys will communicate with to
 receive keys from, send keys to, and search for keys on. The format
@@ -1555,7 +1578,7 @@
 @item --no-options
 Shortcut for "--options /dev/null". This option is
 detected before an attempt to open an option file.
-Using this option will also prevent the creation of a 
+Using this option will also prevent the creation of a
 "~./gnupg" homedir.
 
 @item --load-extension @code{name}
@@ -1677,7 +1700,7 @@
 @item --sig-keyserver-url @code{string}
 Use @code{string} as a preferred keyserver URL for data signatures. If
 you prefix it with an exclamation mark, the keyserver URL packet will
-be flagged as critical. 
+be flagged as critical.
 
 The same %-expandos used for notation data are available here as well.
 
@@ -1851,7 +1874,7 @@
 
 @item --passphrase-file @code{file}
 Read the passphrase from file @code{file}. Only the first line will
-be read from file @code{file}. This can only be used if only one 
+be read from file @code{file}. This can only be used if only one
 passphrase is supplied. Obviously, a passphrase stored in a file is
 of questionable security if other users can read this file. Don't use
 this option if you can avoid it.
@@ -2290,7 +2313,7 @@
 used as the keyserver URL when writing a new self-signature on a key,
 which includes key generation and changing preferences.
 
- at item --list-config 
+ at item --list-config
 @opindex list-config
 Display various internal configuration parameters of GnuPG. This
 option is intended for external programs that call GnuPG to perform
@@ -2309,7 +2332,7 @@
 @c ***************   FILES    ****************
 @c ***************            ****************
 @c *******************************************
- at c man begin FILES
+ at mansect files
 @node GPG Configuration
 @section Configuration files
 
@@ -2329,6 +2352,7 @@
 
 @end table
 
+ at c man:.RE
 Note that on larger installations, it is useful to put predefined files
 into the directory @file{/etc/skel/.gnupg/} so that newly created users
 start up with a working configuration.  For existing users the a small
@@ -2338,50 +2362,111 @@
 files; They all live in in the current home directory (@pxref{option
 --homedir}).  Only the @command{gpg2} may modify these files.
 
+
 @table @file
- at item pubring.gpg
- at cindex pubring.gpg
-xxx
-      
- at item random_seed
- at cindex random_seed
-xxxx
+ at item ~/.gnupg/secring.gpg
+The secret keyring.
 
+ at item ~/.gnupg/secring.gpg.lock
+and the lock file
+
+ at item ~/.gnupg/pubring.gpg
+The public keyring
+
+ at item ~/.gnupg/pubring.gpg.lock
+and the lock file
+
+ at item ~/.gnupg/trustdb.gpg
+The trust database
+
+ at item ~/.gnupg/trustdb.gpg.lock
+and the lock file
+
+ at item ~/.gnupg/random_seed
+used to preserve the internal random pool
+
+ at item /usr[/local]/share/gnupg/options.skel
+Skeleton options file
+
+ at item /usr[/local]/lib/gnupg/
+Default location for extensions
+
 @end table
 
+ at c man:.RE
+Operation is further controlled by a few environment variables:
 
+ at table @asis
+
+ at item HOME
+Used to locate the default home directory.
+
+ at item GNUPGHOME
+If set directory used instead of "~/.gnupg".
+
+ at item GPG_AGENT_INFO
+Used to locate the gpg-agent; only honored when
+--use-agent is set. The value consists of 3 colon delimited fields:
+The first is the path to the Unix Domain Socket, the second the PID of
+the gpg-agent and the protocol version which should be set to 1. When
+starting the gpg-agent as described in its documentation, this
+variable is set to the correct value. The option --gpg-agent-info can
+be used to override it.
+
+ at item COLUMNS
+ at itemx LINES
+Used to size some displays to the full size of the screen.
+
+ at end table
+
+
 @c *******************************************
 @c ***************            ****************
 @c ***************  EXAMPLES  ****************
 @c ***************            ****************
 @c *******************************************
+ at mansect examples
 @node GPG Examples
 @section Examples
 
- at c man begin EXAMPLES
+ at table @asis
 
- at example
- fooo
- at end example
+ at item gpg -se -r @code{Bob} @code{file}
+sign and encrypt for user Bob
 
- at c man end
+ at item gpg --clearsign @code{file}
+make a clear text signature
 
+ at item gpg -sb @code{file}
+make a detached signature
 
+ at item gpg --list-keys @code{user_ID}
+show keys
 
+ at item gpg --fingerprint @code{user_ID}
+show fingerprint
 
-ENDEND
+ at item gpg --verify @code{pgpfile}
+ at itemx gpg --verify @code{sigfile}
+Verify the signature of the file but do not output the data. The
+second form is used for detached signatures, where @code{sigfile}
+is the detached signature (either ASCII armored or binary) and
+are the signed data; if this is not given, the name of
+the file holding the signed data is constructed by cutting off the
+extension (".asc" or ".sig") of @code{sigfile} or by asking the
+user for the filename.
+ at end table
 
 
+ at mansect how to specify a user id
+ at chapheading How to specify a user ID
 
-
- at c @chapheading How to specify a user ID
-
 There are different ways to specify a user ID to GnuPG; here are some
 examples:
 
 @table @asis
 
- at item 
+ at item
 
 @item 234567C4
 @itemx 0F34E556E
@@ -2426,104 +2511,16 @@
 fingerprints. This flag tells GnuPG to use the specified primary or
 secondary key and not to try and calculate which primary or secondary
 key to use.
+
+ at mansect return vaue
 @chapheading RETURN VALUE
 
 The program returns 0 if everything was fine, 1 if at least
 a signature was bad, and other error codes for fatal errors.
- at chapheading EXAMPLES
 
- at table @asis
+ at mansect warnings
+ at chapheading WARNINGS
 
- at item gpg -se -r @code{Bob} @code{file}
-sign and encrypt for user Bob
-
- at item gpg --clearsign @code{file}
-make a clear text signature
-
- at item gpg -sb @code{file}
-make a detached signature
-
- at item gpg --list-keys @code{user_ID}
-show keys
-
- at item gpg --fingerprint @code{user_ID}
-show fingerprint
-
- at item gpg --verify @code{pgpfile}
- at itemx gpg --verify @code{sigfile} 
-Verify the signature of the file but do not output the data. The
-second form is used for detached signatures, where @code{sigfile}
-is the detached signature (either ASCII armored or binary) and
-are the signed data; if this is not given, the name of
-the file holding the signed data is constructed by cutting off the
-extension (".asc" or ".sig") of @code{sigfile} or by asking the
-user for the filename.
- at end table
-
- at c @chapheading ENVIRONMENT
-
- at table @asis
-
- at item HOME
-Used to locate the default home directory.
-
- at item GNUPGHOME
-If set directory used instead of "~/.gnupg".
-
- at item GPG_AGENT_INFO
-Used to locate the gpg-agent; only honored when
---use-agent is set. The value consists of 3 colon delimited fields: 
-The first is the path to the Unix Domain Socket, the second the PID of
-the gpg-agent and the protocol version which should be set to 1. When
-starting the gpg-agent as described in its documentation, this
-variable is set to the correct value. The option --gpg-agent-info can
-be used to override it.
-
- at item COLUMNS
- at itemx LINES
-Used to size some displays to the full size of the screen.
- at end table
- at chapheading FILES
-
- at table @asis
-
- at item ~/.gnupg/secring.gpg
-The secret keyring
-
- at item ~/.gnupg/secring.gpg.lock
-and the lock file
-
- at item ~/.gnupg/pubring.gpg
-The public keyring
-
- at item ~/.gnupg/pubring.gpg.lock
-and the lock file
-
- at item ~/.gnupg/trustdb.gpg
-The trust database
-
- at item ~/.gnupg/trustdb.gpg.lock
-and the lock file
-
- at item ~/.gnupg/random_seed
-used to preserve the internal random pool
-
- at item ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf
-Default configuration file
-
- at item ~/.gnupg/options
-Old style configuration file; only used when gpg.conf
-is not found
-
- at item /usr[/local]/share/gnupg/options.skel
-Skeleton options file
-
- at item /usr[/local]/lib/gnupg/
-Default location for extensions
- at end table
-
- at c @chapheading WARNINGS
-
 Use a *good* password for your user account and a *good* passphrase
 to protect your secret key. This passphrase is the weakest part of the
 whole system. Programs to do dictionary attacks on your secret keyring
@@ -2536,6 +2533,8 @@
 If you are going to verify detached signatures, make sure that the
 program knows about it; either give both filenames on the command line
 or use @samp{-} to specify stdin.
+
+ at mansect interoperability
 @chapheading INTEROPERABILITY WITH OTHER OPENPGP PROGRAMS
 
 GnuPG tries to be a very flexible implementation of the OpenPGP
@@ -2564,6 +2563,8 @@
 are safe as they do not force any particular algorithms in violation
 of OpenPGP, but rather reduce the available algorithms to a "PGP-safe"
 list.
+
+ at mansect bugs
 @chapheading BUGS
 
 On many systems this program should be installed as setuid(root). This
@@ -2574,5 +2575,3 @@
 locking without being root. The program drops root privileges as soon
 as locked memory is allocated.
 
-
-

Modified: trunk/doc/gpgsm.texi
===================================================================
--- trunk/doc/gpgsm.texi	2006-08-16 14:54:19 UTC (rev 4221)
+++ trunk/doc/gpgsm.texi	2006-08-17 18:01:25 UTC (rev 4222)
@@ -8,17 +8,35 @@
 @cindex command options
 @cindex options, GPGSM command
 
- at c man begin DESCRIPTION
+ at manpage gpgsm.1
+ at ifset manverb
+.B gpgsm
+.R \- CMS encryption and signing tool
+ at end ifset
 
+ at mansect synopsis
+ at ifset manverb
+.B  gpgsm
+.RB [ \-\-homedir
+.IR dir ]
+.RB [ \-\-options
+.IR file ]
+.RI [ options ]  
+.I command
+.RI [ args ]
+ at end ifset
+
+
+ at mansect description
 @command{gpgsm} is a tool similar to @command{gpg} to provide digital
 encryption and signing servicesd on X.509 certificates and the CMS
 protocol.  It is mainly used as a backend for S/MIME mail processing.
 @command{gpgsm} includes a full features certificate management and
 complies with all rules defined for the German Sphinx project.
 
- at c man end
-
+ at manpause
 @xref{Option Index}, for an index to @command{GPGSM}'s commands and options.
+ at mancont
 
 @menu
 * GPGSM Commands::        List of all commands.
@@ -31,8 +49,12 @@
 * GPGSM Protocol::        The protocol the server mode uses.
 @end menu
 
- at c man begin COMMANDS
-
+ at c *******************************************
+ at c ***************            ****************
+ at c ***************  COMMANDS  ****************
+ at c ***************            ****************
+ at c *******************************************
+ at mansect commands
 @node GPGSM Commands
 @section Commands
 
@@ -45,6 +67,10 @@
 * Certificate Management::        How to manage certificates.
 @end menu
 
+
+ at c *******************************************
+ at c **********  GENERAL COMMANDS  *************
+ at c *******************************************
 @node General GPGSM Commands
 @subsection Commands not specific to the function
 
@@ -59,6 +85,10 @@
 Print a usage message summarizing the most usefule command-line options.
 Not that you can abbreviate this command.
 
+ at item --warranty
+ at opindex warranty
+Print warranty information.
+
 @item --dump-options
 @opindex dump-options
 Print a list of all available options and commands.  Not that you can
@@ -66,7 +96,9 @@
 @end table
 
 
-
+ at c *******************************************
+ at c ********  OPERATIONAL COMMANDS  ***********
+ at c *******************************************
 @node Operational GPGSM Commands
 @subsection Commands to select the type of operation
 
@@ -122,8 +154,11 @@
 @end table
 
 
+ at c *******************************************
+ at c *******  CERTIFICATE MANAGEMENT  **********
+ at c *******************************************
 @node Certificate Management
- at subsection How to manage the certificate and keys
+ at subsection How to manage the certificates and keys
 
 @table @gnupgtabopt
 @item --gen-key
@@ -200,8 +235,8 @@
 @item --learn-card
 @opindex learn-card
 Read information about the private keys from the smartcard and import
-the certificates from there.  This command utilizes the @sc{gpg-agent}
-and in turn the @sc{scdaemon}.
+the certificates from there.  This command utilizes the @command{gpg-agent}
+and in turn the @command{scdaemon}.
 
 @item --passwd @var{user_id}
 @opindex passwd
@@ -212,6 +247,12 @@
 @end table
 
 
+ at c *******************************************
+ at c ***************            ****************
+ at c ***************  OPTIONS   ****************
+ at c ***************            ****************
+ at c *******************************************
+ at mansect options
 @node GPGSM Options
 @section Option Summary
 
@@ -226,8 +267,10 @@
 * Esoteric Options::        Doing things one usually don't want to do.
 @end menu
 
- at c man begin OPTIONS
 
+ at c *******************************************
+ at c ********  CONFIGURATION OPTIONS  **********
+ at c *******************************************
 @node Configuration Options
 @subsection How to change the configuration
 
@@ -296,6 +339,9 @@
 @end table
 
 
+ at c *******************************************
+ at c ********  CERTIFICATE OPTIONS  ************
+ at c *******************************************
 @node Certificate Options
 @subsection Certificate related options
 
@@ -335,7 +381,7 @@
 the loading for short time intervalls (e.g. 30 minutes). This option
 is useful to make sure that a fresh CRL is available for certificates
 hold in the keybox.  The suggested way of doing this is by using it
-along with the option @option{--with-validation} for a ke listing
+along with the option @option{--with-validation} for a key listing
 command.  This option should not be used in a configuration file. 
 
 @item  --enable-ocsp
@@ -352,6 +398,9 @@
 
 @end table
 
+ at c *******************************************
+ at c ***********  INPUT AND OUTPUT  ************
+ at c *******************************************
 @node Input and Output
 @subsection Input and Output
 
@@ -411,6 +460,9 @@
 
 @end table
 
+ at c *******************************************
+ at c *************  CMS OPTIONS  ***************
+ at c *******************************************
 @node CMS Options
 @subsection How to change how the CMS is created.
 
@@ -425,6 +477,9 @@
 
 
 
+ at c *******************************************
+ at c ********  ESOTERIC OPTIONS  ***************
+ at c *******************************************
 @node Esoteric Options
 @subsection Doing things one usually don't want to do.
 
@@ -527,8 +582,12 @@
 stripping off the two leading dashes.
 
 
- at c man begin FILES
-
+ at c *******************************************
+ at c ***************            ****************
+ at c ***************   FILES    ****************
+ at c ***************            ****************
+ at c *******************************************
+ at mansect files
 @node GPGSM Configuration
 @section Configuration files
 
@@ -558,10 +617,12 @@
 For example, to allow only the policy 2.289.9.9, the file should look
 like this:
 
+ at c man:.RS
 @example
 # Allowed policies
 2.289.9.9  
 @end example
+ at c man:.RE
 
 @item qualified.txt
 @cindex qualified.txt
@@ -601,16 +662,17 @@
 
 @end table
 
+ at c man:.RE
 Note that on larger installations, it is useful to put predefined files
 into the directory @file{/etc/skel/.gnupg/} so that newly created users
 start up with a working configuration.  For existing users the a small
 helper script is provided to create these files (@pxref{addgnupghome}).
 
-
 For internal purposes gpgsm creates and maintaines a few other files;
 They all live in in the current home directory (@pxref{option
 --homedir}).  Only @command{gpgsm} may modify these files.
 
+
 @table @file
 @item pubring.kbx
 @cindex pubring.kbx
@@ -627,25 +689,28 @@
 @end table
 
 
- at c 
- at c  Examples
- at c
+ at c *******************************************
+ at c ***************            ****************
+ at c ***************  EXAMPLES  ****************
+ at c ***************            ****************
+ at c *******************************************
+ at mansect examples
 @node GPGSM Examples
 @section Examples
 
- at c man begin EXAMPLES
-
 @example
 $ gpgsm -er goo@@bar.net <plaintext >ciphertext
 @end example
 
+
 @c man end
 
 
-
- at c ---------------------------------
- at c    The machine interface
- at c --------------------------------
+ at c *******************************************
+ at c ***************              **************
+ at c ***************  UNATTENDED  **************
+ at c ***************              **************
+ at c *******************************************
 @node Unattended Usage
 @section Unattended Usage
 
@@ -704,9 +769,12 @@
 @end table
 
 
- at c 
- at c  Assuan Protocol
- at c
+ at c *******************************************
+ at c ***************           *****************
+ at c ***************  ASSSUAN  *****************
+ at c ***************           *****************
+ at c *******************************************
+ at mansect assuan
 @node GPGSM Protocol
 @section The Protocol the Server Mode Uses.
 

Modified: trunk/doc/scdaemon.texi
===================================================================
--- trunk/doc/scdaemon.texi	2006-08-16 14:54:19 UTC (rev 4221)
+++ trunk/doc/scdaemon.texi	2006-08-17 18:01:25 UTC (rev 4222)
@@ -8,15 +8,42 @@
 @cindex command options
 @cindex options, SCDAEMON command
 
- at c man begin DESCRIPTION
+ at manpage scdaemon.1
+ at ifset manverb
+.B scdaemon
+.R \- Smartcard daemon for the GnuPG system
+ at end ifset
 
+ at mansect synopsis
+ at ifset manverb
+.B  scdaemon
+.RB [ \-\-homedir
+.IR dir ]
+.RB [ \-\-options
+.IR file ]
+.RI [ options ]  
+.B  \-\-server 
+.br
+.B  scdaemon
+.RB [ \-\-homedir
+.IR dir ]
+.RB [ \-\-options
+.IR file ]
+.RI [ options ]  
+.B  \-\-daemon 
+.RI [ command_line ]
+ at end ifset
+
+
+ at mansect description
 The @command{scdaemon} is a daemon to manage smartcards.  It is usually
-invoked by gpg-agent and in general not used directly.
+invoked by @command{gpg-agent} and in general not used directly.
 
- at c man end
+ at manpause
+ at xref{Option Index}, for an index to @command{scdaemon}'s commands and
+options.
+ at mancont
 
- at xref{Option Index}, for an index to GPG-AGENTS's commands and options.
-
 @menu
 * Scdaemon Commands::      List of all commands.
 * Scdaemon Options::       List of all options.
@@ -25,7 +52,7 @@
 * Scdaemon Protocol::      The protocol the daemon uses.
 @end menu
 
- at c man begin COMMANDS
+ at mansect commands
 
 @node Scdaemon Commands
 @section Commands
@@ -73,7 +100,7 @@
 @end table
 
 
- at c man begin OPTIONS
+ at mansect options
 
 @node Scdaemon Options
 @section Option Summary
@@ -109,18 +136,18 @@
 Select the debug level for investigating problems. @var{level} may be
 one of:
 
-   @table @code
-   @item none
-   no debugging at all.
-   @item basic  
-   some basic debug messages
-   @item advanced
-   more verbose debug messages
-   @item expert
-   even more detailed messages
-   @item guru
-   all of the debug messages you can get
-   @end table
+ at table @code
+ at item none
+no debugging at all.
+ at item basic  
+some basic debug messages
+ at item advanced
+more verbose debug messages
+ at item expert
+even more detailed messages
+ at item guru
+all of the debug messages you can get
+ at end table
 
 How these messages are mapped to the actual debugging flags is not
 specified and may change with newer releaes of this program. They are
@@ -139,26 +166,26 @@
 any time without notice.  FLAGS are bit encoded and may be given in
 usual C-Syntax. The currently defined bits are:
 
-   @table @code
-   @item 0  (1)
-   command I/O
-   @item 1  (2)  
-   values of big number integers 
-   @item 2  (4)
-   low level crypto operations
-   @item 5  (32)
-   memory allocation
-   @item 6  (64)
-   caching
-   @item 7  (128)
-   show memory statistics.
-   @item 9  (512)
-   write hashed data to files named @code{dbgmd-000*}
-   @item 10 (1024)
-   trace Assuan protocol
-   @item 11 (2048)
-   trace APDU I/O to the card.  This may reveal sensitive data.
-   @end table
+ at table @code
+ at item 0  (1)
+command I/O
+ at item 1  (2)  
+values of big number integers 
+ at item 2  (4)
+low level crypto operations
+ at item 5  (32)
+memory allocation
+ at item 6  (64)
+caching
+ at item 7  (128)
+show memory statistics.
+ at item 9  (512)
+write hashed data to files named @code{dbgmd-000*}
+ at item 10 (1024)
+trace Assuan protocol
+ at item 11 (2048)
+trace APDU I/O to the card.  This may reveal sensitive data.
+ at end table
 
 @item --debug-all
 @opindex debug-all
@@ -256,8 +283,7 @@
 stripping off the two leading dashes.
 
 
- at c man begin CARD APPLICATIONS
-
+ at mansect card applications
 @node Card applications
 @section Description of card applications
 
@@ -304,6 +330,7 @@
 @c 
 @c  Examples
 @c
+ at mansect examples
 @node Scdaemon Examples
 @section Examples
 
@@ -318,6 +345,7 @@
 @c 
 @c  Assuan Protocol
 @c
+ at mansect assuan
 @node Scdaemon Protocol
 @section Scdaemon's Assuan Protocol
 

Added: trunk/doc/yat2m.c
===================================================================
--- trunk/doc/yat2m.c	2006-08-16 14:54:19 UTC (rev 4221)
+++ trunk/doc/yat2m.c	2006-08-17 18:01:25 UTC (rev 4222)
@@ -0,0 +1,1031 @@
+/* yat2m.c - Yet Another Texi 2 Man converter
+ *	Copyright (C) 2005 g10 Code GmbH
+ *      Copyright (C) 2006 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+ *
+ * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
+ * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+ * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
+ * (at your option) any later version.
+ *
+ * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+ * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+ * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
+ * GNU General Public License for more details.
+ *
+ * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+ * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
+ * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA
+ * 02110-1301, USA.
+ */
+
+/*
+    This is a simple textinfo to man page converter.  It needs some
+    special markup in th e texinfo and tries best to get a create man
+    page.  It has been designed for the GnuPG man pages and thus only
+    a few texinfo commands are supported.
+
+    To use this you need to add the following macros into your texinfo
+    source:
+
+      @macro manpage {a}
+      @end macro
+      @macro mansect {a}
+      @end macro
+      @macro manpause 
+      @end macro
+      @macro mancont
+      @end macro
+      
+    They are used by yat2m to select parts of the Texinfo which should
+    go into the man page. These macros need to be used without leading
+    left space. Processing starts after a "manpage" macro has been
+    seen.  "mansect" identifies the section and yat2m make sure to
+    emit the sections in the proper order.  To insert verbatim troff
+    markup, the follwing texinfo code may be used:
+
+      @ifset manverb
+      .B whateever you want
+      @end ifset
+
+    alternativly a special comment may be used:
+
+      @c man:.B whatever you want
+
+    This is useful in case you need just one line.  @section is
+    ignored, however @subsection gets rendered as ".SS".  @menu is
+    completely skipped. Several man pages may be extracted from one
+    file, either using the --store or the --select option.
+    Makefile snippet from GnuPG:
+
+
+*/
+
+#include <stdio.h>
+#include <stdlib.h>
+#include <stddef.h>
+#include <string.h>
+#include <errno.h>
+#include <stdarg.h>
+#include <assert.h>
+#include <ctype.h>
+#include <time.h>
+
+
+#define PGM "yat2m"
+#define VERSION "0.5"
+
+/* The maximum length of a line including the linefeed and one extra
+   character. */
+#define LINESIZE 1024
+
+/* Option flags. */
+static int verbose;
+static int quiet;
+static int debug;
+static const char *opt_source; 
+static const char *opt_release; 
+static const char *opt_select;
+static int opt_store;
+
+
+/* Flag to keep track whether any error occurred.  */
+static int any_error;
+
+
+/* Object to store one line of content.  */
+struct line_buffer_s
+{
+  struct line_buffer_s *next;
+  int verbatim;  /* True if LINE contains verbatim data.  The default
+                    is Texinfo source.  */
+  char *line;
+};
+typedef struct line_buffer_s *line_buffer_t;
+
+
+/* Object to collect the data of a section.  */
+struct section_buffer_s
+{
+  char *name;           /* Malloced name of the section. This may be
+                           NULL to indicate this slot is not used.  */
+  line_buffer_t lines;  /* Linked list with the lines of the section.  */
+  line_buffer_t *lines_tail; /* Helper for faster appending to the
+                                linked list.  */
+  line_buffer_t last_line;   /* Points to the last line appended.  */
+};
+typedef struct section_buffer_s *section_buffer_t;
+
+/* Variable to keep info about the current page together.  */
+static struct 
+{
+  /* Filename of the current page or NULL if no page is active.  Malloced. */
+  char *name;
+
+  /* Number of allocated elements in SECTIONS below.  */
+  size_t n_sections;       
+  /* Array with the data of the sections.  */
+  section_buffer_t sections; 
+
+} thepage;
+
+
+/* The list of standard section names.  */
+static const char * const standard_sections[] = 
+  { "NAME",  "SYNOPSIS",  "DESCRIPTION",
+    "RETURN VALUE", "EXIT STATUS", "ERROR HANDLING", "ERRORS",
+    "OPTIONS", "USAGE", "EXAMPLES", "FILES",
+    "ENVIRONMENT", "DIAGNOSTICS", "SECURITY", "CONFORMING TO",
+    "NOTES", "BUGS", "AUTHOR", "SEE ALSO", NULL };
+
+
+/*-- Local prototypes.  --*/
+static void proc_texi_buffer (FILE *fp, const char *line, size_t len,
+                              int *table_level, int *eol_action);
+
+
+
+/* Print diagnostic message and exit with failure. */
+static void
+die (const char *format, ...)
+{
+  va_list arg_ptr;
+
+  fflush (stdout);
+  fprintf (stderr, "%s: ", PGM);
+
+  va_start (arg_ptr, format);
+  vfprintf (stderr, format, arg_ptr);
+  va_end (arg_ptr);
+  putc ('\n', stderr);
+
+  exit (1);
+}
+
+
+/* Print diagnostic message. */
+static void
+err (const char *format, ...)
+{
+  va_list arg_ptr;
+
+  fflush (stdout);
+  if (strncmp (format, "%s:%d:", 6))
+    fprintf (stderr, "%s: ", PGM);
+
+  va_start (arg_ptr, format);
+  vfprintf (stderr, format, arg_ptr);
+  va_end (arg_ptr);
+  putc ('\n', stderr);
+  any_error = 1;
+}
+
+/* Print diagnostic message. */
+static void
+inf (const char *format, ...)
+{
+  va_list arg_ptr;
+
+  fflush (stdout);
+  fprintf (stderr, "%s: ", PGM);
+
+  va_start (arg_ptr, format);
+  vfprintf (stderr, format, arg_ptr);
+  va_end (arg_ptr);
+  putc ('\n', stderr);
+}
+
+
+static void *
+xmalloc (size_t n)
+{
+  void *p = malloc (n);
+  if (!p)
+    die ("out of core: %s", strerror (errno));
+  return p;
+}
+
+static void *
+xcalloc (size_t n, size_t m)
+{
+  void *p = calloc (n, m);
+  if (!p)
+    die ("out of core: %s", strerror (errno));
+  return p;
+}
+
+static void *
+xrealloc (void *old, size_t n)
+{
+  void *p = realloc (old, n);
+  if (!p)
+    die ("out of core: %s", strerror (errno));
+  return p;
+}
+
+static char *
+xstrdup (const char *string)
+{
+  void *p = malloc (strlen (string)+1);
+  if (!p)
+    die ("out of core: %s", strerror (errno));
+  strcpy (p, string);
+  return p;
+}
+
+
+/* Uppercase the ascii characters in STRING.  */
+static char *
+ascii_strupr (char *string)
+{
+  char *p;
+
+  for (p = string; *p; p++)
+    if (!(*p & 0x80))
+      *p = toupper (*p);
+  return string;
+}
+
+
+/* Return the current date as an ISO string.  */
+const char *
+isodatestring (void)
+{
+  static char buffer[11+5];
+  struct tm *tp;
+  time_t atime = time (NULL);
+  
+  if (atime < 0)
+    strcpy (buffer, "????" "-??" "-??");
+  else
+    {
+      tp = gmtime (&atime);
+      sprintf (buffer,"%04d-%02d-%02d",
+               1900+tp->tm_year, tp->tm_mon+1, tp->tm_mday );
+    }
+  return buffer;
+}
+
+
+
+/* Return a section buffer for the section NAME.  Allocate a new buffer
+   if this is a new section.  Keep track of the sections in THEPAGE.
+   This function may reallocate the section array in THEPAGE.  */
+static section_buffer_t
+get_section_buffer (const char *name)
+{
+  int i;
+  section_buffer_t sect; 
+
+  /* If there is no section we put everything into the required NAME
+     section.  Given that this is the first one listed it is likely
+     that error are easily visible.  */
+  if (!name)
+    name = "NAME";
+
+  for (i=0; i < thepage.n_sections; i++)
+    {
+      sect = thepage.sections + i;
+      if (sect->name && !strcmp (name, sect->name))
+        return sect;
+    }
+  for (i=0; i < thepage.n_sections; i++)
+    if (!thepage.sections[i].name)
+      break;
+  if (i < thepage.n_sections)
+    sect = thepage.sections + i;
+  else
+    {
+      /* We need to allocate or reallocate the section array.  */
+      size_t old_n = thepage.n_sections;
+      size_t new_n = 20;
+
+      if (!old_n)
+        thepage.sections = xcalloc (new_n, sizeof *thepage.sections);
+      else
+        {
+          thepage.sections = xrealloc (thepage.sections,
+                                       ((old_n + new_n)
+                                        * sizeof *thepage.sections));
+          memset (thepage.sections + old_n, 0,
+                  new_n * sizeof *thepage.sections);
+        }
+      thepage.n_sections += new_n;
+
+      /* Setup the tail pointers.  */
+      for (i=old_n; i < thepage.n_sections; i++)
+        {
+          sect = thepage.sections + i;
+          sect->lines_tail = &sect->lines;
+        }
+      sect = thepage.sections + old_n;
+    }
+
+  /* Store the name.  */
+  assert (!sect->name);
+  sect->name = xstrdup (name);
+  return sect;
+}
+
+
+
+/* Add the content of LINE to the section named SECTNAME.  */
+static void
+add_content (const char *sectname, char *line, int verbatim)
+{
+  section_buffer_t sect;
+  line_buffer_t lb;
+
+  
+  sect = get_section_buffer (sectname);
+  if (sect->last_line && !sect->last_line->verbatim == !verbatim)
+    {
+      /* Lets append that line to the last one.  We do this to keep
+         all lines of the same kind (i.e.verbatim or not) together in
+         one large buffer.  */
+      size_t n1, n;
+
+      lb = sect->last_line;
+      n1 = strlen (lb->line);
+      n = n1 + 1 + strlen (line) + 1;
+      lb->line = xrealloc (lb->line, n);
+      strcpy (lb->line+n1, "\n");
+      strcpy (lb->line+n1+1, line);
+    }
+  else
+    {
+      lb = xcalloc (1, sizeof *lb);
+      lb->verbatim = verbatim;
+      lb->line = xstrdup (line);
+      sect->last_line = lb;
+      *sect->lines_tail = lb;
+      sect->lines_tail = &lb->next;
+    }
+}
+
+
+/* Prepare for a new man page using the filename NAME. */
+static void
+start_page (char *name)
+{
+  if (verbose)
+    inf ("starting page `%s'", name);
+  assert (!thepage.name);
+  thepage.name = xstrdup (name);
+  thepage.n_sections = 0;
+}
+
+
+/* Write the .TH entry of the current page.  Return -1 if there is a
+   problem with the page. */
+static int
+write_th (FILE *fp)
+{
+  char *name, *p;
+
+  name = ascii_strupr (xstrdup (thepage.name));
+  p = strrchr (name, '.');
+  if (!p || !p[1])
+    {
+      err ("no section name in man page `%s'", thepage.name);
+      free (name);
+      return -1;
+    }
+  *p++ = 0;
+  fprintf (fp, ".TH %s %s %s \"%s\" \"%s\"\n",
+           name, p, isodatestring (), opt_release, opt_source);
+  return 0;
+}
+
+
+/* Process the texinfo command COMMAND (without the leading @) and
+   write output if needed to FP. REST is the remainer of the line
+   which should either point to an opening brace or to a white space.
+   The function returns the number of characters already processed
+   from REST.  LEN is the usable length of REST.  TABLE_LEVEL is used to
+   control the indentation of tables.  */
+static size_t
+proc_texi_cmd (FILE *fp, const char *command, const char *rest, size_t len,
+               int *table_level, int *eol_action)
+{
+  static struct {
+    const char *name;    /* Name of the command.  */
+    int what;            /* What to do with this command. */
+    const char *lead_in; /* String to print with a opening brace.  */
+    const char *lead_out;/* String to print with the closing brace. */
+  } cmdtbl[] = {
+    { "command", 0, "\\fB", "\\fR" },
+    { "code",    0, "\\fB", "\\fR" },
+    { "var",     0, "\\fI", "\\fR" },
+    { "samp",    0, "\n'",  "'\n"  },
+    { "file",    0, "`\\fI","\\fR'" }, 
+    { "env",     0, "`\\fI","\\fR'" }, 
+    { "acronym", 0 },
+    { "option",  0, "\\fB", "\\fR"   },
+    { "example", 1, ".RS 2\n.nf\n" },
+    { "smallexample", 1, ".RS 2\n.nf\n" },
+    { "asis",    7 },
+    { "anchor",  7 },
+    { "cartouche", 1 },
+    { "xref",    0, "see: [", "]" },
+    { "pxref",   0, "see: [", "]" },
+    { "uref",    0, "(\\fB", "\\fR)" },
+    { "footnote",0, " ([", "])" },
+    { "emph",    0, "\\fI", "\\fR" },
+    { "w",       1 },                                 
+    { "c",       5 },
+    { "opindex", 1 },
+    { "cpindex", 1 },
+    { "cindex",  1 },
+    { "node",    1 },
+    { "noindent", 0 },
+    { "section", 1 },
+    { "subsection", 6, "\n.SS " },
+    { "chapheading", 0},
+    { "item",    2, ".TP\n.B " },
+    { "itemx",   2, ".TP\n.B " },
+    { "table",   3 }, 
+    { "end",     4 },
+    { "quotation",1, ".RS\n\\fB" },
+    { NULL }
+  };
+  size_t n;
+  int i;
+  const char *s;
+  const char *lead_out = NULL;
+  int ignore_args = 0;
+
+  for (i=0; cmdtbl[i].name && strcmp (cmdtbl[i].name, command); i++)
+    ;
+  if (cmdtbl[i].name)
+    {
+      s = cmdtbl[i].lead_in;
+      if (s)
+        fputs (s, fp);
+      lead_out = cmdtbl[i].lead_out;
+      switch (cmdtbl[i].what)
+        {
+        case 1: /* Throw away the entire line.  */
+          s = memchr (rest, '\n', len);
+          return s? (s-rest)+1 : len;  
+        case 2: /* Handle @item.  */
+          break;
+        case 3: /* Handle table.  */
+          if (++(*table_level) > 1)
+            fputs (".RS\n", fp);
+          /* Now throw away the entire line. */
+          s = memchr (rest, '\n', len);
+          return s? (s-rest)+1 : len;  
+          break;
+        case 4: /* Handle end.  */
+          for (s=rest, n=len; n && (*s == ' ' || *s == '\t'); s++, n--)
+            ;
+          if (n >= 5 && !memcmp (s, "table", 5)
+              && (!n || s[5] == ' ' || s[5] == '\t' || s[5] == '\n'))
+            {
+              if ((*table_level)-- > 1)
+                fputs (".RE\n", fp);
+            }
+          else if (n >= 7 && !memcmp (s, "example", 7)
+              && (!n || s[7] == ' ' || s[7] == '\t' || s[7] == '\n'))
+            {
+              fputs (".fi\n.RE\n", fp);
+            }
+          else if (n >= 12 && !memcmp (s, "smallexample", 12)
+              && (!n || s[12] == ' ' || s[12] == '\t' || s[12] == '\n'))
+            {
+              fputs (".fi\n.RE\n", fp);
+            }
+          else if (n >= 9 && !memcmp (s, "quotation", 9)
+              && (!n || s[9] == ' ' || s[9] == '\t' || s[9] == '\n'))
+            {
+              fputs ("\\fR\n.RE\n", fp);
+            }
+          /* Now throw away the entire line. */
+          s = memchr (rest, '\n', len);
+          return s? (s-rest)+1 : len;  
+        case 5: /* Handle special comments. */
+          for (s=rest, n=len; n && (*s == ' ' || *s == '\t'); s++, n--)
+            ;
+          if (n >= 4 && !memcmp (s, "man:", 4))
+            {
+              for (s+=4, n-=4; n && *s != '\n'; n--, s++)
+                putc (*s, fp);
+              putc ('\n', fp);
+            }
+          /* Now throw away the entire line. */
+          s = memchr (rest, '\n', len);
+          return s? (s-rest)+1 : len;  
+        case 6:
+          *eol_action = 1;
+          break;
+        case 7:
+          ignore_args = 1;
+          break;
+        default:
+          break;
+        }
+    }
+  else
+    {
+      inf ("texinfo command `%s' not supported (%.*s)", command,
+           ((s = memchr (rest, '\n', len)), (s? (s-rest) : len)), rest);
+    }
+
+  if (*rest == '{')
+    {
+      /* Find matching closing brace.  */
+      for (s=rest+1, n=1, i=1; i && *s && n < len; s++, n++)
+        if (*s == '{')
+          i++;
+        else if (*s == '}')
+          i--;
+      if (i)
+        {
+          err ("closing brace for command `%s' not found", command);
+          return len;
+        }
+      if (n > 2 && !ignore_args)
+        proc_texi_buffer (fp, rest+1, n-2, table_level, eol_action);
+    }
+  else
+    n = 0;
+
+  if (lead_out)
+    fputs (lead_out, fp);
+
+  return n;
+}
+
+
+
+/* Process the string LINE with LEN bytes of Texinfo content. */
+static void
+proc_texi_buffer (FILE *fp, const char *line, size_t len,
+                  int *table_level, int *eol_action)
+{
+  const char *s;
+  char cmdbuf[256];
+  int cmdidx = 0;
+  int in_cmd = 0;
+  size_t n;
+
+  for (s=line; *s && len; s++, len--)
+    {
+      if (in_cmd)
+        {
+          if (in_cmd == 1)
+            {
+              switch (*s)
+                {
+                case '@': case '{': case '}': 
+                  putc (*s, fp); in_cmd = 0; 
+                  break;
+                case ':': /* Not ending a sentence flag.  */
+                  in_cmd = 0;
+                  break;
+                case '.': case '!': case '?': /* Ending a sentence. */
+                  putc (*s, fp); in_cmd = 0; 
+                  break;
+                case ' ': case '\t': case '\n': /* Non collapsing spaces.  */
+                  putc (*s, fp); in_cmd = 0; 
+                  break;
+                default:
+                  cmdidx = 0;
+                  cmdbuf[cmdidx++] = *s;
+                  in_cmd++;
+                  break;
+                }
+            }
+          else if (*s == '{' || *s == ' ' || *s == '\t' || *s == '\n')
+            {
+              cmdbuf[cmdidx] = 0;
+              n = proc_texi_cmd (fp, cmdbuf, s, len, table_level, eol_action);
+              assert (n <= len);
+              s += n; len -= n;
+              s--; len++;
+              in_cmd = 0;
+            }
+          else if (cmdidx < sizeof cmdbuf -1)  
+            cmdbuf[cmdidx++] = *s;
+          else
+            {
+              err ("texinfo command too long - ignored");
+              in_cmd = 0;
+            }
+        }
+      else if (*s == '@')
+        in_cmd = 1;
+      else if (*s == '\n')
+        {
+          switch (*eol_action)
+            {
+            case 1: /* Create a dummy paragraph. */
+              fputs ("\n\\ \n", fp);
+              break;
+            default:
+              putc (*s, fp);
+            }
+          *eol_action = 0;
+        }
+      else
+        putc (*s, fp);
+    }
+}
+
+
+/* Do something with the Texinfo line LINE.  */
+static void
+parse_texi_line (FILE *fp, const char *line, int *table_level)
+{
+  int eol_action = 0;
+
+  /* A quick test whether there are any texinfo commands.  */
+  if (!strchr (line, '@'))
+    {
+      fputs (line, fp);
+      putc ('\n', fp);
+      return;
+    }
+  proc_texi_buffer (fp, line, strlen (line), table_level, &eol_action);
+  putc ('\n', fp);
+}
+
+
+/* Write all the lines LINES to FP.  */
+static void
+write_content (FILE *fp, line_buffer_t lines)
+{
+  line_buffer_t line;
+  int table_level = 0;
+
+  for (line = lines; line; line = line->next)
+    {
+      if (line->verbatim)
+        {
+          fputs (line->line, fp);
+          putc ('\n', fp);
+        }
+      else
+        {
+/*           fputs ("TEXI---", fp); */
+/*           fputs (line->line, fp); */
+/*           fputs ("---\n", fp); */
+          parse_texi_line (fp, line->line, &table_level);
+        }
+    }  
+}
+
+
+
+static int
+is_standard_section (const char *name)
+{
+  int i;
+  const char *s;
+
+  for (i=0; (s=standard_sections[i]); i++)
+    if (!strcmp (s, name))
+      return 1;
+  return 0;
+}
+
+
+/* Finish a page; that is sort the data and write it out to the file.  */
+static void
+finish_page (void)
+{
+  FILE *fp;
+  section_buffer_t sect;
+  int idx;
+  const char *s;
+  int i;
+
+  if (!thepage.name)
+    return; /* No page active.  */
+
+  if (verbose)
+    inf ("finishing page `%s'", thepage.name);
+
+  if (opt_select)
+    {
+      if (!strcmp (opt_select, thepage.name))
+        {
+          inf ("selected `%s'", thepage.name );
+          fp = stdout;
+        }
+      else
+        {
+          fp = fopen ( "/dev/null", "w" );
+          if (!fp)
+            die ("failed to open /dev/null: %s\n", strerror (errno));
+        }
+    }
+  else if (opt_store)
+    {
+      inf ("writing `%s'", thepage.name );
+      fp = fopen ( thepage.name, "w" );
+      if (!fp)
+        die ("failed to create `%s': %s\n", thepage.name, strerror (errno));
+    }
+  else
+    fp = stdout;
+
+  if (write_th (fp))
+    goto leave;
+
+  for (idx=0; (s=standard_sections[idx]); idx++)
+    {
+      for (i=0; i < thepage.n_sections; i++)
+        {
+          sect = thepage.sections + i;
+          if (sect->name && !strcmp (s, sect->name))
+            break;
+        }
+      if (i == thepage.n_sections)
+        sect = NULL;
+
+      if (sect)
+        {
+          fprintf (fp, ".SH %s\n", sect->name);
+          write_content (fp, sect->lines);
+          /* Now continue with all non standard sections directly
+             following this one. */
+          for (i++; i < thepage.n_sections; i++)
+            {
+              sect = thepage.sections + i;
+              if (sect->name && is_standard_section (sect->name))
+                break;
+              if (sect->name)
+                {
+                  fprintf (fp, ".SH %s\n", sect->name);
+                  write_content (fp, sect->lines);
+                }
+            }
+          
+        }
+    }
+
+
+ leave:
+  if (fp != stdout)
+    fclose (fp);
+  free (thepage.name);
+  thepage.name = NULL;
+  /* FIXME: Cleanup the content.  */
+}
+
+
+
+
+/* Parse one Texinfo file and create manpages according to the
+   embedded instructions.  */
+static void
+parse_file (const char *fname, FILE *fp)
+{
+  char *line;
+  int lnr = 0;
+  int in_verbatim = 0;
+  int in_pause = 0;
+  char *section_name = NULL;  /* Name of the current section or NULL
+                                 if not in a section.  */
+  int skip_to_end = 0;        /* Used to skip over menu entries. */
+
+  line = xmalloc (LINESIZE);
+  while (fgets (line, LINESIZE, fp))
+    {
+      size_t n = strlen (line);
+      int got_line = 0;
+      char *p;
+
+      lnr++;
+      if (!n || line[n-1] != '\n')
+        {
+          err ("%s:$d: trailing linefeed missing, line too long or "
+               "embedded Nul character", fname, lnr);
+          break;
+        }
+      line[--n] = 0;
+      /* We only parse lines we need and ignore the rest.  There are a
+         few macros used to control this as well as one @ifset
+         command.  Parts we know about are saved away into containers
+         separate for each section. */
+      if (*line == '@')
+        {
+          for (p=line+1, n=1; *p && *p != ' ' && *p != '\t'; p++)
+            n++;
+          while (*p == ' ' || *p == '\t')
+            p++;
+
+          if (skip_to_end 
+              &&n == 4 && !memcmp (line, "@end", 4)
+              && (line[4]==' '||line[4]=='\t'||!line[4]))
+            {
+              skip_to_end = 0;
+            }
+          else if (n == 6 && !memcmp (line, "@ifset", 6)
+              && !strncmp (p, "manverb", 7) && (p[7]==' '||p[7]=='\t'||!p[7]))
+            {
+              if (in_verbatim)
+                err ("%s:%d: nested \"@ifset manverb\"", fname, lnr);
+              else
+                in_verbatim = 1;
+            }
+          else if (in_verbatim && n == 4 && !memcmp (line, "@end", 4)
+                   && !strncmp (p, "ifset", 5)
+                   && (p[5]==' '||p[5]=='\t'||!p[5]))
+            {
+              in_verbatim = 0;
+            }
+          else if (in_verbatim)
+            {
+              got_line = 1;
+            }
+          else if (n == 8 && !memcmp (line, "@manpage", 8))
+            {
+              free (section_name);
+              section_name = NULL;
+              finish_page ();
+              start_page (p);
+              in_pause = 0;
+            }
+          else if (n == 8 && !memcmp (line, "@mansect", 8))
+            {
+              if (!thepage.name)
+                err ("%s:%d: section outside of a man page", fname, lnr);
+              else
+                {
+                  free (section_name);
+                  section_name = ascii_strupr (xstrdup (p));
+                  in_pause = 0;
+                }
+            }
+          else if (n == 9 && !memcmp (line, "@manpause", 9))
+            {
+              if (!section_name)
+                err ("%s:%d: pausing outside of a man section", fname, lnr);
+              else if (in_pause)
+                err ("%s:%d: already pausing", fname, lnr);
+              else
+                in_pause = 1;
+            }
+          else if (n == 8 && !memcmp (line, "@mancont", 8))
+            {
+              if (!section_name)
+                err ("%s:%d: continue outside of a man section", fname, lnr);
+              else if (!in_pause)
+                err ("%s:%d: continue while not pausing", fname, lnr);
+              else
+                in_pause = 0;
+            }
+          else if (n == 5 && !memcmp (line, "@menu", 5)
+                   && (line[5]==' '||line[5]=='\t'||!line[5]))
+            {
+              skip_to_end = 1;
+            }
+          else
+            got_line = 1;
+        }
+      else if (!skip_to_end)
+        got_line = 1;
+
+      if (got_line && in_verbatim)
+        add_content (section_name, line, 1);
+      else if (got_line && thepage.name && section_name && !in_pause)
+        add_content (section_name, line, 0);
+
+    }
+  if (ferror (fp))
+    err ("%s:%d: read error: %s", fname, lnr, strerror (errno));
+  finish_page ();
+  free (section_name);
+  free (line);
+}
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+int 
+main (int argc, char **argv)
+{
+  int last_argc = -1;
+
+  opt_source = "GNU";
+  opt_release = "";
+
+  if (argc)
+    {
+      argc--; argv++;
+    }
+  while (argc && last_argc != argc )
+    {
+      last_argc = argc;
+      if (!strcmp (*argv, "--"))
+        {
+          argc--; argv++;
+          break;
+        }
+      else if (!strcmp (*argv, "--help"))
+        {
+          puts (
+                "Usage: " PGM " [OPTION] [FILE]\n"
+                "Extract man pages from a Texinfo source.\n\n"
+                "  --source NAME    use NAME as source field\n"
+                "  --release STRING use STRING as the release field\n"
+                "  --store          write output using @manpage name\n"
+                "  --select NAME    only output pages with @manpage NAME\n"
+                "  --verbose        enable extra informational output\n"
+                "  --debug          enable additional debug output\n"
+                "  --help           display this help and exit\n\n"
+                "With no FILE, or when FILE is -, read standard input.\n\n"
+                "Report bugs to <bugs at g10code.com>.");
+          exit (0);
+        }
+      else if (!strcmp (*argv, "--version"))
+        {
+          puts (PGM " " VERSION "\n"
+               "Copyright (C) 2005 g10 Code GmbH\n"
+               "This program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY.\n"
+               "This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it\n"
+                "under certain conditions. See the file COPYING for details.");
+          exit (0);
+        }
+      else if (!strcmp (*argv, "--verbose"))
+        {
+          verbose = 1;
+          argc--; argv++;
+        }
+      else if (!strcmp (*argv, "--quiet"))
+        {
+          quiet = 1;
+          argc--; argv++;
+        }
+      else if (!strcmp (*argv, "--debug"))
+        {
+          verbose = debug = 1;
+          argc--; argv++;
+        }
+      else if (!strcmp (*argv, "--source"))
+        {
+          argc--; argv++;
+          if (argc)
+            {
+              opt_source = *argv;
+              argc--; argv++;
+            }
+        }
+      else if (!strcmp (*argv, "--release"))
+        {
+          argc--; argv++;
+          if (argc)
+            {
+              opt_release = *argv;
+              argc--; argv++;
+            }
+        }
+      else if (!strcmp (*argv, "--store"))
+        {
+          opt_store = 1;
+          argc--; argv++;
+        }
+      else if (!strcmp (*argv, "--select"))
+        {
+          argc--; argv++;
+          if (argc)
+            {
+              opt_select = strrchr (*argv, '/');
+              if (opt_select)
+                opt_select++;
+              else 
+                opt_select = *argv;
+              argc--; argv++;
+            }
+        }
+    }          
+ 
+  if (argc > 1)
+    die ("usage: " PGM " [OPTION] [FILE] (try --help for more information)\n");
+
+  /* Start processing. */
+  if (argc && strcmp (*argv, "-"))
+    {
+      FILE *fp = fopen (*argv, "rb");
+      if (!fp)
+        die ("%s:0: can't open file: %s", *argv, strerror (errno));
+      parse_file (*argv, fp);
+      fclose (fp);
+    }
+  else
+    parse_file ("-", stdin);
+
+  return !!any_error;
+}
+
+
+/*
+Local Variables:
+compile-command: "gcc -Wall -g -Wall -o yat2m yat2m.c"
+End:
+*/




More information about the Gnupg-commits mailing list