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XML MarkupThis chapter describes the two markup languages you will
encounter when you contribute to the FreeBSD documentation
project. Each section describes the markup language, and details
the markup that you are likely to want to use, or that is already
in use.These markup languages contain a large number of elements, and
it can be confusing sometimes to know which element to use for a
particular situation. This section goes through the elements you
are most likely to need, and gives examples of how you would use
them.This is not an exhaustive list of
elements, since that would just reiterate the documentation for
each language. The aim of this section is to list those elements
more likely to be useful to you. If you have a question about how
best to markup a particular piece of content, please post it to
the &a.doc;.Inline Versus BlockIn the remainder of this document, when describing elements,
inline means that the element can occur
within a block element, and does not cause a line break. A
block element, by comparison, will cause a
line break (and other processing) when it is encountered.XHTMLXHTML is the XML version of the HyperText Markup Language,
which is the markup language
of choice on the World Wide Web. More information can be found
at .XHTML is used to markup pages on the FreeBSD web site. It
should not (generally) be used to mark up other documentation,
since DocBook offers a far richer set of elements to choose
from. Consequently, you will normally only encounter XHTML pages
if you are writing for the web site.HTML has gone through a number of versions, 1, 2, 3.0, 3.2,
4.0 and then an XML-compliant version has also been created, which
is called XHTML and the latest widespread version of it is
XHTML 1.0(available in both
strict and transitional
variants).The XHTML DTDs are available from the Ports Collection
in the textproc/xhtml port.
They are automatically installed as part of the textproc/docproj port.Formal Public Identifier (FPI)There are a number of XHTML FPIs, depending upon the
version (also known as the level) of XHTML that you want to
declare your document to be compliant with.The majority of XHTML documents on the FreeBSD web site
comply with the transitional version of XHTML 1.0.PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"Sectional ElementsAn XHTML document is normally split into two sections. The
first section, called the head, contains
meta-information about the document, such as its title, the
name of the author, the parent document, and so on. The
second section, the body, contains the
content that will be displayed to the user.These sections are indicated with head
and body elements respectively. These
elements are contained within the top-level
html element.Normal XHTML Document Structure<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head>
<title>The Document's Title</title>
</head>
<body>
…
</body>
</html>Block ElementsHeadingsXHTML allows you to denote headings in your document, at
up to six different levels.The largest and most prominent heading is
h1, then h2,
continuing down to h6.The element's content is the text of the heading.h1, h2,
and Other Header TagsUse:First section
This is the heading for the first section
This is the heading for the first sub-section
This is the heading for the second section
]]>Generally, an XHTML page should have one first level
heading (h1). This can contain many
second level headings (h2), which can in
turn contain many third level headings. Each
hn element
should have the same element, but one further up the
hierarchy, preceding it. Leaving gaps in the numbering is
to be avoided.Bad Ordering of
hn
ElementsUse:First section
Sub-section
]]>ParagraphsXHTML supports a single paragraph element,
p.pUse:This is a paragraph. It can contain just about any
other element.
]]>
Block QuotationsA block quotation is an extended quotation from another
document that should not appear within the current
paragraph.blockquoteUse:A small excerpt from the US Constitution:
We the People of the United States, in Order to form
a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic
Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general
Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our
Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the
United States of America.
]]>ListsYou can present the user with three types of lists,
ordered, unordered, and definition.Typically, each entry in an ordered list will be
numbered, while each entry in an unordered list will be
preceded by a bullet point. Definition lists are composed
of two sections for each entry. The first section is the
term being defined, and the second section is the definition
of the term.Ordered lists are indicated by the ol
element, unordered lists by the ul
element, and definition lists by the dl
element.Ordered and unordered lists contain listitems, indicated
by the li element. A listitem can
contain textual content, or it may be further wrapped in one
or more p elements.Definition lists contain definition terms
(dt) and definition descriptions
(dd). A definition term can only contain
inline elements. A definition description can contain other
block elements.ul and
olUse:An unordered list. Listitems will probably be
preceded by bullets.
First item
Second item
Third item
An ordered list, with list items consisting of multiple
paragraphs. Each item (note: not each paragraph) will be
numbered.
This is the first item. It only has one paragraph.
This is the first paragraph of the second item.
This is the second paragraph of the second item.
This is the first and only paragraph of the third
item.
]]>Definition Lists with dlUse:
Term 1
Paragraph 1 of definition 1.
Paragraph 2 of definition 1.
Term 2
Paragraph 1 of definition 2.
Term 3
Paragraph 1 of definition 3.
]]>Pre-formatted TextYou can indicate that text should be shown to the user
exactly as it is in the file. Typically, this means that
the text is shown in a fixed font, multiple spaces are not
merged into one, and line breaks in the text are
significant.In order to do this, wrap the content in the
pre element.preYou could use pre to mark up an
email message: From: nik@FreeBSD.org
To: freebsd-doc@FreeBSD.org
Subject: New documentation available
There is a new copy of my primer for contributors to the FreeBSD
Documentation Project available at
<URL:http://people.FreeBSD.org/~nik/primer/index.html>
Comments appreciated.
N]]>Keep in mind that < and
& still are recognized as special
characters in pre-formatted text. This is why the example
shown had to use < instead of
<. For consistency,
> was used in place of
>, too. Watch out for the special
characters that may appear in text copied from a
plain-text source, e.g., an email message or program
code.TablesMost text-mode browsers (such as Lynx) do not render
tables particularly effectively. If you are relying on
the tabular display of your content, you should consider
using alternative markup to prevent confusion.Mark up tabular information using the
table element. A table consists of one
or more table rows (tr), each containing
one or more cells of table data (td).
Each cell can contain other block elements, such as
paragraphs or lists. It can also contain another table
(this nesting can repeat indefinitely). If the cell only
contains one paragraph then you do not need to include the
p element.Simple Use of tableUse:This is a simple 2x2 table.
Top left cell
Top right cell
Bottom left cell
Bottom right cell
]]>A cell can span multiple rows and columns. To indicate
this, add the rowspan and/or
colspan attributes, with values
indicating the number of rows or columns that should be
spanned.Using rowspanUse:One tall thin cell on the left, two short cells next to
it on the right.
Long and thin
Top cell
Bottom cell
]]>Using colspanUse:One long cell on top, two short cells below it.
Top cell
Bottom left cell
Bottom right cell
]]>Using rowspan and
colspan TogetherUse:On a 3x3 grid, the top left block is a 2x2 set of
cells merged into one. The other cells are normal.
Top left large cell
Top right cell
Middle right cell
Bottom left cell
Bottom middle cell
Bottom right cell
]]>In-line ElementsEmphasizing InformationYou have two levels of emphasis available in XHTML,
em and strong.
em is for a normal level of emphasis and
strong indicates stronger
emphasis.Typically, em is rendered in italic
and strong is rendered in bold. This is
not always the case, however, and you should not rely on
it. According to best practices, webpages only hold
structural and semantical information and stylesheets are
later applied to use these two so you should think of
semantics not formatting when using these tags.em and
strongUse:This has been emphasized, while
this has been strongly emphasized.]]>Indicating Fixed-Pitch TextIf you have content that should be rendered in a fixed
pitch (typewriter) typeface, use tt (for
teletype).ttUse:This document was originally written by
Nik Clayton, who can be reached by email as
nik@FreeBSD.org.]]>LinksLinks are also inline elements.Linking to Other Documents on the WWWIn order to include a link to another document on the
WWW you must know the URL of the document you want to link
to.The link is indicated with a, and the
href attribute contains the URL of the
target document. The content of the element becomes the
link, and is normally indicated to the user in some way
(underlining, change of color, different mouse cursor when
over the link, and so on).Using <a href="...">Use:More information is available at the
FreeBSD web site.]]>These links will take the user to the top of the chosen
document.Linking to Other Parts of DocumentsLinking to a point within another document (or within
the same document) requires that the document author include
anchors that you can link to.Anchors are indicated with a and the
id attribute instead of
href.Using <a id="...">Use:This paragraph can be referenced
in other links with the name para1.]]>To link to a named part of a document, write a normal
link to that document, but include the id of the anchor
after a # symbol.Linking to a Named Part of Another DocumentAssume that the para1 example
resides in a document called
foo.html.More information can be found in the
first paragraph of
foo.html.]]>If you are linking to a named anchor within the same
document then you can omit the document's URL, and just
include the name of the anchor (with the preceding
#).Linking to a Named Part of the Same DocumentAssume that the para1 example
resides in this document:More information can be found in the
first paragraph of this
document.]]>DocBookDocBook was originally developed by HaL Computer Systems and
O'Reilly & Associates to be a DTD for writing technical
documentation A short history can be found under
http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/intro.shtml#d0e41..
Since 1998 it is maintained by the
DocBook Technical Committee. As such, and unlike
LinuxDoc and XHTML, DocBook is very heavily oriented towards
markup that describes what something is,
rather than describing how it should be
presented.Formal Versus InformalSome elements may exist in two forms,
formal and informal.
Typically, the formal version of the element will consist of a
title followed by the informal version of the element. The
informal version will not have a title.The DocBook DTD is available from the Ports Collection
- in the textproc/docbook
+ in the textproc/docbook-xml-450
port. It is automatically installed as part of the textproc/docproj port.&os; ExtensionsThe FreeBSD Documentation Project has extended the DocBook
DTD by adding some new elements. These elements serve to make
some of the markup more precise.Where a FreeBSD specific element is listed below it is
clearly marked.Throughout the rest of this document, the term
DocBook is used to mean the FreeBSD extended
DocBook DTD.There is nothing about these extensions that is FreeBSD
specific, it was just felt that they were useful
enhancements for this particular project. Should anyone
from any of the other *nix camps (NetBSD, OpenBSD, Linux,
…) be interested in collaborating on a standard
DocBook extension set, please get in touch with
&a.doceng;.The &os; extensions are not (currently) in the
Ports Collection. They are stored in the &os; Subversion
tree, as head/share/xml/freebsd.dtd.Formal Public Identifier (FPI)In compliance with the DocBook guidelines for writing FPIs
for DocBook customizations, the FPI for the FreeBSD extended
DocBook DTD is:PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//DTD DocBook V4.2-Based Extension//EN"Document StructureDocBook allows you to structure your documentation in
several ways. In the FreeBSD Documentation Project we are
using two primary types of DocBook document: the book and the
article.A book is organized into chapters.
This is a mandatory requirement. There may be
parts between the book and the chapter to
provide another layer of organization. For example, the
Handbook is arranged in this way.A chapter may (or may not) contain one or more sections.
These are indicated with the sect1 element.
If a section contains another section then use the
sect2 element, and so on, up to
sect5.Chapters and sections contain the remainder of the
content.An article is simpler than a book, and does not use
chapters. Instead, the content of an article is organized
into one or more sections, using the same
sect1 (and sect2 and so
on) elements that are used in books.Obviously, you should consider the nature of the
documentation you are writing in order to decide whether it is
best marked up as a book or an article. Articles are well
suited to information that does not need to be broken down
into several chapters, and that is, relatively speaking, quite
short, at up to 20-25 pages of content. Books are best suited
to information that can be broken up into several chapters,
possibly with appendices and similar content as well.The FreeBSD
tutorials are all marked up as articles, while this
document, the
FreeBSD FAQ,
and the FreeBSD
Handbook are all marked up as books, for
example.Starting a BookThe content of the book is contained within the
book element. As well as containing
structural markup, this element can contain elements that
include additional information about the book. This is
either meta-information, used for reference purposes, or
additional content used to produce a title page.This additional information should be contained within
bookinfo.Boilerplate book with
bookinfo<book>
<bookinfo>
<title>Your Title Here</title>
<author>
<firstname>Your first name</firstname>
<surname>Your surname</surname>
<affiliation>
<address><email>Your email address</email></address>
</affiliation>
</author>
<copyright>
<year>1998</year>
<holder role="mailto:your email address">Your name</holder>
</copyright>
<releaseinfo>$FreeBSD$</releaseinfo>
<abstract>
<para>Include an abstract of the book's contents here.</para>
</abstract>
</bookinfo>
…
</book>Starting an ArticleThe content of the article is contained within the
article element. As well as containing
structural markup, this element can contain elements that
include additional information about the article. This is
either meta-information, used for reference purposes, or
additional content used to produce a title page.This additional information should be contained within
articleinfo.Boilerplate article with
articleinfo<article>
<articleinfo>
<title>Your title here</title>
<author>
<firstname>Your first name</firstname>
<surname>Your surname</surname>
<affiliation>
<address><email>Your email address</email></address>
</affiliation>
</author>
<copyright>
<year>1998</year>
<holder role="mailto:your email address">Your name</holder>
</copyright>
<releaseinfo>$FreeBSD$</releaseinfo>
<abstract>
<para>Include an abstract of the article's contents here.</para>
</abstract>
</articleinfo>
…
</article>Indicating ChaptersUse chapter to mark up your chapters.
Each chapter has a mandatory title.
Articles do not contain chapters, they are reserved for
books.A Simple ChapterThe Chapter's Title
...
]]>A chapter cannot be empty; it must contain elements in
addition to title. If you need to
include an empty chapter then just use an empty
paragraph.Empty ChaptersThis is An Empty Chapter
]]>Sections Below ChaptersIn books, chapters may (but do not need to) be broken up
into sections, subsections, and so on. In articles,
sections are the main structural element, and each article
must contain at least one section. Use the
sectn element.
The n indicates the section
number, which identifies the section level.The first
sectn is
sect1. You can have one or more of these
in a chapter. They can contain one or more
sect2 elements, and so on, down to
sect5.Sections in ChaptersA Sample ChapterSome text in the chapter.First Section (1.1)
…
Second Section (1.2)First Sub-Section (1.2.1)First Sub-Sub-Section (1.2.1.1)
…
Second Sub-Section (1.2.2)
…
]]>This example includes section numbers in the section
titles. You should not do this in your documents. Adding
the section numbers is carried out by the stylesheets (of
which more later), and you do not need to manage them
yourself.Subdividing Using part
ElementsYou can introduce another layer of organization between
book and chapter with
one or more parts. This cannot be done
in an article.IntroductionOverview
...
What is FreeBSD?
...
History
...
]]>Block ElementsParagraphsDocBook supports three types of paragraphs:
formalpara, para, and
simpara.Most of the time you will only need to use
para. formalpara
includes a title element, and
simpara disallows some elements from
within para. Stick with
para.paraUse:This is a paragraph. It can contain just about any
other element. ]]>Appearance:This is a paragraph. It can contain just about any
other element.Block QuotationsA block quotation is an extended quotation from another
document that should not appear within the current
paragraph. You will probably only need it
infrequently.Blockquotes can optionally contain a title and an
attribution (or they can be left untitled and
unattributed).blockquoteUse:A small excerpt from the US Constitution:
Preamble to the Constitution of the United StatesCopied from a web site somewhereWe the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect
Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the
common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings
of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this
Constitution for the United States of America.
]]>Appearance:A small excerpt from the US Constitution:
Preamble to the Constitution of the United
StatesCopied from a web site
somewhereWe the People of the United States, in Order to form
a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic
Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the
general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to
ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish
this Constitution for the United States of
America.
Tips, Notes, Warnings, Cautions, Important Information
and SidebarsYou may need to include extra information separate from
the main body of the text. Typically this is
meta information that the user should be
aware of.Depending on the nature of the information, one of
tip, note,
warning, caution, and
important should be used. Alternatively,
if the information is related to the main text but is not
one of the above, use sidebar.The circumstances in which to choose one of these
elements over another is unclear. The DocBook documentation
suggests:A Note is for information that should be heeded by
all readers.An Important element is a variation on Note.A Caution is for information regarding possible data
loss or software damage.A Warning is for information regarding possible
hardware damage or injury to life or limb.warningUse:Installing FreeBSD may make you want to delete Windows from your
hard disk.
]]>Appearance:Installing FreeBSD may make you want to delete Windows
from your hard disk.Lists and ProceduresYou will often need to list pieces of information to the
user, or present them with a number of steps that must be
carried out in order to accomplish a particular goal.In order to do this, use
itemizedlist,
orderedlist, or
procedureThere are other
types of list element in DocBook, but we are not
concerned with those at the
moment.itemizedlist and
orderedlist are similar to their
counterparts in HTML, ul and
ol. Each one consists of one or more
listitem elements, and each
listitem contains one or more block
elements. The listitem elements are
analogous to HTML's li tags. However,
unlike HTML, they are required.procedure is slightly different. It
consists of steps, which may in turn
consists of more steps or
substeps. Each step
contains block elements.itemizedlist,
orderedlist, and
procedureUse:This is the first itemized item.This is the second itemized item.This is the first ordered item.This is the second ordered item.Do this.Then do this.And now do this.]]>Appearance:This is the first itemized item.This is the second itemized item.This is the first ordered item.This is the second ordered item.Do this.Then do this.And now do this.Showing File SamplesIf you want to show a fragment of a file (or perhaps a
complete file) to the user, wrap it in the
programlisting element.White space and line breaks within
programlistingare
significant. In particular, this means that the opening tag
should appear on the same line as the first line of the
output, and the closing tag should appear on the same line
as the last line of the output, otherwise spurious blank
lines may be included.programlistingUse:When you have finished, your program should look like
this:
#include <stdio.h>
int
main(void)
{
printf("hello, world\n");
}]]>Notice how the angle brackets in the
#include line need to be referenced by
their entities instead of being included literally.Appearance:When you have finished, your program should look like
this:#include <stdio.h>
int
main(void)
{
printf("hello, world\n");
}CalloutsA callout is a mechanism for referring back to an
earlier piece of text or specific position within an earlier
example without linking to it within the text.To do this, mark areas of interest in your example
(programlisting,
literallayout, or whatever) with the
co element. Each element must have a
unique id assigned to it. After the
example include a calloutlist that refers
back to the example and provides additional
commentary.co and
calloutlistWhen you have finished, your program should look like
this:
#include <stdio.h>
int
main(void)
{
printf("hello, world\n");
}Includes the standard IO header file.Specifies that main() returns an
int.The printf() call that writes
hello, world to standard output.]]>Appearance:When you have finished, your program should look like
this:#include <stdio.h>
int
main(void)
{
printf("hello, world\n");
}Includes the standard IO header file.Specifies that main() returns
an int.The printf() call that writes
hello, world to standard
output.TablesUnlike HTML, you do not need to use tables for layout
purposes, as the stylesheet handles those issues for you.
Instead, just use tables for marking up tabular data.In general terms (and see the DocBook documentation for
more detail) a table (which can be either formal or
informal) consists of a table element.
This contains at least one tgroup
element, which specifies (as an attribute) the number of
columns in this table group. Within the tablegroup you can
then have one thead element, which
contains elements for the table headings (column headings),
and one tbody which contains the body of
the table.Both tgroup and
thead contain row
elements, which in turn contain entry
elements. Each entry element specifies
one cell in the table.informaltableUse:This is Column Head 1This is Column Head 2Row 1, column 1Row 1, column 2Row 2, column 1Row 2, column 2
]]>Appearance:This is Column Head 1This is Column Head 2Row 1, column 1Row 1, column 2Row 2, column 1Row 2, column 2Always use the pgwide attribute with
a value of 1 with the
informaltable element. A bug in Internet
Explorer can cause the table to render incorrectly if this
is omitted.If you do not want a border around the table the
frame attribute can be added to the
informaltable element with a value of
none (i.e., <informaltable
frame="none">).Tables Where frame="none"Appearance:This is Column Head 1This is Column Head 2Row 1, column 1Row 1, column 2Row 2, column 1Row 2, column 2Examples for the User to FollowA lot of the time you need to show examples for the user
to follow. Typically, these will consist of dialogs with
the computer; the user types in a command, the user gets a
response back, they type in another command, and so
on.A number of distinct elements and entities come into
play here.screenEverything the user sees in this example will be
on the computer screen, so the next element is
screen.Within screen, white space is
significant.prompt,
&prompt.root; and
&prompt.user;Some of the things the user will be seeing on the
screen are prompts from the computer (either from the
operating system, command shell, or application).
These should be marked up using
prompt.As a special case, the two shell prompts for the
normal user and the root user have been provided as
entities. Every time you want to indicate the user is
at a shell prompt, use one of
&prompt.root; and
&prompt.user; as necessary.
They do not need to be inside
prompt.&prompt.root; and
&prompt.user; are FreeBSD
extensions to DocBook, and are not part of the
original DTD.userinputWhen displaying text that the user should type in,
wrap it in userinput tags. It will
probably be displayed differently to the user.screen, prompt,
and userinputUse:&prompt.user; ls -1
foo1
foo2
foo3
&prompt.user; ls -1 | grep foo2
foo2
&prompt.user; suPassword:
&prompt.root; cat foo2
This is the file called 'foo2']]>Appearance:&prompt.user; ls -1
foo1
foo2
foo3
&prompt.user; ls -1 | grep foo2
foo2
&prompt.user; suPassword:
&prompt.root; cat foo2
This is the file called 'foo2'Even though we are displaying the contents of the file
foo2, it is not
marked up as programlisting. Reserve
programlisting for showing fragments of
files outside the context of user actions.In-line ElementsEmphasizing InformationWhen you want to emphasize a particular word or phrase,
use emphasis. This may be presented as
italic, or bold, or might be spoken differently with a
text-to-speech system.There is no way to change the presentation of the
emphasis within your document, no equivalent of HTML's
b and i. If the
information you are presenting is important then consider
presenting it in important rather than
emphasis.emphasisUse:FreeBSD is without doubt the
premiere Unix like operating system for the Intel architecture.]]>Appearance:FreeBSD is without doubt the
premiere Unix like operating system for the Intel
architecture.QuotationsTo quote text from another document or source, or to
denote a phrase that is used figuratively, use
quote. Within a quote
tag, you may use most of the markup tags available for
normal text.QuotationsUse:However, make sure that the search does not go beyond the
boundary between local and public administration,
as RFC 1535 calls it.]]>Appearance:However, make sure that the search does not go beyond
the boundary between local and public
administration, as RFC 1535 calls it.Keys, Mouse Buttons, and CombinationsTo refer to a specific key on the keyboard, use
keycap. To refer to a mouse button, use
mousebutton. And to refer to
combinations of key presses or mouse clicks, wrap them all
in keycombo.keycombo has an attribute called
action, which may be one of
click, double-click,
other, press,
seq, or simul. The
last two values denote whether the keys or buttons should be
pressed in sequence, or simultaneously.The stylesheets automatically add any connecting
symbols, such as +, between the key
names, when wrapped in keycombo.Keys, Mouse Buttons, and CombinationsUse:To switch to the second virtual terminal, press
AltF1.
To exit vi without saving your work, type
Esc:q!.My window manager is configured so that
Altright mouse button is used to move windows.]]>Appearance:To switch to the second virtual terminal, press
AltF1.To exit vi without saving your
work, type Esc:q!.My window manager is configured so that
Altright mouse button
is used to move windows.Applications, Commands, Options, and CitesYou will frequently want to refer to both applications
and commands when writing documentation. The distinction
between them is simple: an application is the name for a
suite (or possibly just 1) of programs that fulfill a
particular task. A command is the name of a program that
the user can run.In addition, you will occasionally need to list one or
more of the options that a command might take.Finally, you will often want to list a command with its
manual section number, in the command(number)
format so common in Unix manuals.Mark up application names with
application.When you want to list a command with its manual section
number (which should be most of the time) the DocBook
element is citerefentry. This will
contain a further two elements,
refentrytitle and
manvolnum. The content of
refentrytitle is the name of the command,
and the content of manvolnum is the
manual page section.This can be cumbersome to write, and so a series of
general
entities have been created to make this easier.
Each entity takes the form
&man.manual-page.manual-section;.The file that contains these entities is in
doc/share/xml/man-refs.ent, and can be
referred to using this FPI:PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//ENTITIES DocBook Manual Page Entities//EN"Therefore, the introduction to your documentation will
probably look like this:<!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//DTD DocBook V4.1-Based Extension//EN" [
<!ENTITY % man PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//ENTITIES DocBook Manual Page Entities//EN">
%man;
…
]>Use command when you want to include
a command name in-line but present it as
something the user should type in.Use option to mark up the options
which will be passed to a command.When referring to the same command multiple times in
close proximity it is preferred to use the
&man.command.section;
notation to markup the first reference and use
command to markup subsequent references.
This makes the generated output, especially HTML, appear
visually better.This can be confusing, and sometimes the choice is not
always clear. Hopefully this example makes it
clearer.Applications, Commands, and OptionsUse:Sendmail is the most
widely used Unix mail application.
Sendmail includes the
sendmail8, &man.mailq.1;, and &man.newaliases.1;
programs.One of the command line parameters to sendmail8, , will display the current
status of messages in the mail queue. Check this on the command
line by running sendmail -bp.]]>Appearance:Sendmail is the most widely
used Unix mail application.Sendmail includes the
sendmail8, &man.mailq.1;, and &man.newaliases.1;
programs.One of the command line parameters to
sendmail8, , will display the
current status of messages in the mail queue. Check this
on the command line by running
sendmail -bp.Notice how the
&man.command.section;
notation is easier to follow.Files, Directories, ExtensionsWhenever you wish to refer to the name of a file, a
directory, or a file extension, use
filename.filenameUse:The SGML source for the Handbook in English can be
found in /usr/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/. The first
file is called book.xml in that
directory. You should also see a Makefile
and a number of files with a .ent
extension.]]>Appearance:The SGML source for the Handbook in English can be
found in /usr/doc/en/handbook/. The
first file is called handbook.xml in
that directory. You should also see a
Makefile and a number of files with a
.ent extension.The Name of Ports&os; ExtensionThese elements are part of the FreeBSD extension to
DocBook, and do not exist in the original DocBook
DTD.You might need to include the name of a program from the
FreeBSD Ports Collection in the documentation. Use the
filename tag with the
role attribute set to
package to identify these. Since ports
can be installed in any number of locations, only include
the category and the port name; do not include
/usr/ports.filename Tag with
package RoleUse:Install the net/ethereal port to view network traffic.]]>Appearance:Install the net/ethereal port to view
network traffic.Devices&os; ExtensionThese elements are part of the FreeBSD extension to
DocBook, and do not exist in the original DocBook
DTD.When referring to devices you have two choices. You can
either refer to the device as it appears in
/dev, or you can use the name of the
device as it appears in the kernel. For this latter course,
use devicename.Sometimes you will not have a choice. Some devices,
such as networking cards, do not have entries in
/dev, or the entries are markedly
different from those entries.devicenameUse:sio is used for serial
communication in FreeBSD. sio manifests
through a number of entries in /dev, including
/dev/ttyd0 and /dev/cuaa0.
By contrast, the networking devices, such as
ed0 do not appear in /dev.In MS-DOS, the first floppy drive is referred to as
a:. In FreeBSD it is
/dev/fd0.]]>Appearance:sio is used for serial
communication in FreeBSD. sio
manifests through a number of entries in
/dev, including
/dev/ttyd0 and
/dev/cuaa0.By contrast, the networking devices, such as
ed0 do not appear in
/dev.In MS-DOS, the first floppy drive is referred to as
a:. In FreeBSD it is
/dev/fd0.Hosts, Domains, IP Addresses, and So Forth&os; ExtensionThese elements are part of the FreeBSD extension to
DocBook, and do not exist in the original DocBook
DTD.You can markup identification information for networked
computers (hosts) in several ways, depending on the nature
of the information. All of them use
hostid as the element, with the
role attribute selecting the type of the
marked up information.No role attribute, or
role="hostname"With no role attribute (i.e.,
hostid.../hostid)
the marked up information is the simple hostname, such
as freefall or
wcarchive. You can explicitly
specify this with
role="hostname".role="domainname"The text is a domain name, such as
FreeBSD.org or
ngo.org.uk. There is no hostname
component.role="fqdn"The text is a Fully Qualified Domain Name, with
both hostname and domain name parts.role="ipaddr"The text is an IP address, probably expressed as a
dotted quad.role="ip6addr"The text is an IPv6 address.role="netmask"The text is a network mask, which might be
expressed as a dotted quad, a hexadecimal string, or
as a / followed by a number.role="mac"The text is an Ethernet MAC address, expressed as
a series of 2 digit hexadecimal numbers separated by
colons.hostid and RolesUse:The local machine can always be referred to by the
name localhost, which will have the IP address
127.0.0.1.
The FreeBSD.org domain
contains a number of different hosts, including
freefall.FreeBSD.org and
pointyhat.FreeBSD.org.When adding an IP alias to an interface (using
ifconfig) always use a
netmask of 255.255.255.255
(which can also be expressed as 0xffffffff).The MAC address uniquely identifies every network card
in existence. A typical MAC address looks like 08:00:20:87:ef:d0.]]>Appearance:The local machine can always be referred to by the
name localhost, which will have the IP
address 127.0.0.1.The FreeBSD.org
domain contains a number of different hosts, including
freefall.FreeBSD.org and
bento.FreeBSD.org.When adding an IP alias to an interface (using
ifconfig) always
use a netmask of
255.255.255.255
(which can also be expressed as 0xffffffff).The MAC address uniquely identifies every network card
in existence. A typical MAC address looks like 08:00:20:87:ef:d0.Usernames&os; ExtensionThese elements are part of the FreeBSD extension to
DocBook, and do not exist in the original DocBook
DTD.When you need to refer to a specific username, such as
root or bin, use
username.usernameUse:To carry out most system administration functions you
will need to be root.]]>Appearance:To carry out most system administration functions you
will need to be root.Describing Makefiles&os; ExtensionThese elements are part of the FreeBSD extension to
DocBook, and do not exist in the original DocBook
DTD.Two elements exist to describe parts of
Makefiles,
maketarget and
makevar.maketarget identifies a build target
exported by a Makefile that can be
given as a parameter to make.
makevar identifies a variable that can be
set (in the environment, on the make
command line, or within the Makefile)
to influence the process.maketarget and
makevarUse:Two common targets in a Makefile
are all and clean.
Typically, invoking all will rebuild the
application, and invoking clean will remove
the temporary files (.o for example) created by
the build process.clean may be controlled by a number of
variables, including CLOBBER and
RECURSE.]]>Appearance:Two common targets in a Makefile
are all and
clean.Typically, invoking all will
rebuild the application, and invoking
clean will remove the temporary
files (.o for example) created by the
build process.clean may be controlled by a
number of variables, including CLOBBER
and RECURSE.Literal TextYou will often need to include literal
text in the documentation. This is text that is excerpted
from another file, or which should be copied from the
documentation into another file verbatim.Some of the time, programlisting will
be sufficient to denote this text.
programlisting is not always appropriate,
particularly when you want to include a portion of a file
in-line with the rest of the
paragraph.On these occasions, use
literal.literalUse:The maxusers 10 line in the kernel
configuration file determines the size of many system tables, and is
a rough guide to how many simultaneous logins the system will
support.]]>Appearance:The maxusers 10 line in the kernel
configuration file determines the size of many system
tables, and is a rough guide to how many simultaneous
logins the system will support.Showing Items That the User Must
Fill InThere will often be times when you want to show the user
what to do, or refer to a file, or command line, or similar,
where the user cannot simply copy the examples that you
provide, but must instead include some information
themselves.replaceable is designed for this
eventuality. Use it inside other
elements to indicate parts of that element's content that
the user must replace.replaceableUse:&prompt.user; man command]]>Appearance:&prompt.user; man commandreplaceable can be used in many
different elements, including literal.
This example also shows that
replaceable should only be wrapped
around the content that the user is
meant to provide. The other content should be left
alone.Use:The maxusers n
line in the kernel configuration file determines the size of many system
tables, and is a rough guide to how many simultaneous logins the system will
support.
For a desktop workstation, 32 is a good value
for n.]]>Appearance:The
maxusers n
line in the kernel configuration file determines the size
of many system tables, and is a rough guide to how many
simultaneous logins the system will support.For a desktop workstation, 32 is a
good value for n.Quoting System ErrorsYou might want to show errors generated by FreeBSD.
Mark these with errorname. This
indicates the exact error that appears.errornameUse:Panic: cannot mount root ]]>
Appearance:Panic: cannot mount rootImagesImage support in the documentation is currently
extremely experimental. The mechanisms described here are
unlikely to change, but that is not guaranteed.You will also need to install the
graphics/ImageMagick
port, which is used to convert between the different image
formats. This is a big port, and most of it is not
required. However, while we are working on the
Makefiles and other infrastructure it
makes things easier. This port is not
in the textproc/docproj
meta port, you must install it by hand.The best example of what follows in practice is the
doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/vm-design/
document. If you are unsure of the description that
follows, take a look at the files in that directory to see
how everything hangs together. Experiment with creating
different formatted versions of the document to see how the
image markup appears in the formatted output.Image FormatsWe currently support two formats for images. The format
you should use will depend on the nature of your
image.For images that are primarily vector based, such as
network diagrams, time lines, and similar, use Encapsulated
Postscript, and make sure that your images have the
.eps extension.For bitmaps, such as screen captures, use the Portable
Network Graphic format, and make sure that your images have
the .png extension.These are the only formats in which
images should be committed to the Subversion
repository.Use the right format for the right image. It is to be
expected that your documentation will have a mix of EPS and
PNG images. The Makefiles ensure that
the correct format image is chosen depending on the output
format that you use for your documentation. Do
not commit the same image to the repository in two different
formats.It is anticipated that the Documentation Project will
switch to using the Scalable Vector Graphic (SVG) format
for vector images. However, the current state of SVG
capable editing tools makes this impractical.MarkupThe markup for an image is relatively simple. First,
markup a mediaobject. The
mediaobject can contain other, more
specific objects. We are concerned with two, the
imageobject and the
textobject.You should include one imageobject,
and two textobject elements. The
imageobject will point to the name of the
image file that will be used (without the extension). The
textobject elements contain information
that will be presented to the user as well as, or instead
of, the image.There are two circumstances where this can
happen.When the reader is viewing the documentation in
HTML. In this case, each image will need to have
associated alternate text to show the user, typically
whilst the image is loading, or if they hover the mouse
pointer over the image.When the reader is viewing the documentation in
plain text. In this case, each image should have an
ASCII art equivalent to show the user.An example will probably make things easier to
understand. Suppose you have an image, called
fig1.png, that you want to include in the
document. This image is of a rectangle with an A inside it.
The markup for this would be as follows.<mediaobject>
<imageobject>
<imagedata fileref="fig1">
</imageobject>
<textobject>
<literallayout class="monospaced">+---------------+
| A |
+---------------+</literallayout>
</textobject>
<textobject>
<phrase>A picture</phrase>
</textobject>
</mediaobject>Include an imagedata element
inside the imageobject element. The
fileref attribute should contain the
filename of the image to include, without the extension.
The stylesheets will work out which extension should be
added to the filename automatically.The first textobject should
contain a literallayout element,
where the class attribute is set to
monospaced. This is your opportunity
to demonstrate your ASCII art skills. This content will
be used if the document is converted to plain
text.Notice how the first and last lines of the content
of the literallayout element butt up
next to the element's tags. This ensures no extraneous
white space is included.The second textobject should
contain a single phrase element. The
contents of this will become the alt
attribute for the image when this document is converted
to HTML.Makefile EntriesYour images must be listed in the
Makefile in the
IMAGES variable. This variable should
contain the name of all your source
images. For example, if you have created three figures,
fig1.eps,
fig2.png,
fig3.png, then your
Makefile should have lines like this in
it.…
IMAGES= fig1.eps fig2.png fig3.png
…or…
IMAGES= fig1.eps
IMAGES+= fig2.png
IMAGES+= fig3.png
…Again, the Makefile will work out
the complete list of images it needs to build your source
document, you only need to list the image files
you provided.Images and Chapters in SubdirectoriesYou must be careful when you separate your documentation
into smaller files (see
) in
different directories.Suppose you have a book with three chapters, and the
chapters are stored in their own directories, called
chapter1/chapter.xml,
chapter2/chapter.xml, and
chapter3/chapter.xml. If each chapter
has images associated with it, it is suggested to place
those images in each chapter's subdirectory
(chapter1/,
chapter2/, and
chapter3/).However, if you do this you must include the directory
names in the IMAGES variable in the
Makefile, and you
must include the directory name in the
imagedata element in your
document.For example, if you have
chapter1/fig1.png, then
chapter1/chapter.xml should
contain:<mediaobject>
<imageobject>
<imagedata fileref="chapter1/fig1">
</imageobject>
…
</mediaobject>The directory name must be included in the
fileref attribute.The Makefile must contain:…
IMAGES= chapter1/fig1.png
…Then everything should just work.LinksLinks are also in-line elements.Linking to Other Parts of the Same DocumentLinking within the same document requires you to specify
where you are linking from (i.e., the text the user will
click, or otherwise indicate, as the source of the link) and
where you are linking to (the link's destination).Each element within DocBook has an attribute called
id. You can place text in this attribute
to uniquely name the element it is attached to.This value will be used when you specify the link
source.Normally, you will only be linking to chapters or
sections, so you would add the id
attribute to these elements.Attribute id on Chapters and
SectionsIntroductionThis is the introduction. It contains a subsection,
which is identified as well.Sub-sect 1This is the subsection.
]]>Obviously, you should use more descriptive values. The
values must be unique within the document (i.e., not just
the file, but the document the file might be included in as
well). Notice how the id for the
subsection is constructed by appending text to the
id of the chapter. This helps to ensure
that they are unique.If you want to allow the user to jump into a specific
portion of the document (possibly in the middle of a
paragraph or an example), use anchor.
This element has no content, but takes an
id attribute.anchorThis paragraph has an embedded
link target in it. It will not show up in
the document.]]>When you want to provide the user with a link they can
activate (probably by clicking) to go to a section of the
document that has an id attribute, you
can use either xref or
link.Both of these elements have a linkend
attribute. The value of this attribute should be the value
that you have used in a id attribute (it
does not matter if that value has not yet occurred in your
document; this will work for forward links as well as
backward links).If you use xref then you have no
control over the text of the link. It will be generated for
you.Using xrefAssume that this fragment appears somewhere in a
document that includes the id
example:More information can be found
in .
More specific information can be found
in .]]>The text of the link will be generated automatically,
and will look like (emphasized text
indicates the text that will be the link):
More information can be found in Chapter
One.More specific information can be found in
the section called Sub-Sect
1.
Notice how the text from the link is derived from the
section title or the chapter number.This means that you cannot use
xref to link to an
id attribute on an
anchor element. The
anchor has no content, so the
xref cannot generate the text for the
link.If you want to control the text of the link then use
link. This element wraps content, and
the content will be used for the link.Using linkAssume that this fragment appears somewhere in a
document that includes the id
example.More information can be found in
the first chapter.
More specific information can be found in
this section.]]>This will generate the following
(emphasized text indicates the text
that will be the link):
More information can be found in the first
chapter.More specific information can be found in
this section.
That last one is a bad example. Never use words like
this or here as the source
for the link. The reader will need to hunt around the
surrounding context to see where the link is actually
taking them.You can use
link to include a link to an
id on an anchor
element, since the link content defines
the text that will be used for the link.Linking to Documents on the WWWLinking to external documents is much simpler, as long
as you know the URL of the document you want to link to.
Use ulink. The url
attribute is the URL of the page that the link points to,
and the content of the element is the text that will be
displayed for the user to activate.ulinkUse:Of course, you could stop reading this document and
go to the FreeBSD
home page instead.]]>Appearance:Of course, you could stop reading this document and go
to the FreeBSD home
page instead.
Index: head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/fdp-primer/tools/chapter.xml
===================================================================
--- head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/fdp-primer/tools/chapter.xml (revision 41713)
+++ head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/fdp-primer/tools/chapter.xml (revision 41714)
@@ -1,278 +1,278 @@
ToolsThe FDP uses a number of different software tools to help
manage the FreeBSD documentation, convert it to different output
formats, and so on. You will need to use these tools yourself if
you are to work with the FreeBSD documentation.All these tools are available as FreeBSD Ports and Packages,
greatly simplifying the work you have to do to install
them.You will need to install these tools before you work through
any of the examples in later chapters. The actual usage of these
tools is covered in later chapters.Use textproc/docproj If
PossibleYou can save yourself a lot of time if you install the
textproc/docproj port. This
is a meta-port which does not contain any
software itself. Instead, it depends on various other ports
being installed correctly. Installing this port
should automatically download and install
all of the packages listed in this chapter that you need.One of the packages that you might need is the
JadeTeX macro set. In turn, this
macro set requires &tex; to be installed. &tex; is a large
package, and you only need it if you want to produce Postscript
or PDF output.To save yourself time and space you must specify whether or
not you want JadeTeX (and therefore
&tex;) installed when you install this port. Either do:&prompt.root; make JADETEX=yes installor&prompt.root; make JADETEX=no installas necessary. Alternatively you may install
textproc/docproj-jadetex or
textproc/docproj-nojadetex.
These slave ports define the JADETEX variable
for you, therefore they will install the same suite of
applications on your machine. Note that you can produce only
XHTML or ASCII text output if you do not install
JadeTeX. PostScript or PDF output
requires &tex;.Mandatory ToolsSoftwareThese programs are required before you can usefully work
with the FreeBSD documentation, and they will allow you to
convert the documentation to XHTML, plain text, and RTF
formats. They are all included in textproc/docproj.Jade
(textproc/jade)A DSSSL implementation. Used for converting marked
up documents to other formats, including HTML and
&tex;.Links
(www/links)A text-mode WWW browser that can also convert
XHTML files to plain text.peps
(graphics/peps)Some of the documentation includes images, some of
which are stored as EPS files. These must be converted
to PNG before most web browsers will display
them.DTDs and EntitiesThese are the DTDs and entity sets used by the FDP. They
need to be installed before you can work with any of the
documentation.XHTML DTD (textproc/xhtml)XHTML is the markup language of choice for the World
Wide Web, and is used throughout the FreeBSD web
site.DocBook DTD (textproc/docbook)
+ role="package">textproc/docbook-xml-450)
DocBook is designed for marking up technical
documentation. All the FreeBSD documentation is written
in DocBook.ISO 8879 entities
(textproc/iso8879)19 of the ISO 8879:1986 character entity sets used
by many DTDs. Includes named mathematical symbols,
additional characters in the Latin character set
(accents, diacriticals, and so on), and Greek
symbols.StylesheetsThe stylesheets are used when converting and formatting
the documentation for display on screen, printing, and so
on.Modular DocBook Stylesheets
(textproc/dsssl-docbook-modular)The Modular DocBook Stylesheets are used when
converting documentation marked up in DocBook to other
formats, such as HTML or RTF.Optional ToolsYou do not need to have any of the following installed.
However, you may find it easier to work with the documentation
if you do, and they may give you more flexibility in the output
formats that can be generated.SoftwareJadeTeX and
teTeX
(print/jadetex and
print/teTeX)Jade and
teTeX are used to convert
DocBook documents to DVI, Postscript, and PDF formats.
The JadeTeX macros are needed
in order to do this.If you do not intend to convert your documentation
to one of these formats (i.e., HTML, plain text, and RTF
are sufficient) then you do not need to install
JadeTeX and
teTeX. This can be a
significant space and time saver, as
teTeX is over 30MB in
size.If you decide to install
JadeTeX and
teTeX then you will need to
configure teTeX after
JadeTeX has been installed.
print/jadetex/pkg-message
contains detailed instructions explaining what you
need to do.Emacs or
XEmacs
(editors/emacs or
editors/xemacs)Both these editors include a special mode for
editing documents marked up according to an SGML DTD.
This mode includes commands to reduce the amount of
typing you need, and help reduce the possibility of
errors.You do not need to use them; any text editor can be
used to edit marked up documents. You may find they
make you more efficient.If anyone has recommendations for other software that is
useful when manipulating XML documents, please let &a.doceng;
know, so they can be added to this list.