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+This is standards.info, produced by makeinfo version 4.13 from
+/Volumes/androidtc/androidtoolchain/./src/build/../gdb/gdb-7.3.x/etc/standards.texi.
+
+INFO-DIR-SECTION GNU organization
+START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
+* Standards: (standards). GNU coding standards.
+END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
+
+ The GNU coding standards, last updated April 12, 2010.
+
+ Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000,
+2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 Free Software
+Foundation, Inc.
+
+ Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
+under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
+any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
+Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no Back-Cover
+Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled "GNU
+Free Documentation License".
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Top, Next: Preface, Prev: (dir), Up: (dir)
+
+Version
+*******
+
+The GNU coding standards, last updated April 12, 2010.
+
+ Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000,
+2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 Free Software
+Foundation, Inc.
+
+ Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
+under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
+any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
+Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no Back-Cover
+Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled "GNU
+Free Documentation License".
+
+* Menu:
+
+* Preface:: About the GNU Coding Standards.
+* Legal Issues:: Keeping free software free.
+* Design Advice:: General program design.
+* Program Behavior:: Program behavior for all programs
+* Writing C:: Making the best use of C.
+* Documentation:: Documenting programs.
+* Managing Releases:: The release process.
+* References:: Mentioning non-free software or documentation.
+* GNU Free Documentation License:: Copying and sharing this manual.
+* Index::
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Preface, Next: Legal Issues, Prev: Top, Up: Top
+
+1 About the GNU Coding Standards
+********************************
+
+The GNU Coding Standards were written by Richard Stallman and other GNU
+Project volunteers. Their purpose is to make the GNU system clean,
+consistent, and easy to install. This document can also be read as a
+guide to writing portable, robust and reliable programs. It focuses on
+programs written in C, but many of the rules and principles are useful
+even if you write in another programming language. The rules often
+state reasons for writing in a certain way.
+
+ If you did not obtain this file directly from the GNU project and
+recently, please check for a newer version. You can get the GNU Coding
+Standards from the GNU web server in many different formats, including
+the Texinfo source, PDF, HTML, DVI, plain text, and more, at:
+`http://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/'.
+
+ If you are maintaining an official GNU package, in addition to this
+document, please read and follow the GNU maintainer information (*note
+Contents: (maintain)Top.).
+
+ If you want to receive diffs for every change to these GNU documents,
+join the mailing list `gnustandards-commit@gnu.org', via the web
+interface at
+`http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnustandards-commit'. Archives
+are also available there.
+
+ Please send corrections or suggestions for this document to
+<bug-standards@gnu.org>. If you make a suggestion, please include a
+suggested new wording for it, to help us consider the suggestion
+efficiently. We prefer a context diff to the Texinfo source, but if
+that's difficult for you, you can make a context diff for some other
+version of this document, or propose it in any way that makes it clear.
+The source repository for this document can be found at
+`http://savannah.gnu.org/projects/gnustandards'.
+
+ These standards cover the minimum of what is important when writing a
+GNU package. Likely, the need for additional standards will come up.
+Sometimes, you might suggest that such standards be added to this
+document. If you think your standards would be generally useful, please
+do suggest them.
+
+ You should also set standards for your package on many questions not
+addressed or not firmly specified here. The most important point is to
+be self-consistent--try to stick to the conventions you pick, and try
+to document them as much as possible. That way, your program will be
+more maintainable by others.
+
+ The GNU Hello program serves as an example of how to follow the GNU
+coding standards for a trivial program.
+`http://www.gnu.org/software/hello/hello.html'.
+
+ This release of the GNU Coding Standards was last updated April 12,
+2010.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Legal Issues, Next: Design Advice, Prev: Preface, Up: Top
+
+2 Keeping Free Software Free
+****************************
+
+This chapter discusses how you can make sure that GNU software avoids
+legal difficulties, and other related issues.
+
+* Menu:
+
+* Reading Non-Free Code:: Referring to proprietary programs.
+* Contributions:: Accepting contributions.
+* Trademarks:: How we deal with trademark issues.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Reading Non-Free Code, Next: Contributions, Up: Legal Issues
+
+2.1 Referring to Proprietary Programs
+=====================================
+
+Don't in any circumstances refer to Unix source code for or during your
+work on GNU! (Or to any other proprietary programs.)
+
+ If you have a vague recollection of the internals of a Unix program,
+this does not absolutely mean you can't write an imitation of it, but
+do try to organize the imitation internally along different lines,
+because this is likely to make the details of the Unix version
+irrelevant and dissimilar to your results.
+
+ For example, Unix utilities were generally optimized to minimize
+memory use; if you go for speed instead, your program will be very
+different. You could keep the entire input file in memory and scan it
+there instead of using stdio. Use a smarter algorithm discovered more
+recently than the Unix program. Eliminate use of temporary files. Do
+it in one pass instead of two (we did this in the assembler).
+
+ Or, on the contrary, emphasize simplicity instead of speed. For some
+applications, the speed of today's computers makes simpler algorithms
+adequate.
+
+ Or go for generality. For example, Unix programs often have static
+tables or fixed-size strings, which make for arbitrary limits; use
+dynamic allocation instead. Make sure your program handles NULs and
+other funny characters in the input files. Add a programming language
+for extensibility and write part of the program in that language.
+
+ Or turn some parts of the program into independently usable
+libraries. Or use a simple garbage collector instead of tracking
+precisely when to free memory, or use a new GNU facility such as
+obstacks.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Contributions, Next: Trademarks, Prev: Reading Non-Free Code, Up: Legal Issues
+
+2.2 Accepting Contributions
+===========================
+
+If the program you are working on is copyrighted by the Free Software
+Foundation, then when someone else sends you a piece of code to add to
+the program, we need legal papers to use it--just as we asked you to
+sign papers initially. _Each_ person who makes a nontrivial
+contribution to a program must sign some sort of legal papers in order
+for us to have clear title to the program; the main author alone is not
+enough.
+
+ So, before adding in any contributions from other people, please tell
+us, so we can arrange to get the papers. Then wait until we tell you
+that we have received the signed papers, before you actually use the
+contribution.
+
+ This applies both before you release the program and afterward. If
+you receive diffs to fix a bug, and they make significant changes, we
+need legal papers for that change.
+
+ This also applies to comments and documentation files. For copyright
+law, comments and code are just text. Copyright applies to all kinds of
+text, so we need legal papers for all kinds.
+
+ We know it is frustrating to ask for legal papers; it's frustrating
+for us as well. But if you don't wait, you are going out on a limb--for
+example, what if the contributor's employer won't sign a disclaimer?
+You might have to take that code out again!
+
+ You don't need papers for changes of a few lines here or there, since
+they are not significant for copyright purposes. Also, you don't need
+papers if all you get from the suggestion is some ideas, not actual code
+which you use. For example, if someone sent you one implementation, but
+you write a different implementation of the same idea, you don't need to
+get papers.
+
+ The very worst thing is if you forget to tell us about the other
+contributor. We could be very embarrassed in court some day as a
+result.
+
+ We have more detailed advice for maintainers of programs; if you have
+reached the stage of actually maintaining a program for GNU (whether
+released or not), please ask us for a copy. It is also available
+online for your perusal: `http://www.gnu.org/prep/maintain/'.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Trademarks, Prev: Contributions, Up: Legal Issues
+
+2.3 Trademarks
+==============
+
+Please do not include any trademark acknowledgements in GNU software
+packages or documentation.
+
+ Trademark acknowledgements are the statements that such-and-such is a
+trademark of so-and-so. The GNU Project has no objection to the basic
+idea of trademarks, but these acknowledgements feel like kowtowing, and
+there is no legal requirement for them, so we don't use them.
+
+ What is legally required, as regards other people's trademarks, is to
+avoid using them in ways which a reader might reasonably understand as
+naming or labeling our own programs or activities. For example, since
+"Objective C" is (or at least was) a trademark, we made sure to say
+that we provide a "compiler for the Objective C language" rather than
+an "Objective C compiler". The latter would have been meant as a
+shorter way of saying the former, but it does not explicitly state the
+relationship, so it could be misinterpreted as using "Objective C" as a
+label for the compiler rather than for the language.
+
+ Please don't use "win" as an abbreviation for Microsoft Windows in
+GNU software or documentation. In hacker terminology, calling
+something a "win" is a form of praise. If you wish to praise Microsoft
+Windows when speaking on your own, by all means do so, but not in GNU
+software. Usually we write the name "Windows" in full, but when
+brevity is very important (as in file names and sometimes symbol
+names), we abbreviate it to "w". For instance, the files and functions
+in Emacs that deal with Windows start with `w32'.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Design Advice, Next: Program Behavior, Prev: Legal Issues, Up: Top
+
+3 General Program Design
+************************
+
+This chapter discusses some of the issues you should take into account
+when designing your program.
+
+* Menu:
+
+* Source Language:: Which languages to use.
+* Compatibility:: Compatibility with other implementations.
+* Using Extensions:: Using non-standard features.
+* Standard C:: Using standard C features.
+* Conditional Compilation:: Compiling code only if a conditional is true.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Source Language, Next: Compatibility, Up: Design Advice
+
+3.1 Which Languages to Use
+==========================
+
+When you want to use a language that gets compiled and runs at high
+speed, the best language to use is C. Using another language is like
+using a non-standard feature: it will cause trouble for users. Even if
+GCC supports the other language, users may find it inconvenient to have
+to install the compiler for that other language in order to build your
+program. For example, if you write your program in C++, people will
+have to install the GNU C++ compiler in order to compile your program.
+
+ C has one other advantage over C++ and other compiled languages: more
+people know C, so more people will find it easy to read and modify the
+program if it is written in C.
+
+ So in general it is much better to use C, rather than the comparable
+alternatives.
+
+ But there are two exceptions to that conclusion:
+
+ * It is no problem to use another language to write a tool
+ specifically intended for use with that language. That is because
+ the only people who want to build the tool will be those who have
+ installed the other language anyway.
+
+ * If an application is of interest only to a narrow part of the
+ community, then the question of which language it is written in
+ has less effect on other people, so you may as well please
+ yourself.
+
+ Many programs are designed to be extensible: they include an
+interpreter for a language that is higher level than C. Often much of
+the program is written in that language, too. The Emacs editor
+pioneered this technique.
+
+ The standard extensibility interpreter for GNU software is Guile
+(`http://www.gnu.org/software/guile/'), which implements the language
+Scheme (an especially clean and simple dialect of Lisp). Guile also
+includes bindings for GTK+/GNOME, making it practical to write modern
+GUI functionality within Guile. We don't reject programs written in
+other "scripting languages" such as Perl and Python, but using Guile is
+very important for the overall consistency of the GNU system.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Compatibility, Next: Using Extensions, Prev: Source Language, Up: Design Advice
+
+3.2 Compatibility with Other Implementations
+============================================
+
+With occasional exceptions, utility programs and libraries for GNU
+should be upward compatible with those in Berkeley Unix, and upward
+compatible with Standard C if Standard C specifies their behavior, and
+upward compatible with POSIX if POSIX specifies their behavior.
+
+ When these standards conflict, it is useful to offer compatibility
+modes for each of them.
+
+ Standard C and POSIX prohibit many kinds of extensions. Feel free
+to make the extensions anyway, and include a `--ansi', `--posix', or
+`--compatible' option to turn them off. However, if the extension has
+a significant chance of breaking any real programs or scripts, then it
+is not really upward compatible. So you should try to redesign its
+interface to make it upward compatible.
+
+ Many GNU programs suppress extensions that conflict with POSIX if the
+environment variable `POSIXLY_CORRECT' is defined (even if it is
+defined with a null value). Please make your program recognize this
+variable if appropriate.
+
+ When a feature is used only by users (not by programs or command
+files), and it is done poorly in Unix, feel free to replace it
+completely with something totally different and better. (For example,
+`vi' is replaced with Emacs.) But it is nice to offer a compatible
+feature as well. (There is a free `vi' clone, so we offer it.)
+
+ Additional useful features are welcome regardless of whether there
+is any precedent for them.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Using Extensions, Next: Standard C, Prev: Compatibility, Up: Design Advice
+
+3.3 Using Non-standard Features
+===============================
+
+Many GNU facilities that already exist support a number of convenient
+extensions over the comparable Unix facilities. Whether to use these
+extensions in implementing your program is a difficult question.
+
+ On the one hand, using the extensions can make a cleaner program.
+On the other hand, people will not be able to build the program unless
+the other GNU tools are available. This might cause the program to
+work on fewer kinds of machines.
+
+ With some extensions, it might be easy to provide both alternatives.
+For example, you can define functions with a "keyword" `INLINE' and
+define that as a macro to expand into either `inline' or nothing,
+depending on the compiler.
+
+ In general, perhaps it is best not to use the extensions if you can
+straightforwardly do without them, but to use the extensions if they
+are a big improvement.
+
+ An exception to this rule are the large, established programs (such
+as Emacs) which run on a great variety of systems. Using GNU
+extensions in such programs would make many users unhappy, so we don't
+do that.
+
+ Another exception is for programs that are used as part of
+compilation: anything that must be compiled with other compilers in
+order to bootstrap the GNU compilation facilities. If these require
+the GNU compiler, then no one can compile them without having them
+installed already. That would be extremely troublesome in certain
+cases.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Standard C, Next: Conditional Compilation, Prev: Using Extensions, Up: Design Advice
+
+3.4 Standard C and Pre-Standard C
+=================================
+
+1989 Standard C is widespread enough now that it is ok to use its
+features in new programs. There is one exception: do not ever use the
+"trigraph" feature of Standard C.
+
+ 1999 Standard C is not widespread yet, so please do not require its
+features in programs. It is ok to use its features if they are present.
+
+ However, it is easy to support pre-standard compilers in most
+programs, so if you know how to do that, feel free. If a program you
+are maintaining has such support, you should try to keep it working.
+
+ To support pre-standard C, instead of writing function definitions in
+standard prototype form,
+
+ int
+ foo (int x, int y)
+ ...
+
+write the definition in pre-standard style like this,
+
+ int
+ foo (x, y)
+ int x, y;
+ ...
+
+and use a separate declaration to specify the argument prototype:
+
+ int foo (int, int);
+
+ You need such a declaration anyway, in a header file, to get the
+benefit of prototypes in all the files where the function is called.
+And once you have the declaration, you normally lose nothing by writing
+the function definition in the pre-standard style.
+
+ This technique does not work for integer types narrower than `int'.
+If you think of an argument as being of a type narrower than `int',
+declare it as `int' instead.
+
+ There are a few special cases where this technique is hard to use.
+For example, if a function argument needs to hold the system type
+`dev_t', you run into trouble, because `dev_t' is shorter than `int' on
+some machines; but you cannot use `int' instead, because `dev_t' is
+wider than `int' on some machines. There is no type you can safely use
+on all machines in a non-standard definition. The only way to support
+non-standard C and pass such an argument is to check the width of
+`dev_t' using Autoconf and choose the argument type accordingly. This
+may not be worth the trouble.
+
+ In order to support pre-standard compilers that do not recognize
+prototypes, you may want to use a preprocessor macro like this:
+
+ /* Declare the prototype for a general external function. */
+ #if defined (__STDC__) || defined (WINDOWSNT)
+ #define P_(proto) proto
+ #else
+ #define P_(proto) ()
+ #endif
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Conditional Compilation, Prev: Standard C, Up: Design Advice
+
+3.5 Conditional Compilation
+===========================
+
+When supporting configuration options already known when building your
+program we prefer using `if (... )' over conditional compilation, as in
+the former case the compiler is able to perform more extensive checking
+of all possible code paths.
+
+ For example, please write
+
+ if (HAS_FOO)
+ ...
+ else
+ ...
+
+instead of:
+
+ #ifdef HAS_FOO
+ ...
+ #else
+ ...
+ #endif
+
+ A modern compiler such as GCC will generate exactly the same code in
+both cases, and we have been using similar techniques with good success
+in several projects. Of course, the former method assumes that
+`HAS_FOO' is defined as either 0 or 1.
+
+ While this is not a silver bullet solving all portability problems,
+and is not always appropriate, following this policy would have saved
+GCC developers many hours, or even days, per year.
+
+ In the case of function-like macros like `REVERSIBLE_CC_MODE' in GCC
+which cannot be simply used in `if (...)' statements, there is an easy
+workaround. Simply introduce another macro `HAS_REVERSIBLE_CC_MODE' as
+in the following example:
+
+ #ifdef REVERSIBLE_CC_MODE
+ #define HAS_REVERSIBLE_CC_MODE 1
+ #else
+ #define HAS_REVERSIBLE_CC_MODE 0
+ #endif
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Program Behavior, Next: Writing C, Prev: Design Advice, Up: Top
+
+4 Program Behavior for All Programs
+***********************************
+
+This chapter describes conventions for writing robust software. It
+also describes general standards for error messages, the command line
+interface, and how libraries should behave.
+
+* Menu:
+
+* Non-GNU Standards:: We consider standards such as POSIX;
+ we don't "obey" them.
+* Semantics:: Writing robust programs.
+* Libraries:: Library behavior.
+* Errors:: Formatting error messages.
+* User Interfaces:: Standards about interfaces generally.
+* Graphical Interfaces:: Standards for graphical interfaces.
+* Command-Line Interfaces:: Standards for command line interfaces.
+* Option Table:: Table of long options.
+* OID Allocations:: Table of OID slots for GNU.
+* Memory Usage:: When and how to care about memory needs.
+* File Usage:: Which files to use, and where.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Non-GNU Standards, Next: Semantics, Up: Program Behavior
+
+4.1 Non-GNU Standards
+=====================
+
+The GNU Project regards standards published by other organizations as
+suggestions, not orders. We consider those standards, but we do not
+"obey" them. In developing a GNU program, you should implement an
+outside standard's specifications when that makes the GNU system better
+overall in an objective sense. When it doesn't, you shouldn't.
+
+ In most cases, following published standards is convenient for
+users--it means that their programs or scripts will work more portably.
+For instance, GCC implements nearly all the features of Standard C as
+specified by that standard. C program developers would be unhappy if
+it did not. And GNU utilities mostly follow specifications of POSIX.2;
+shell script writers and users would be unhappy if our programs were
+incompatible.
+
+ But we do not follow either of these specifications rigidly, and
+there are specific points on which we decided not to follow them, so as
+to make the GNU system better for users.
+
+ For instance, Standard C says that nearly all extensions to C are
+prohibited. How silly! GCC implements many extensions, some of which
+were later adopted as part of the standard. If you want these
+constructs to give an error message as "required" by the standard, you
+must specify `--pedantic', which was implemented only so that we can
+say "GCC is a 100% implementation of the standard," not because there
+is any reason to actually use it.
+
+ POSIX.2 specifies that `df' and `du' must output sizes by default in
+units of 512 bytes. What users want is units of 1k, so that is what we
+do by default. If you want the ridiculous behavior "required" by
+POSIX, you must set the environment variable `POSIXLY_CORRECT' (which
+was originally going to be named `POSIX_ME_HARDER').
+
+ GNU utilities also depart from the letter of the POSIX.2
+specification when they support long-named command-line options, and
+intermixing options with ordinary arguments. This minor
+incompatibility with POSIX is never a problem in practice, and it is
+very useful.
+
+ In particular, don't reject a new feature, or remove an old one,
+merely because a standard says it is "forbidden" or "deprecated."
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Semantics, Next: Libraries, Prev: Non-GNU Standards, Up: Program Behavior
+
+4.2 Writing Robust Programs
+===========================
+
+Avoid arbitrary limits on the length or number of _any_ data structure,
+including file names, lines, files, and symbols, by allocating all data
+structures dynamically. In most Unix utilities, "long lines are
+silently truncated". This is not acceptable in a GNU utility.
+
+ Utilities reading files should not drop NUL characters, or any other
+nonprinting characters _including those with codes above 0177_. The
+only sensible exceptions would be utilities specifically intended for
+interface to certain types of terminals or printers that can't handle
+those characters. Whenever possible, try to make programs work
+properly with sequences of bytes that represent multibyte characters,
+using encodings such as UTF-8 and others.
+
+ Check every system call for an error return, unless you know you
+wish to ignore errors. Include the system error text (from `perror' or
+equivalent) in _every_ error message resulting from a failing system
+call, as well as the name of the file if any and the name of the
+utility. Just "cannot open foo.c" or "stat failed" is not sufficient.
+
+ Check every call to `malloc' or `realloc' to see if it returned
+zero. Check `realloc' even if you are making the block smaller; in a
+system that rounds block sizes to a power of 2, `realloc' may get a
+different block if you ask for less space.
+
+ In Unix, `realloc' can destroy the storage block if it returns zero.
+GNU `realloc' does not have this bug: if it fails, the original block
+is unchanged. Feel free to assume the bug is fixed. If you wish to
+run your program on Unix, and wish to avoid lossage in this case, you
+can use the GNU `malloc'.
+
+ You must expect `free' to alter the contents of the block that was
+freed. Anything you want to fetch from the block, you must fetch before
+calling `free'.
+
+ If `malloc' fails in a noninteractive program, make that a fatal
+error. In an interactive program (one that reads commands from the
+user), it is better to abort the command and return to the command
+reader loop. This allows the user to kill other processes to free up
+virtual memory, and then try the command again.
+
+ Use `getopt_long' to decode arguments, unless the argument syntax
+makes this unreasonable.
+
+ When static storage is to be written in during program execution, use
+explicit C code to initialize it. Reserve C initialized declarations
+for data that will not be changed.
+
+ Try to avoid low-level interfaces to obscure Unix data structures
+(such as file directories, utmp, or the layout of kernel memory), since
+these are less likely to work compatibly. If you need to find all the
+files in a directory, use `readdir' or some other high-level interface.
+These are supported compatibly by GNU.
+
+ The preferred signal handling facilities are the BSD variant of
+`signal', and the POSIX `sigaction' function; the alternative USG
+`signal' interface is an inferior design.
+
+ Nowadays, using the POSIX signal functions may be the easiest way to
+make a program portable. If you use `signal', then on GNU/Linux
+systems running GNU libc version 1, you should include `bsd/signal.h'
+instead of `signal.h', so as to get BSD behavior. It is up to you
+whether to support systems where `signal' has only the USG behavior, or
+give up on them.
+
+ In error checks that detect "impossible" conditions, just abort.
+There is usually no point in printing any message. These checks
+indicate the existence of bugs. Whoever wants to fix the bugs will have
+to read the source code and run a debugger. So explain the problem with
+comments in the source. The relevant data will be in variables, which
+are easy to examine with the debugger, so there is no point moving them
+elsewhere.
+
+ Do not use a count of errors as the exit status for a program.
+_That does not work_, because exit status values are limited to 8 bits
+(0 through 255). A single run of the program might have 256 errors; if
+you try to return 256 as the exit status, the parent process will see 0
+as the status, and it will appear that the program succeeded.
+
+ If you make temporary files, check the `TMPDIR' environment
+variable; if that variable is defined, use the specified directory
+instead of `/tmp'.
+
+ In addition, be aware that there is a possible security problem when
+creating temporary files in world-writable directories. In C, you can
+avoid this problem by creating temporary files in this manner:
+
+ fd = open (filename, O_WRONLY | O_CREAT | O_EXCL, 0600);
+
+or by using the `mkstemps' function from libiberty.
+
+ In bash, use `set -C' to avoid this problem.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Libraries, Next: Errors, Prev: Semantics, Up: Program Behavior
+
+4.3 Library Behavior
+====================
+
+Try to make library functions reentrant. If they need to do dynamic
+storage allocation, at least try to avoid any nonreentrancy aside from
+that of `malloc' itself.
+
+ Here are certain name conventions for libraries, to avoid name
+conflicts.
+
+ Choose a name prefix for the library, more than two characters long.
+All external function and variable names should start with this prefix.
+In addition, there should only be one of these in any given library
+member. This usually means putting each one in a separate source file.
+
+ An exception can be made when two external symbols are always used
+together, so that no reasonable program could use one without the
+other; then they can both go in the same file.
+
+ External symbols that are not documented entry points for the user
+should have names beginning with `_'. The `_' should be followed by
+the chosen name prefix for the library, to prevent collisions with
+other libraries. These can go in the same files with user entry points
+if you like.
+
+ Static functions and variables can be used as you like and need not
+fit any naming convention.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Errors, Next: User Interfaces, Prev: Libraries, Up: Program Behavior
+
+4.4 Formatting Error Messages
+=============================
+
+Error messages from compilers should look like this:
+
+ SOURCE-FILE-NAME:LINENO: MESSAGE
+
+If you want to mention the column number, use one of these formats:
+
+ SOURCE-FILE-NAME:LINENO:COLUMN: MESSAGE
+ SOURCE-FILE-NAME:LINENO.COLUMN: MESSAGE
+
+Line numbers should start from 1 at the beginning of the file, and
+column numbers should start from 1 at the beginning of the line. (Both
+of these conventions are chosen for compatibility.) Calculate column
+numbers assuming that space and all ASCII printing characters have
+equal width, and assuming tab stops every 8 columns.
+
+ The error message can also give both the starting and ending
+positions of the erroneous text. There are several formats so that you
+can avoid redundant information such as a duplicate line number. Here
+are the possible formats:
+
+ SOURCE-FILE-NAME:LINENO-1.COLUMN-1-LINENO-2.COLUMN-2: MESSAGE
+ SOURCE-FILE-NAME:LINENO-1.COLUMN-1-COLUMN-2: MESSAGE
+ SOURCE-FILE-NAME:LINENO-1-LINENO-2: MESSAGE
+
+When an error is spread over several files, you can use this format:
+
+ FILE-1:LINENO-1.COLUMN-1-FILE-2:LINENO-2.COLUMN-2: MESSAGE
+
+ Error messages from other noninteractive programs should look like
+this:
+
+ PROGRAM:SOURCE-FILE-NAME:LINENO: MESSAGE
+
+when there is an appropriate source file, or like this:
+
+ PROGRAM: MESSAGE
+
+when there is no relevant source file.
+
+ If you want to mention the column number, use this format:
+
+ PROGRAM:SOURCE-FILE-NAME:LINENO:COLUMN: MESSAGE
+
+ In an interactive program (one that is reading commands from a
+terminal), it is better not to include the program name in an error
+message. The place to indicate which program is running is in the
+prompt or with the screen layout. (When the same program runs with
+input from a source other than a terminal, it is not interactive and
+would do best to print error messages using the noninteractive style.)
+
+ The string MESSAGE should not begin with a capital letter when it
+follows a program name and/or file name, because that isn't the
+beginning of a sentence. (The sentence conceptually starts at the
+beginning of the line.) Also, it should not end with a period.
+
+ Error messages from interactive programs, and other messages such as
+usage messages, should start with a capital letter. But they should not
+end with a period.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: User Interfaces, Next: Graphical Interfaces, Prev: Errors, Up: Program Behavior
+
+4.5 Standards for Interfaces Generally
+======================================
+
+Please don't make the behavior of a utility depend on the name used to
+invoke it. It is useful sometimes to make a link to a utility with a
+different name, and that should not change what it does.
+
+ Instead, use a run time option or a compilation switch or both to
+select among the alternate behaviors.
+
+ Likewise, please don't make the behavior of the program depend on the
+type of output device it is used with. Device independence is an
+important principle of the system's design; do not compromise it merely
+to save someone from typing an option now and then. (Variation in error
+message syntax when using a terminal is ok, because that is a side issue
+that people do not depend on.)
+
+ If you think one behavior is most useful when the output is to a
+terminal, and another is most useful when the output is a file or a
+pipe, then it is usually best to make the default behavior the one that
+is useful with output to a terminal, and have an option for the other
+behavior.
+
+ Compatibility requires certain programs to depend on the type of
+output device. It would be disastrous if `ls' or `sh' did not do so in
+the way all users expect. In some of these cases, we supplement the
+program with a preferred alternate version that does not depend on the
+output device type. For example, we provide a `dir' program much like
+`ls' except that its default output format is always multi-column
+format.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Graphical Interfaces, Next: Command-Line Interfaces, Prev: User Interfaces, Up: Program Behavior
+
+4.6 Standards for Graphical Interfaces
+======================================
+
+When you write a program that provides a graphical user interface,
+please make it work with the X Window System and the GTK+ toolkit
+unless the functionality specifically requires some alternative (for
+example, "displaying jpeg images while in console mode").
+
+ In addition, please provide a command-line interface to control the
+functionality. (In many cases, the graphical user interface can be a
+separate program which invokes the command-line program.) This is so
+that the same jobs can be done from scripts.
+
+ Please also consider providing a D-bus interface for use from other
+running programs, such as within GNOME. (GNOME used to use CORBA for
+this, but that is being phased out.) In addition, consider providing a
+library interface (for use from C), and perhaps a keyboard-driven
+console interface (for use by users from console mode). Once you are
+doing the work to provide the functionality and the graphical
+interface, these won't be much extra work.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Command-Line Interfaces, Next: Option Table, Prev: Graphical Interfaces, Up: Program Behavior
+
+4.7 Standards for Command Line Interfaces
+=========================================
+
+It is a good idea to follow the POSIX guidelines for the command-line
+options of a program. The easiest way to do this is to use `getopt' to
+parse them. Note that the GNU version of `getopt' will normally permit
+options anywhere among the arguments unless the special argument `--'
+is used. This is not what POSIX specifies; it is a GNU extension.
+
+ Please define long-named options that are equivalent to the
+single-letter Unix-style options. We hope to make GNU more user
+friendly this way. This is easy to do with the GNU function
+`getopt_long'.
+
+ One of the advantages of long-named options is that they can be
+consistent from program to program. For example, users should be able
+to expect the "verbose" option of any GNU program which has one, to be
+spelled precisely `--verbose'. To achieve this uniformity, look at the
+table of common long-option names when you choose the option names for
+your program (*note Option Table::).
+
+ It is usually a good idea for file names given as ordinary arguments
+to be input files only; any output files would be specified using
+options (preferably `-o' or `--output'). Even if you allow an output
+file name as an ordinary argument for compatibility, try to provide an
+option as another way to specify it. This will lead to more consistency
+among GNU utilities, and fewer idiosyncrasies for users to remember.
+
+ All programs should support two standard options: `--version' and
+`--help'. CGI programs should accept these as command-line options,
+and also if given as the `PATH_INFO'; for instance, visiting
+`http://example.org/p.cgi/--help' in a browser should output the same
+information as invoking `p.cgi --help' from the command line.
+
+* Menu:
+
+* --version:: The standard output for --version.
+* --help:: The standard output for --help.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: --version, Next: --help, Up: Command-Line Interfaces
+
+4.7.1 `--version'
+-----------------
+
+The standard `--version' option should direct the program to print
+information about its name, version, origin and legal status, all on
+standard output, and then exit successfully. Other options and
+arguments should be ignored once this is seen, and the program should
+not perform its normal function.
+
+ The first line is meant to be easy for a program to parse; the
+version number proper starts after the last space. In addition, it
+contains the canonical name for this program, in this format:
+
+ GNU Emacs 19.30
+
+The program's name should be a constant string; _don't_ compute it from
+`argv[0]'. The idea is to state the standard or canonical name for the
+program, not its file name. There are other ways to find out the
+precise file name where a command is found in `PATH'.
+
+ If the program is a subsidiary part of a larger package, mention the
+package name in parentheses, like this:
+
+ emacsserver (GNU Emacs) 19.30
+
+If the package has a version number which is different from this
+program's version number, you can mention the package version number
+just before the close-parenthesis.
+
+ If you _need_ to mention the version numbers of libraries which are
+distributed separately from the package which contains this program,
+you can do so by printing an additional line of version info for each
+library you want to mention. Use the same format for these lines as for
+the first line.
+
+ Please do not mention all of the libraries that the program uses
+"just for completeness"--that would produce a lot of unhelpful clutter.
+Please mention library version numbers only if you find in practice that
+they are very important to you in debugging.
+
+ The following line, after the version number line or lines, should
+be a copyright notice. If more than one copyright notice is called
+for, put each on a separate line.
+
+ Next should follow a line stating the license, preferably using one
+of abbrevations below, and a brief statement that the program is free
+software, and that users are free to copy and change it. Also mention
+that there is no warranty, to the extent permitted by law. See
+recommended wording below.
+
+ It is ok to finish the output with a list of the major authors of the
+program, as a way of giving credit.
+
+ Here's an example of output that follows these rules:
+
+ GNU hello 2.3
+ Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+ License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>
+ This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it.
+ There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.
+
+ You should adapt this to your program, of course, filling in the
+proper year, copyright holder, name of program, and the references to
+distribution terms, and changing the rest of the wording as necessary.
+
+ This copyright notice only needs to mention the most recent year in
+which changes were made--there's no need to list the years for previous
+versions' changes. You don't have to mention the name of the program in
+these notices, if that is inconvenient, since it appeared in the first
+line. (The rules are different for copyright notices in source files;
+*note Copyright Notices: (maintain)Copyright Notices.)
+
+ Translations of the above lines must preserve the validity of the
+copyright notices (*note Internationalization::). If the translation's
+character set supports it, the `(C)' should be replaced with the
+copyright symbol, as follows:
+
+ (the official copyright symbol, which is the letter C in a circle);
+
+ Write the word "Copyright" exactly like that, in English. Do not
+translate it into another language. International treaties recognize
+the English word "Copyright"; translations into other languages do not
+have legal significance.
+
+ Finally, here is the table of our suggested license abbreviations.
+Any abbreviation can be followed by `vVERSION[+]', meaning that
+particular version, or later versions with the `+', as shown above.
+
+ In the case of exceptions for extra permissions with the GPL, we use
+`/' for a separator; the version number can follow the license
+abbreviation as usual, as in the examples below.
+
+GPL
+ GNU General Public License, `http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html'.
+
+LGPL
+ GNU Lesser General Public License,
+ `http://www.gnu.org/licenses/lgpl.html'.
+
+GPL/Ada
+ GNU GPL with the exception for Ada.
+
+Apache
+ The Apache Software Foundation license,
+ `http://www.apache.org/licenses'.
+
+Artistic
+ The Artistic license used for Perl,
+ `http://www.perlfoundation.org/legal'.
+
+Expat
+ The Expat license, `http://www.jclark.com/xml/copying.txt'.
+
+MPL
+ The Mozilla Public License, `http://www.mozilla.org/MPL/'.
+
+OBSD
+ The original (4-clause) BSD license, incompatible with the GNU GPL
+ `http://www.xfree86.org/3.3.6/COPYRIGHT2.html#6'.
+
+PHP
+ The license used for PHP, `http://www.php.net/license/'.
+
+public domain
+ The non-license that is being in the public domain,
+ `http://www.gnu.org/licenses/license-list.html#PublicDomain'.
+
+Python
+ The license for Python, `http://www.python.org/2.0.1/license.html'.
+
+RBSD
+ The revised (3-clause) BSD, compatible with the GNU GPL,
+ `http://www.xfree86.org/3.3.6/COPYRIGHT2.html#5'.
+
+X11
+ The simple non-copyleft license used for most versions of the X
+ Window System, `http://www.xfree86.org/3.3.6/COPYRIGHT2.html#3'.
+
+Zlib
+ The license for Zlib, `http://www.gzip.org/zlib/zlib_license.html'.
+
+
+ More information about these licenses and many more are on the GNU
+licensing web pages, `http://www.gnu.org/licenses/license-list.html'.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: --help, Prev: --version, Up: Command-Line Interfaces
+
+4.7.2 `--help'
+--------------
+
+The standard `--help' option should output brief documentation for how
+to invoke the program, on standard output, then exit successfully.
+Other options and arguments should be ignored once this is seen, and
+the program should not perform its normal function.
+
+ Near the end of the `--help' option's output, please place lines
+giving the email address for bug reports, the package's home page
+(normally <http://www.gnu.org/software/PKG>, and the general page for
+help using GNU programs. The format should be like this:
+
+ Report bugs to: MAILING-ADDRESS
+ PKG home page: <http://www.gnu.org/software/PKG/>
+ General help using GNU software: <http://www.gnu.org/gethelp/>
+
+ It is ok to mention other appropriate mailing lists and web pages.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Option Table, Next: OID Allocations, Prev: Command-Line Interfaces, Up: Program Behavior
+
+4.8 Table of Long Options
+=========================
+
+Here is a table of long options used by GNU programs. It is surely
+incomplete, but we aim to list all the options that a new program might
+want to be compatible with. If you use names not already in the table,
+please send <bug-standards@gnu.org> a list of them, with their
+meanings, so we can update the table.
+
+`after-date'
+ `-N' in `tar'.
+
+`all'
+ `-a' in `du', `ls', `nm', `stty', `uname', and `unexpand'.
+
+`all-text'
+ `-a' in `diff'.
+
+`almost-all'
+ `-A' in `ls'.
+
+`append'
+ `-a' in `etags', `tee', `time'; `-r' in `tar'.
+
+`archive'
+ `-a' in `cp'.
+
+`archive-name'
+ `-n' in `shar'.
+
+`arglength'
+ `-l' in `m4'.
+
+`ascii'
+ `-a' in `diff'.
+
+`assign'
+ `-v' in `gawk'.
+
+`assume-new'
+ `-W' in `make'.
+
+`assume-old'
+ `-o' in `make'.
+
+`auto-check'
+ `-a' in `recode'.
+
+`auto-pager'
+ `-a' in `wdiff'.
+
+`auto-reference'
+ `-A' in `ptx'.
+
+`avoid-wraps'
+ `-n' in `wdiff'.
+
+`background'
+ For server programs, run in the background.
+
+`backward-search'
+ `-B' in `ctags'.
+
+`basename'
+ `-f' in `shar'.
+
+`batch'
+ Used in GDB.
+
+`baud'
+ Used in GDB.
+
+`before'
+ `-b' in `tac'.
+
+`binary'
+ `-b' in `cpio' and `diff'.
+
+`bits-per-code'
+ `-b' in `shar'.
+
+`block-size'
+ Used in `cpio' and `tar'.
+
+`blocks'
+ `-b' in `head' and `tail'.
+
+`break-file'
+ `-b' in `ptx'.
+
+`brief'
+ Used in various programs to make output shorter.
+
+`bytes'
+ `-c' in `head', `split', and `tail'.
+
+`c++'
+ `-C' in `etags'.
+
+`catenate'
+ `-A' in `tar'.
+
+`cd'
+ Used in various programs to specify the directory to use.
+
+`changes'
+ `-c' in `chgrp' and `chown'.
+
+`classify'
+ `-F' in `ls'.
+
+`colons'
+ `-c' in `recode'.
+
+`command'
+ `-c' in `su'; `-x' in GDB.
+
+`compare'
+ `-d' in `tar'.
+
+`compat'
+ Used in `gawk'.
+
+`compress'
+ `-Z' in `tar' and `shar'.
+
+`concatenate'
+ `-A' in `tar'.
+
+`confirmation'
+ `-w' in `tar'.
+
+`context'
+ Used in `diff'.
+
+`copyleft'
+ `-W copyleft' in `gawk'.
+
+`copyright'
+ `-C' in `ptx', `recode', and `wdiff'; `-W copyright' in `gawk'.
+
+`core'
+ Used in GDB.
+
+`count'
+ `-q' in `who'.
+
+`count-links'
+ `-l' in `du'.
+
+`create'
+ Used in `tar' and `cpio'.
+
+`cut-mark'
+ `-c' in `shar'.
+
+`cxref'
+ `-x' in `ctags'.
+
+`date'
+ `-d' in `touch'.
+
+`debug'
+ `-d' in `make' and `m4'; `-t' in Bison.
+
+`define'
+ `-D' in `m4'.
+
+`defines'
+ `-d' in Bison and `ctags'.
+
+`delete'
+ `-D' in `tar'.
+
+`dereference'
+ `-L' in `chgrp', `chown', `cpio', `du', `ls', and `tar'.
+
+`dereference-args'
+ `-D' in `du'.
+
+`device'
+ Specify an I/O device (special file name).
+
+`diacritics'
+ `-d' in `recode'.
+
+`dictionary-order'
+ `-d' in `look'.
+
+`diff'
+ `-d' in `tar'.
+
+`digits'
+ `-n' in `csplit'.
+
+`directory'
+ Specify the directory to use, in various programs. In `ls', it
+ means to show directories themselves rather than their contents.
+ In `rm' and `ln', it means to not treat links to directories
+ specially.
+
+`discard-all'
+ `-x' in `strip'.
+
+`discard-locals'
+ `-X' in `strip'.
+
+`dry-run'
+ `-n' in `make'.
+
+`ed'
+ `-e' in `diff'.
+
+`elide-empty-files'
+ `-z' in `csplit'.
+
+`end-delete'
+ `-x' in `wdiff'.
+
+`end-insert'
+ `-z' in `wdiff'.
+
+`entire-new-file'
+ `-N' in `diff'.
+
+`environment-overrides'
+ `-e' in `make'.
+
+`eof'
+ `-e' in `xargs'.
+
+`epoch'
+ Used in GDB.
+
+`error-limit'
+ Used in `makeinfo'.
+
+`error-output'
+ `-o' in `m4'.
+
+`escape'
+ `-b' in `ls'.
+
+`exclude-from'
+ `-X' in `tar'.
+
+`exec'
+ Used in GDB.
+
+`exit'
+ `-x' in `xargs'.
+
+`exit-0'
+ `-e' in `unshar'.
+
+`expand-tabs'
+ `-t' in `diff'.
+
+`expression'
+ `-e' in `sed'.
+
+`extern-only'
+ `-g' in `nm'.
+
+`extract'
+ `-i' in `cpio'; `-x' in `tar'.
+
+`faces'
+ `-f' in `finger'.
+
+`fast'
+ `-f' in `su'.
+
+`fatal-warnings'
+ `-E' in `m4'.
+
+`file'
+ `-f' in `gawk', `info', `make', `mt', `sed', and `tar'.
+
+`field-separator'
+ `-F' in `gawk'.
+
+`file-prefix'
+ `-b' in Bison.
+
+`file-type'
+ `-F' in `ls'.
+
+`files-from'
+ `-T' in `tar'.
+
+`fill-column'
+ Used in `makeinfo'.
+
+`flag-truncation'
+ `-F' in `ptx'.
+
+`fixed-output-files'
+ `-y' in Bison.
+
+`follow'
+ `-f' in `tail'.
+
+`footnote-style'
+ Used in `makeinfo'.
+
+`force'
+ `-f' in `cp', `ln', `mv', and `rm'.
+
+`force-prefix'
+ `-F' in `shar'.
+
+`foreground'
+ For server programs, run in the foreground; in other words, don't
+ do anything special to run the server in the background.
+
+`format'
+ Used in `ls', `time', and `ptx'.
+
+`freeze-state'
+ `-F' in `m4'.
+
+`fullname'
+ Used in GDB.
+
+`gap-size'
+ `-g' in `ptx'.
+
+`get'
+ `-x' in `tar'.
+
+`graphic'
+ `-i' in `ul'.
+
+`graphics'
+ `-g' in `recode'.
+
+`group'
+ `-g' in `install'.
+
+`gzip'
+ `-z' in `tar' and `shar'.
+
+`hashsize'
+ `-H' in `m4'.
+
+`header'
+ `-h' in `objdump' and `recode'
+
+`heading'
+ `-H' in `who'.
+
+`help'
+ Used to ask for brief usage information.
+
+`here-delimiter'
+ `-d' in `shar'.
+
+`hide-control-chars'
+ `-q' in `ls'.
+
+`html'
+ In `makeinfo', output HTML.
+
+`idle'
+ `-u' in `who'.
+
+`ifdef'
+ `-D' in `diff'.
+
+`ignore'
+ `-I' in `ls'; `-x' in `recode'.
+
+`ignore-all-space'
+ `-w' in `diff'.
+
+`ignore-backups'
+ `-B' in `ls'.
+
+`ignore-blank-lines'
+ `-B' in `diff'.
+
+`ignore-case'
+ `-f' in `look' and `ptx'; `-i' in `diff' and `wdiff'.
+
+`ignore-errors'
+ `-i' in `make'.
+
+`ignore-file'
+ `-i' in `ptx'.
+
+`ignore-indentation'
+ `-I' in `etags'.
+
+`ignore-init-file'
+ `-f' in Oleo.
+
+`ignore-interrupts'
+ `-i' in `tee'.
+
+`ignore-matching-lines'
+ `-I' in `diff'.
+
+`ignore-space-change'
+ `-b' in `diff'.
+
+`ignore-zeros'
+ `-i' in `tar'.
+
+`include'
+ `-i' in `etags'; `-I' in `m4'.
+
+`include-dir'
+ `-I' in `make'.
+
+`incremental'
+ `-G' in `tar'.
+
+`info'
+ `-i', `-l', and `-m' in Finger.
+
+`init-file'
+ In some programs, specify the name of the file to read as the
+ user's init file.
+
+`initial'
+ `-i' in `expand'.
+
+`initial-tab'
+ `-T' in `diff'.
+
+`inode'
+ `-i' in `ls'.
+
+`interactive'
+ `-i' in `cp', `ln', `mv', `rm'; `-e' in `m4'; `-p' in `xargs';
+ `-w' in `tar'.
+
+`intermix-type'
+ `-p' in `shar'.
+
+`iso-8601'
+ Used in `date'
+
+`jobs'
+ `-j' in `make'.
+
+`just-print'
+ `-n' in `make'.
+
+`keep-going'
+ `-k' in `make'.
+
+`keep-files'
+ `-k' in `csplit'.
+
+`kilobytes'
+ `-k' in `du' and `ls'.
+
+`language'
+ `-l' in `etags'.
+
+`less-mode'
+ `-l' in `wdiff'.
+
+`level-for-gzip'
+ `-g' in `shar'.
+
+`line-bytes'
+ `-C' in `split'.
+
+`lines'
+ Used in `split', `head', and `tail'.
+
+`link'
+ `-l' in `cpio'.
+
+`lint'
+`lint-old'
+ Used in `gawk'.
+
+`list'
+ `-t' in `cpio'; `-l' in `recode'.
+
+`list'
+ `-t' in `tar'.
+
+`literal'
+ `-N' in `ls'.
+
+`load-average'
+ `-l' in `make'.
+
+`login'
+ Used in `su'.
+
+`machine'
+ Used in `uname'.
+
+`macro-name'
+ `-M' in `ptx'.
+
+`mail'
+ `-m' in `hello' and `uname'.
+
+`make-directories'
+ `-d' in `cpio'.
+
+`makefile'
+ `-f' in `make'.
+
+`mapped'
+ Used in GDB.
+
+`max-args'
+ `-n' in `xargs'.
+
+`max-chars'
+ `-n' in `xargs'.
+
+`max-lines'
+ `-l' in `xargs'.
+
+`max-load'
+ `-l' in `make'.
+
+`max-procs'
+ `-P' in `xargs'.
+
+`mesg'
+ `-T' in `who'.
+
+`message'
+ `-T' in `who'.
+
+`minimal'
+ `-d' in `diff'.
+
+`mixed-uuencode'
+ `-M' in `shar'.
+
+`mode'
+ `-m' in `install', `mkdir', and `mkfifo'.
+
+`modification-time'
+ `-m' in `tar'.
+
+`multi-volume'
+ `-M' in `tar'.
+
+`name-prefix'
+ `-a' in Bison.
+
+`nesting-limit'
+ `-L' in `m4'.
+
+`net-headers'
+ `-a' in `shar'.
+
+`new-file'
+ `-W' in `make'.
+
+`no-builtin-rules'
+ `-r' in `make'.
+
+`no-character-count'
+ `-w' in `shar'.
+
+`no-check-existing'
+ `-x' in `shar'.
+
+`no-common'
+ `-3' in `wdiff'.
+
+`no-create'
+ `-c' in `touch'.
+
+`no-defines'
+ `-D' in `etags'.
+
+`no-deleted'
+ `-1' in `wdiff'.
+
+`no-dereference'
+ `-d' in `cp'.
+
+`no-inserted'
+ `-2' in `wdiff'.
+
+`no-keep-going'
+ `-S' in `make'.
+
+`no-lines'
+ `-l' in Bison.
+
+`no-piping'
+ `-P' in `shar'.
+
+`no-prof'
+ `-e' in `gprof'.
+
+`no-regex'
+ `-R' in `etags'.
+
+`no-sort'
+ `-p' in `nm'.
+
+`no-splash'
+ Don't print a startup splash screen.
+
+`no-split'
+ Used in `makeinfo'.
+
+`no-static'
+ `-a' in `gprof'.
+
+`no-time'
+ `-E' in `gprof'.
+
+`no-timestamp'
+ `-m' in `shar'.
+
+`no-validate'
+ Used in `makeinfo'.
+
+`no-wait'
+ Used in `emacsclient'.
+
+`no-warn'
+ Used in various programs to inhibit warnings.
+
+`node'
+ `-n' in `info'.
+
+`nodename'
+ `-n' in `uname'.
+
+`nonmatching'
+ `-f' in `cpio'.
+
+`nstuff'
+ `-n' in `objdump'.
+
+`null'
+ `-0' in `xargs'.
+
+`number'
+ `-n' in `cat'.
+
+`number-nonblank'
+ `-b' in `cat'.
+
+`numeric-sort'
+ `-n' in `nm'.
+
+`numeric-uid-gid'
+ `-n' in `cpio' and `ls'.
+
+`nx'
+ Used in GDB.
+
+`old-archive'
+ `-o' in `tar'.
+
+`old-file'
+ `-o' in `make'.
+
+`one-file-system'
+ `-l' in `tar', `cp', and `du'.
+
+`only-file'
+ `-o' in `ptx'.
+
+`only-prof'
+ `-f' in `gprof'.
+
+`only-time'
+ `-F' in `gprof'.
+
+`options'
+ `-o' in `getopt', `fdlist', `fdmount', `fdmountd', and `fdumount'.
+
+`output'
+ In various programs, specify the output file name.
+
+`output-prefix'
+ `-o' in `shar'.
+
+`override'
+ `-o' in `rm'.
+
+`overwrite'
+ `-c' in `unshar'.
+
+`owner'
+ `-o' in `install'.
+
+`paginate'
+ `-l' in `diff'.
+
+`paragraph-indent'
+ Used in `makeinfo'.
+
+`parents'
+ `-p' in `mkdir' and `rmdir'.
+
+`pass-all'
+ `-p' in `ul'.
+
+`pass-through'
+ `-p' in `cpio'.
+
+`port'
+ `-P' in `finger'.
+
+`portability'
+ `-c' in `cpio' and `tar'.
+
+`posix'
+ Used in `gawk'.
+
+`prefix-builtins'
+ `-P' in `m4'.
+
+`prefix'
+ `-f' in `csplit'.
+
+`preserve'
+ Used in `tar' and `cp'.
+
+`preserve-environment'
+ `-p' in `su'.
+
+`preserve-modification-time'
+ `-m' in `cpio'.
+
+`preserve-order'
+ `-s' in `tar'.
+
+`preserve-permissions'
+ `-p' in `tar'.
+
+`print'
+ `-l' in `diff'.
+
+`print-chars'
+ `-L' in `cmp'.
+
+`print-data-base'
+ `-p' in `make'.
+
+`print-directory'
+ `-w' in `make'.
+
+`print-file-name'
+ `-o' in `nm'.
+
+`print-symdefs'
+ `-s' in `nm'.
+
+`printer'
+ `-p' in `wdiff'.
+
+`prompt'
+ `-p' in `ed'.
+
+`proxy'
+ Specify an HTTP proxy.
+
+`query-user'
+ `-X' in `shar'.
+
+`question'
+ `-q' in `make'.
+
+`quiet'
+ Used in many programs to inhibit the usual output. Every program
+ accepting `--quiet' should accept `--silent' as a synonym.
+
+`quiet-unshar'
+ `-Q' in `shar'
+
+`quote-name'
+ `-Q' in `ls'.
+
+`rcs'
+ `-n' in `diff'.
+
+`re-interval'
+ Used in `gawk'.
+
+`read-full-blocks'
+ `-B' in `tar'.
+
+`readnow'
+ Used in GDB.
+
+`recon'
+ `-n' in `make'.
+
+`record-number'
+ `-R' in `tar'.
+
+`recursive'
+ Used in `chgrp', `chown', `cp', `ls', `diff', and `rm'.
+
+`reference'
+ `-r' in `touch'.
+
+`references'
+ `-r' in `ptx'.
+
+`regex'
+ `-r' in `tac' and `etags'.
+
+`release'
+ `-r' in `uname'.
+
+`reload-state'
+ `-R' in `m4'.
+
+`relocation'
+ `-r' in `objdump'.
+
+`rename'
+ `-r' in `cpio'.
+
+`replace'
+ `-i' in `xargs'.
+
+`report-identical-files'
+ `-s' in `diff'.
+
+`reset-access-time'
+ `-a' in `cpio'.
+
+`reverse'
+ `-r' in `ls' and `nm'.
+
+`reversed-ed'
+ `-f' in `diff'.
+
+`right-side-defs'
+ `-R' in `ptx'.
+
+`same-order'
+ `-s' in `tar'.
+
+`same-permissions'
+ `-p' in `tar'.
+
+`save'
+ `-g' in `stty'.
+
+`se'
+ Used in GDB.
+
+`sentence-regexp'
+ `-S' in `ptx'.
+
+`separate-dirs'
+ `-S' in `du'.
+
+`separator'
+ `-s' in `tac'.
+
+`sequence'
+ Used by `recode' to chose files or pipes for sequencing passes.
+
+`shell'
+ `-s' in `su'.
+
+`show-all'
+ `-A' in `cat'.
+
+`show-c-function'
+ `-p' in `diff'.
+
+`show-ends'
+ `-E' in `cat'.
+
+`show-function-line'
+ `-F' in `diff'.
+
+`show-tabs'
+ `-T' in `cat'.
+
+`silent'
+ Used in many programs to inhibit the usual output. Every program
+ accepting `--silent' should accept `--quiet' as a synonym.
+
+`size'
+ `-s' in `ls'.
+
+`socket'
+ Specify a file descriptor for a network server to use for its
+ socket, instead of opening and binding a new socket. This
+ provides a way to run, in a non-privileged process, a server that
+ normally needs a reserved port number.
+
+`sort'
+ Used in `ls'.
+
+`source'
+ `-W source' in `gawk'.
+
+`sparse'
+ `-S' in `tar'.
+
+`speed-large-files'
+ `-H' in `diff'.
+
+`split-at'
+ `-E' in `unshar'.
+
+`split-size-limit'
+ `-L' in `shar'.
+
+`squeeze-blank'
+ `-s' in `cat'.
+
+`start-delete'
+ `-w' in `wdiff'.
+
+`start-insert'
+ `-y' in `wdiff'.
+
+`starting-file'
+ Used in `tar' and `diff' to specify which file within a directory
+ to start processing with.
+
+`statistics'
+ `-s' in `wdiff'.
+
+`stdin-file-list'
+ `-S' in `shar'.
+
+`stop'
+ `-S' in `make'.
+
+`strict'
+ `-s' in `recode'.
+
+`strip'
+ `-s' in `install'.
+
+`strip-all'
+ `-s' in `strip'.
+
+`strip-debug'
+ `-S' in `strip'.
+
+`submitter'
+ `-s' in `shar'.
+
+`suffix'
+ `-S' in `cp', `ln', `mv'.
+
+`suffix-format'
+ `-b' in `csplit'.
+
+`sum'
+ `-s' in `gprof'.
+
+`summarize'
+ `-s' in `du'.
+
+`symbolic'
+ `-s' in `ln'.
+
+`symbols'
+ Used in GDB and `objdump'.
+
+`synclines'
+ `-s' in `m4'.
+
+`sysname'
+ `-s' in `uname'.
+
+`tabs'
+ `-t' in `expand' and `unexpand'.
+
+`tabsize'
+ `-T' in `ls'.
+
+`terminal'
+ `-T' in `tput' and `ul'. `-t' in `wdiff'.
+
+`text'
+ `-a' in `diff'.
+
+`text-files'
+ `-T' in `shar'.
+
+`time'
+ Used in `ls' and `touch'.
+
+`timeout'
+ Specify how long to wait before giving up on some operation.
+
+`to-stdout'
+ `-O' in `tar'.
+
+`total'
+ `-c' in `du'.
+
+`touch'
+ `-t' in `make', `ranlib', and `recode'.
+
+`trace'
+ `-t' in `m4'.
+
+`traditional'
+ `-t' in `hello'; `-W traditional' in `gawk'; `-G' in `ed', `m4',
+ and `ptx'.
+
+`tty'
+ Used in GDB.
+
+`typedefs'
+ `-t' in `ctags'.
+
+`typedefs-and-c++'
+ `-T' in `ctags'.
+
+`typeset-mode'
+ `-t' in `ptx'.
+
+`uncompress'
+ `-z' in `tar'.
+
+`unconditional'
+ `-u' in `cpio'.
+
+`undefine'
+ `-U' in `m4'.
+
+`undefined-only'
+ `-u' in `nm'.
+
+`update'
+ `-u' in `cp', `ctags', `mv', `tar'.
+
+`usage'
+ Used in `gawk'; same as `--help'.
+
+`uuencode'
+ `-B' in `shar'.
+
+`vanilla-operation'
+ `-V' in `shar'.
+
+`verbose'
+ Print more information about progress. Many programs support this.
+
+`verify'
+ `-W' in `tar'.
+
+`version'
+ Print the version number.
+
+`version-control'
+ `-V' in `cp', `ln', `mv'.
+
+`vgrind'
+ `-v' in `ctags'.
+
+`volume'
+ `-V' in `tar'.
+
+`what-if'
+ `-W' in `make'.
+
+`whole-size-limit'
+ `-l' in `shar'.
+
+`width'
+ `-w' in `ls' and `ptx'.
+
+`word-regexp'
+ `-W' in `ptx'.
+
+`writable'
+ `-T' in `who'.
+
+`zeros'
+ `-z' in `gprof'.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: OID Allocations, Next: Memory Usage, Prev: Option Table, Up: Program Behavior
+
+4.9 OID Allocations
+===================
+
+The OID (object identifier) 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591 has been assigned to the
+GNU Project (thanks to Werner Koch). These are used for SNMP, LDAP,
+X.509 certificates, and so on. The web site
+`http://www.alvestrand.no/objectid' has a (voluntary) listing of many
+OID assignments.
+
+ If you need a new slot for your GNU package, write
+<maintainers@gnu.org>. Here is a list of arcs currently assigned:
+
+
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591 GNU
+
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.1 GNU Radius
+
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.2 GnuPG
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.2.1 notation
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.2.1.1 pkaAddress
+
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.3 GNU Radar
+
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.4 GNU GSS
+
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.5 GNU Mailutils
+
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.6 GNU Shishi
+
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.7 GNU Radio
+
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.12 digestAlgorithm
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.12.2 TIGER/192
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.13 encryptionAlgorithm
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.13.2 Serpent
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.13.2.1 Serpent-128-ECB
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.13.2.2 Serpent-128-CBC
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.13.2.3 Serpent-128-OFB
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.13.2.4 Serpent-128-CFB
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.13.2.21 Serpent-192-ECB
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.13.2.22 Serpent-192-CBC
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.13.2.23 Serpent-192-OFB
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.13.2.24 Serpent-192-CFB
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.13.2.41 Serpent-256-ECB
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.13.2.42 Serpent-256-CBC
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.13.2.43 Serpent-256-OFB
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.13.2.44 Serpent-256-CFB
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.14 CRC algorithms
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.11591.14.1 CRC 32
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Memory Usage, Next: File Usage, Prev: OID Allocations, Up: Program Behavior
+
+4.10 Memory Usage
+=================
+
+If a program typically uses just a few meg of memory, don't bother
+making any effort to reduce memory usage. For example, if it is
+impractical for other reasons to operate on files more than a few meg
+long, it is reasonable to read entire input files into memory to
+operate on them.
+
+ However, for programs such as `cat' or `tail', that can usefully
+operate on very large files, it is important to avoid using a technique
+that would artificially limit the size of files it can handle. If a
+program works by lines and could be applied to arbitrary user-supplied
+input files, it should keep only a line in memory, because this is not
+very hard and users will want to be able to operate on input files that
+are bigger than will fit in memory all at once.
+
+ If your program creates complicated data structures, just make them
+in memory and give a fatal error if `malloc' returns zero.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: File Usage, Prev: Memory Usage, Up: Program Behavior
+
+4.11 File Usage
+===============
+
+Programs should be prepared to operate when `/usr' and `/etc' are
+read-only file systems. Thus, if the program manages log files, lock
+files, backup files, score files, or any other files which are modified
+for internal purposes, these files should not be stored in `/usr' or
+`/etc'.
+
+ There are two exceptions. `/etc' is used to store system
+configuration information; it is reasonable for a program to modify
+files in `/etc' when its job is to update the system configuration.
+Also, if the user explicitly asks to modify one file in a directory, it
+is reasonable for the program to store other files in the same
+directory.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Writing C, Next: Documentation, Prev: Program Behavior, Up: Top
+
+5 Making The Best Use of C
+**************************
+
+This chapter provides advice on how best to use the C language when
+writing GNU software.
+
+* Menu:
+
+* Formatting:: Formatting your source code.
+* Comments:: Commenting your work.
+* Syntactic Conventions:: Clean use of C constructs.
+* Names:: Naming variables, functions, and files.
+* System Portability:: Portability among different operating systems.
+* CPU Portability:: Supporting the range of CPU types.
+* System Functions:: Portability and ``standard'' library functions.
+* Internationalization:: Techniques for internationalization.
+* Character Set:: Use ASCII by default.
+* Quote Characters:: Use `...' in the C locale.
+* Mmap:: How you can safely use `mmap'.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Formatting, Next: Comments, Up: Writing C
+
+5.1 Formatting Your Source Code
+===============================
+
+It is important to put the open-brace that starts the body of a C
+function in column one, so that they will start a defun. Several tools
+look for open-braces in column one to find the beginnings of C
+functions. These tools will not work on code not formatted that way.
+
+ Avoid putting open-brace, open-parenthesis or open-bracket in column
+one when they are inside a function, so that they won't start a defun.
+The open-brace that starts a `struct' body can go in column one if you
+find it useful to treat that definition as a defun.
+
+ It is also important for function definitions to start the name of
+the function in column one. This helps people to search for function
+definitions, and may also help certain tools recognize them. Thus,
+using Standard C syntax, the format is this:
+
+ static char *
+ concat (char *s1, char *s2)
+ {
+ ...
+ }
+
+or, if you want to use traditional C syntax, format the definition like
+this:
+
+ static char *
+ concat (s1, s2) /* Name starts in column one here */
+ char *s1, *s2;
+ { /* Open brace in column one here */
+ ...
+ }
+
+ In Standard C, if the arguments don't fit nicely on one line, split
+it like this:
+
+ int
+ lots_of_args (int an_integer, long a_long, short a_short,
+ double a_double, float a_float)
+ ...
+
+ The rest of this section gives our recommendations for other aspects
+of C formatting style, which is also the default style of the `indent'
+program in version 1.2 and newer. It corresponds to the options
+
+ -nbad -bap -nbc -bbo -bl -bli2 -bls -ncdb -nce -cp1 -cs -di2
+ -ndj -nfc1 -nfca -hnl -i2 -ip5 -lp -pcs -psl -nsc -nsob
+
+ We don't think of these recommendations as requirements, because it
+causes no problems for users if two different programs have different
+formatting styles.
+
+ But whatever style you use, please use it consistently, since a
+mixture of styles within one program tends to look ugly. If you are
+contributing changes to an existing program, please follow the style of
+that program.
+
+ For the body of the function, our recommended style looks like this:
+
+ if (x < foo (y, z))
+ haha = bar[4] + 5;
+ else
+ {
+ while (z)
+ {
+ haha += foo (z, z);
+ z--;
+ }
+ return ++x + bar ();
+ }
+
+ We find it easier to read a program when it has spaces before the
+open-parentheses and after the commas. Especially after the commas.
+
+ When you split an expression into multiple lines, split it before an
+operator, not after one. Here is the right way:
+
+ if (foo_this_is_long && bar > win (x, y, z)
+ && remaining_condition)
+
+ Try to avoid having two operators of different precedence at the same
+level of indentation. For example, don't write this:
+
+ mode = (inmode[j] == VOIDmode
+ || GET_MODE_SIZE (outmode[j]) > GET_MODE_SIZE (inmode[j])
+ ? outmode[j] : inmode[j]);
+
+ Instead, use extra parentheses so that the indentation shows the
+nesting:
+
+ mode = ((inmode[j] == VOIDmode
+ || (GET_MODE_SIZE (outmode[j]) > GET_MODE_SIZE (inmode[j])))
+ ? outmode[j] : inmode[j]);
+
+ Insert extra parentheses so that Emacs will indent the code properly.
+For example, the following indentation looks nice if you do it by hand,
+
+ v = rup->ru_utime.tv_sec*1000 + rup->ru_utime.tv_usec/1000
+ + rup->ru_stime.tv_sec*1000 + rup->ru_stime.tv_usec/1000;
+
+but Emacs would alter it. Adding a set of parentheses produces
+something that looks equally nice, and which Emacs will preserve:
+
+ v = (rup->ru_utime.tv_sec*1000 + rup->ru_utime.tv_usec/1000
+ + rup->ru_stime.tv_sec*1000 + rup->ru_stime.tv_usec/1000);
+
+ Format do-while statements like this:
+
+ do
+ {
+ a = foo (a);
+ }
+ while (a > 0);
+
+ Please use formfeed characters (control-L) to divide the program into
+pages at logical places (but not within a function). It does not matter
+just how long the pages are, since they do not have to fit on a printed
+page. The formfeeds should appear alone on lines by themselves.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Comments, Next: Syntactic Conventions, Prev: Formatting, Up: Writing C
+
+5.2 Commenting Your Work
+========================
+
+Every program should start with a comment saying briefly what it is for.
+Example: `fmt - filter for simple filling of text'. This comment
+should be at the top of the source file containing the `main' function
+of the program.
+
+ Also, please write a brief comment at the start of each source file,
+with the file name and a line or two about the overall purpose of the
+file.
+
+ Please write the comments in a GNU program in English, because
+English is the one language that nearly all programmers in all
+countries can read. If you do not write English well, please write
+comments in English as well as you can, then ask other people to help
+rewrite them. If you can't write comments in English, please find
+someone to work with you and translate your comments into English.
+
+ Please put a comment on each function saying what the function does,
+what sorts of arguments it gets, and what the possible values of
+arguments mean and are used for. It is not necessary to duplicate in
+words the meaning of the C argument declarations, if a C type is being
+used in its customary fashion. If there is anything nonstandard about
+its use (such as an argument of type `char *' which is really the
+address of the second character of a string, not the first), or any
+possible values that would not work the way one would expect (such as,
+that strings containing newlines are not guaranteed to work), be sure
+to say so.
+
+ Also explain the significance of the return value, if there is one.
+
+ Please put two spaces after the end of a sentence in your comments,
+so that the Emacs sentence commands will work. Also, please write
+complete sentences and capitalize the first word. If a lower-case
+identifier comes at the beginning of a sentence, don't capitalize it!
+Changing the spelling makes it a different identifier. If you don't
+like starting a sentence with a lower case letter, write the sentence
+differently (e.g., "The identifier lower-case is ...").
+
+ The comment on a function is much clearer if you use the argument
+names to speak about the argument values. The variable name itself
+should be lower case, but write it in upper case when you are speaking
+about the value rather than the variable itself. Thus, "the inode
+number NODE_NUM" rather than "an inode".
+
+ There is usually no purpose in restating the name of the function in
+the comment before it, because the reader can see that for himself.
+There might be an exception when the comment is so long that the
+function itself would be off the bottom of the screen.
+
+ There should be a comment on each static variable as well, like this:
+
+ /* Nonzero means truncate lines in the display;
+ zero means continue them. */
+ int truncate_lines;
+
+ Every `#endif' should have a comment, except in the case of short
+conditionals (just a few lines) that are not nested. The comment should
+state the condition of the conditional that is ending, _including its
+sense_. `#else' should have a comment describing the condition _and
+sense_ of the code that follows. For example:
+
+ #ifdef foo
+ ...
+ #else /* not foo */
+ ...
+ #endif /* not foo */
+ #ifdef foo
+ ...
+ #endif /* foo */
+
+but, by contrast, write the comments this way for a `#ifndef':
+
+ #ifndef foo
+ ...
+ #else /* foo */
+ ...
+ #endif /* foo */
+ #ifndef foo
+ ...
+ #endif /* not foo */
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Syntactic Conventions, Next: Names, Prev: Comments, Up: Writing C
+
+5.3 Clean Use of C Constructs
+=============================
+
+Please explicitly declare the types of all objects. For example, you
+should explicitly declare all arguments to functions, and you should
+declare functions to return `int' rather than omitting the `int'.
+
+ Some programmers like to use the GCC `-Wall' option, and change the
+code whenever it issues a warning. If you want to do this, then do.
+Other programmers prefer not to use `-Wall', because it gives warnings
+for valid and legitimate code which they do not want to change. If you
+want to do this, then do. The compiler should be your servant, not
+your master.
+
+ Declarations of external functions and functions to appear later in
+the source file should all go in one place near the beginning of the
+file (somewhere before the first function definition in the file), or
+else should go in a header file. Don't put `extern' declarations inside
+functions.
+
+ It used to be common practice to use the same local variables (with
+names like `tem') over and over for different values within one
+function. Instead of doing this, it is better to declare a separate
+local variable for each distinct purpose, and give it a name which is
+meaningful. This not only makes programs easier to understand, it also
+facilitates optimization by good compilers. You can also move the
+declaration of each local variable into the smallest scope that includes
+all its uses. This makes the program even cleaner.
+
+ Don't use local variables or parameters that shadow global
+identifiers.
+
+ Don't declare multiple variables in one declaration that spans lines.
+Start a new declaration on each line, instead. For example, instead of
+this:
+
+ int foo,
+ bar;
+
+write either this:
+
+ int foo, bar;
+
+or this:
+
+ int foo;
+ int bar;
+
+(If they are global variables, each should have a comment preceding it
+anyway.)
+
+ When you have an `if'-`else' statement nested in another `if'
+statement, always put braces around the `if'-`else'. Thus, never write
+like this:
+
+ if (foo)
+ if (bar)
+ win ();
+ else
+ lose ();
+
+always like this:
+
+ if (foo)
+ {
+ if (bar)
+ win ();
+ else
+ lose ();
+ }
+
+ If you have an `if' statement nested inside of an `else' statement,
+either write `else if' on one line, like this,
+
+ if (foo)
+ ...
+ else if (bar)
+ ...
+
+with its `then'-part indented like the preceding `then'-part, or write
+the nested `if' within braces like this:
+
+ if (foo)
+ ...
+ else
+ {
+ if (bar)
+ ...
+ }
+
+ Don't declare both a structure tag and variables or typedefs in the
+same declaration. Instead, declare the structure tag separately and
+then use it to declare the variables or typedefs.
+
+ Try to avoid assignments inside `if'-conditions (assignments inside
+`while'-conditions are ok). For example, don't write this:
+
+ if ((foo = (char *) malloc (sizeof *foo)) == 0)
+ fatal ("virtual memory exhausted");
+
+instead, write this:
+
+ foo = (char *) malloc (sizeof *foo);
+ if (foo == 0)
+ fatal ("virtual memory exhausted");
+
+ Don't make the program ugly to placate `lint'. Please don't insert
+any casts to `void'. Zero without a cast is perfectly fine as a null
+pointer constant, except when calling a varargs function.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Names, Next: System Portability, Prev: Syntactic Conventions, Up: Writing C
+
+5.4 Naming Variables, Functions, and Files
+==========================================
+
+The names of global variables and functions in a program serve as
+comments of a sort. So don't choose terse names--instead, look for
+names that give useful information about the meaning of the variable or
+function. In a GNU program, names should be English, like other
+comments.
+
+ Local variable names can be shorter, because they are used only
+within one context, where (presumably) comments explain their purpose.
+
+ Try to limit your use of abbreviations in symbol names. It is ok to
+make a few abbreviations, explain what they mean, and then use them
+frequently, but don't use lots of obscure abbreviations.
+
+ Please use underscores to separate words in a name, so that the Emacs
+word commands can be useful within them. Stick to lower case; reserve
+upper case for macros and `enum' constants, and for name-prefixes that
+follow a uniform convention.
+
+ For example, you should use names like `ignore_space_change_flag';
+don't use names like `iCantReadThis'.
+
+ Variables that indicate whether command-line options have been
+specified should be named after the meaning of the option, not after
+the option-letter. A comment should state both the exact meaning of
+the option and its letter. For example,
+
+ /* Ignore changes in horizontal whitespace (-b). */
+ int ignore_space_change_flag;
+
+ When you want to define names with constant integer values, use
+`enum' rather than `#define'. GDB knows about enumeration constants.
+
+ You might want to make sure that none of the file names would
+conflict if the files were loaded onto an MS-DOS file system which
+shortens the names. You can use the program `doschk' to test for this.
+
+ Some GNU programs were designed to limit themselves to file names of
+14 characters or less, to avoid file name conflicts if they are read
+into older System V systems. Please preserve this feature in the
+existing GNU programs that have it, but there is no need to do this in
+new GNU programs. `doschk' also reports file names longer than 14
+characters.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: System Portability, Next: CPU Portability, Prev: Names, Up: Writing C
+
+5.5 Portability between System Types
+====================================
+
+In the Unix world, "portability" refers to porting to different Unix
+versions. For a GNU program, this kind of portability is desirable, but
+not paramount.
+
+ The primary purpose of GNU software is to run on top of the GNU
+kernel, compiled with the GNU C compiler, on various types of CPU. So
+the kinds of portability that are absolutely necessary are quite
+limited. But it is important to support Linux-based GNU systems, since
+they are the form of GNU that is popular.
+
+ Beyond that, it is good to support the other free operating systems
+(*BSD), and it is nice to support other Unix-like systems if you want
+to. Supporting a variety of Unix-like systems is desirable, although
+not paramount. It is usually not too hard, so you may as well do it.
+But you don't have to consider it an obligation, if it does turn out to
+be hard.
+
+ The easiest way to achieve portability to most Unix-like systems is
+to use Autoconf. It's unlikely that your program needs to know more
+information about the host platform than Autoconf can provide, simply
+because most of the programs that need such knowledge have already been
+written.
+
+ Avoid using the format of semi-internal data bases (e.g.,
+directories) when there is a higher-level alternative (`readdir').
+
+ As for systems that are not like Unix, such as MSDOS, Windows, VMS,
+MVS, and older Macintosh systems, supporting them is often a lot of
+work. When that is the case, it is better to spend your time adding
+features that will be useful on GNU and GNU/Linux, rather than on
+supporting other incompatible systems.
+
+ If you do support Windows, please do not abbreviate it as "win". In
+hacker terminology, calling something a "win" is a form of praise.
+You're free to praise Microsoft Windows on your own if you want, but
+please don't do this in GNU packages. Instead of abbreviating
+"Windows" to "win", you can write it in full or abbreviate it to "woe"
+or "w". In GNU Emacs, for instance, we use `w32' in file names of
+Windows-specific files, but the macro for Windows conditionals is
+called `WINDOWSNT'.
+
+ It is a good idea to define the "feature test macro" `_GNU_SOURCE'
+when compiling your C files. When you compile on GNU or GNU/Linux,
+this will enable the declarations of GNU library extension functions,
+and that will usually give you a compiler error message if you define
+the same function names in some other way in your program. (You don't
+have to actually _use_ these functions, if you prefer to make the
+program more portable to other systems.)
+
+ But whether or not you use these GNU extensions, you should avoid
+using their names for any other meanings. Doing so would make it hard
+to move your code into other GNU programs.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: CPU Portability, Next: System Functions, Prev: System Portability, Up: Writing C
+
+5.6 Portability between CPUs
+============================
+
+Even GNU systems will differ because of differences among CPU
+types--for example, difference in byte ordering and alignment
+requirements. It is absolutely essential to handle these differences.
+However, don't make any effort to cater to the possibility that an
+`int' will be less than 32 bits. We don't support 16-bit machines in
+GNU.
+
+ Similarly, don't make any effort to cater to the possibility that
+`long' will be smaller than predefined types like `size_t'. For
+example, the following code is ok:
+
+ printf ("size = %lu\n", (unsigned long) sizeof array);
+ printf ("diff = %ld\n", (long) (pointer2 - pointer1));
+
+ 1989 Standard C requires this to work, and we know of only one
+counterexample: 64-bit programs on Microsoft Windows. We will leave it
+to those who want to port GNU programs to that environment to figure
+out how to do it.
+
+ Predefined file-size types like `off_t' are an exception: they are
+longer than `long' on many platforms, so code like the above won't work
+with them. One way to print an `off_t' value portably is to print its
+digits yourself, one by one.
+
+ Don't assume that the address of an `int' object is also the address
+of its least-significant byte. This is false on big-endian machines.
+Thus, don't make the following mistake:
+
+ int c;
+ ...
+ while ((c = getchar ()) != EOF)
+ write (file_descriptor, &c, 1);
+
+Instead, use `unsigned char' as follows. (The `unsigned' is for
+portability to unusual systems where `char' is signed and where there
+is integer overflow checking.)
+
+ int c;
+ while ((c = getchar ()) != EOF)
+ {
+ unsigned char u = c;
+ write (file_descriptor, &u, 1);
+ }
+
+ It used to be ok to not worry about the difference between pointers
+and integers when passing arguments to functions. However, on most
+modern 64-bit machines pointers are wider than `int'. Conversely,
+integer types like `long long int' and `off_t' are wider than pointers
+on most modern 32-bit machines. Hence it's often better nowadays to
+use prototypes to define functions whose argument types are not trivial.
+
+ In particular, if functions accept varying argument counts or types
+they should be declared using prototypes containing `...' and defined
+using `stdarg.h'. For an example of this, please see the Gnulib
+(http://www.gnu.org/software/gnulib/) error module, which declares and
+defines the following function:
+
+ /* Print a message with `fprintf (stderr, FORMAT, ...)';
+ if ERRNUM is nonzero, follow it with ": " and strerror (ERRNUM).
+ If STATUS is nonzero, terminate the program with `exit (STATUS)'. */
+
+ void error (int status, int errnum, const char *format, ...);
+
+ A simple way to use the Gnulib error module is to obtain the two
+source files `error.c' and `error.h' from the Gnulib library source
+code repository at `http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=gnulib.git'.
+Here's a sample use:
+
+ #include "error.h"
+ #include <errno.h>
+ #include <stdio.h>
+
+ char *program_name = "myprogram";
+
+ FILE *
+ xfopen (char const *name)
+ {
+ FILE *fp = fopen (name, "r");
+ if (! fp)
+ error (1, errno, "cannot read %s", name);
+ return fp;
+ }
+
+ Avoid casting pointers to integers if you can. Such casts greatly
+reduce portability, and in most programs they are easy to avoid. In the
+cases where casting pointers to integers is essential--such as, a Lisp
+interpreter which stores type information as well as an address in one
+word--you'll have to make explicit provisions to handle different word
+sizes. You will also need to make provision for systems in which the
+normal range of addresses you can get from `malloc' starts far away
+from zero.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: System Functions, Next: Internationalization, Prev: CPU Portability, Up: Writing C
+
+5.7 Calling System Functions
+============================
+
+C implementations differ substantially. Standard C reduces but does
+not eliminate the incompatibilities; meanwhile, many GNU packages still
+support pre-standard compilers because this is not hard to do. This
+chapter gives recommendations for how to use the more-or-less standard C
+library functions to avoid unnecessary loss of portability.
+
+ * Don't use the return value of `sprintf'. It returns the number of
+ characters written on some systems, but not on all systems.
+
+ * Be aware that `vfprintf' is not always available.
+
+ * `main' should be declared to return type `int'. It should
+ terminate either by calling `exit' or by returning the integer
+ status code; make sure it cannot ever return an undefined value.
+
+ * Don't declare system functions explicitly.
+
+ Almost any declaration for a system function is wrong on some
+ system. To minimize conflicts, leave it to the system header
+ files to declare system functions. If the headers don't declare a
+ function, let it remain undeclared.
+
+ While it may seem unclean to use a function without declaring it,
+ in practice this works fine for most system library functions on
+ the systems where this really happens; thus, the disadvantage is
+ only theoretical. By contrast, actual declarations have
+ frequently caused actual conflicts.
+
+ * If you must declare a system function, don't specify the argument
+ types. Use an old-style declaration, not a Standard C prototype.
+ The more you specify about the function, the more likely a
+ conflict.
+
+ * In particular, don't unconditionally declare `malloc' or `realloc'.
+
+ Most GNU programs use those functions just once, in functions
+ conventionally named `xmalloc' and `xrealloc'. These functions
+ call `malloc' and `realloc', respectively, and check the results.
+
+ Because `xmalloc' and `xrealloc' are defined in your program, you
+ can declare them in other files without any risk of type conflict.
+
+ On most systems, `int' is the same length as a pointer; thus, the
+ calls to `malloc' and `realloc' work fine. For the few
+ exceptional systems (mostly 64-bit machines), you can use
+ *conditionalized* declarations of `malloc' and `realloc'--or put
+ these declarations in configuration files specific to those
+ systems.
+
+ * The string functions require special treatment. Some Unix systems
+ have a header file `string.h'; others have `strings.h'. Neither
+ file name is portable. There are two things you can do: use
+ Autoconf to figure out which file to include, or don't include
+ either file.
+
+ * If you don't include either strings file, you can't get
+ declarations for the string functions from the header file in the
+ usual way.
+
+ That causes less of a problem than you might think. The newer
+ standard string functions should be avoided anyway because many
+ systems still don't support them. The string functions you can
+ use are these:
+
+ strcpy strncpy strcat strncat
+ strlen strcmp strncmp
+ strchr strrchr
+
+ The copy and concatenate functions work fine without a declaration
+ as long as you don't use their values. Using their values without
+ a declaration fails on systems where the width of a pointer
+ differs from the width of `int', and perhaps in other cases. It
+ is trivial to avoid using their values, so do that.
+
+ The compare functions and `strlen' work fine without a declaration
+ on most systems, possibly all the ones that GNU software runs on.
+ You may find it necessary to declare them *conditionally* on a few
+ systems.
+
+ The search functions must be declared to return `char *'. Luckily,
+ there is no variation in the data type they return. But there is
+ variation in their names. Some systems give these functions the
+ names `index' and `rindex'; other systems use the names `strchr'
+ and `strrchr'. Some systems support both pairs of names, but
+ neither pair works on all systems.
+
+ You should pick a single pair of names and use it throughout your
+ program. (Nowadays, it is better to choose `strchr' and `strrchr'
+ for new programs, since those are the standard names.) Declare
+ both of those names as functions returning `char *'. On systems
+ which don't support those names, define them as macros in terms of
+ the other pair. For example, here is what to put at the beginning
+ of your file (or in a header) if you want to use the names
+ `strchr' and `strrchr' throughout:
+
+ #ifndef HAVE_STRCHR
+ #define strchr index
+ #endif
+ #ifndef HAVE_STRRCHR
+ #define strrchr rindex
+ #endif
+
+ char *strchr ();
+ char *strrchr ();
+
+ Here we assume that `HAVE_STRCHR' and `HAVE_STRRCHR' are macros
+defined in systems where the corresponding functions exist. One way to
+get them properly defined is to use Autoconf.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Internationalization, Next: Character Set, Prev: System Functions, Up: Writing C
+
+5.8 Internationalization
+========================
+
+GNU has a library called GNU gettext that makes it easy to translate the
+messages in a program into various languages. You should use this
+library in every program. Use English for the messages as they appear
+in the program, and let gettext provide the way to translate them into
+other languages.
+
+ Using GNU gettext involves putting a call to the `gettext' macro
+around each string that might need translation--like this:
+
+ printf (gettext ("Processing file `%s'..."));
+
+This permits GNU gettext to replace the string `"Processing file
+`%s'..."' with a translated version.
+
+ Once a program uses gettext, please make a point of writing calls to
+`gettext' when you add new strings that call for translation.
+
+ Using GNU gettext in a package involves specifying a "text domain
+name" for the package. The text domain name is used to separate the
+translations for this package from the translations for other packages.
+Normally, the text domain name should be the same as the name of the
+package--for example, `coreutils' for the GNU core utilities.
+
+ To enable gettext to work well, avoid writing code that makes
+assumptions about the structure of words or sentences. When you want
+the precise text of a sentence to vary depending on the data, use two or
+more alternative string constants each containing a complete sentences,
+rather than inserting conditionalized words or phrases into a single
+sentence framework.
+
+ Here is an example of what not to do:
+
+ printf ("%s is full", capacity > 5000000 ? "disk" : "floppy disk");
+
+ If you apply gettext to all strings, like this,
+
+ printf (gettext ("%s is full"),
+ capacity > 5000000 ? gettext ("disk") : gettext ("floppy disk"));
+
+the translator will hardly know that "disk" and "floppy disk" are meant
+to be substituted in the other string. Worse, in some languages (like
+French) the construction will not work: the translation of the word
+"full" depends on the gender of the first part of the sentence; it
+happens to be not the same for "disk" as for "floppy disk".
+
+ Complete sentences can be translated without problems:
+
+ printf (capacity > 5000000 ? gettext ("disk is full")
+ : gettext ("floppy disk is full"));
+
+ A similar problem appears at the level of sentence structure with
+this code:
+
+ printf ("# Implicit rule search has%s been done.\n",
+ f->tried_implicit ? "" : " not");
+
+Adding `gettext' calls to this code cannot give correct results for all
+languages, because negation in some languages requires adding words at
+more than one place in the sentence. By contrast, adding `gettext'
+calls does the job straightforwardly if the code starts out like this:
+
+ printf (f->tried_implicit
+ ? "# Implicit rule search has been done.\n",
+ : "# Implicit rule search has not been done.\n");
+
+ Another example is this one:
+
+ printf ("%d file%s processed", nfiles,
+ nfiles != 1 ? "s" : "");
+
+The problem with this example is that it assumes that plurals are made
+by adding `s'. If you apply gettext to the format string, like this,
+
+ printf (gettext ("%d file%s processed"), nfiles,
+ nfiles != 1 ? "s" : "");
+
+the message can use different words, but it will still be forced to use
+`s' for the plural. Here is a better way, with gettext being applied to
+the two strings independently:
+
+ printf ((nfiles != 1 ? gettext ("%d files processed")
+ : gettext ("%d file processed")),
+ nfiles);
+
+But this still doesn't work for languages like Polish, which has three
+plural forms: one for nfiles == 1, one for nfiles == 2, 3, 4, 22, 23,
+24, ... and one for the rest. The GNU `ngettext' function solves this
+problem:
+
+ printf (ngettext ("%d files processed", "%d file processed", nfiles),
+ nfiles);
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Character Set, Next: Quote Characters, Prev: Internationalization, Up: Writing C
+
+5.9 Character Set
+=================
+
+Sticking to the ASCII character set (plain text, 7-bit characters) is
+preferred in GNU source code comments, text documents, and other
+contexts, unless there is good reason to do something else because of
+the application domain. For example, if source code deals with the
+French Revolutionary calendar, it is OK if its literal strings contain
+accented characters in month names like "Flore'al". Also, it is OK to
+use non-ASCII characters to represent proper names of contributors in
+change logs (*note Change Logs::).
+
+ If you need to use non-ASCII characters, you should normally stick
+with one encoding, as one cannot in general mix encodings reliably.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Quote Characters, Next: Mmap, Prev: Character Set, Up: Writing C
+
+5.10 Quote Characters
+=====================
+
+In the C locale, GNU programs should stick to plain ASCII for quotation
+characters in messages to users: preferably 0x60 (``') for left quotes
+and 0x27 (`'') for right quotes. It is ok, but not required, to use
+locale-specific quotes in other locales.
+
+ The Gnulib (http://www.gnu.org/software/gnulib/) `quote' and
+`quotearg' modules provide a reasonably straightforward way to support
+locale-specific quote characters, as well as taking care of other
+issues, such as quoting a filename that itself contains a quote
+character. See the Gnulib documentation for usage details.
+
+ In any case, the documentation for your program should clearly
+specify how it does quoting, if different than the preferred method of
+``' and `''. This is especially important if the output of your
+program is ever likely to be parsed by another program.
+
+ Quotation characters are a difficult area in the computing world at
+this time: there are no true left or right quote characters in Latin1;
+the ``' character we use was standardized there as a grave accent.
+Moreover, Latin1 is still not universally usable.
+
+ Unicode contains the unambiguous quote characters required, and its
+common encoding UTF-8 is upward compatible with Latin1. However,
+Unicode and UTF-8 are not universally well-supported, either.
+
+ This may change over the next few years, and then we will revisit
+this.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Mmap, Prev: Quote Characters, Up: Writing C
+
+5.11 Mmap
+=========
+
+Don't assume that `mmap' either works on all files or fails for all
+files. It may work on some files and fail on others.
+
+ The proper way to use `mmap' is to try it on the specific file for
+which you want to use it--and if `mmap' doesn't work, fall back on
+doing the job in another way using `read' and `write'.
+
+ The reason this precaution is needed is that the GNU kernel (the
+HURD) provides a user-extensible file system, in which there can be many
+different kinds of "ordinary files." Many of them support `mmap', but
+some do not. It is important to make programs handle all these kinds
+of files.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Documentation, Next: Managing Releases, Prev: Writing C, Up: Top
+
+6 Documenting Programs
+**********************
+
+A GNU program should ideally come with full free documentation, adequate
+for both reference and tutorial purposes. If the package can be
+programmed or extended, the documentation should cover programming or
+extending it, as well as just using it.
+
+* Menu:
+
+* GNU Manuals:: Writing proper manuals.
+* Doc Strings and Manuals:: Compiling doc strings doesn't make a manual.
+* Manual Structure Details:: Specific structure conventions.
+* License for Manuals:: Writing the distribution terms for a manual.
+* Manual Credits:: Giving credit to documentation contributors.
+* Printed Manuals:: Mentioning the printed manual.
+* NEWS File:: NEWS files supplement manuals.
+* Change Logs:: Recording changes.
+* Man Pages:: Man pages are secondary.
+* Reading other Manuals:: How far you can go in learning
+ from other manuals.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: GNU Manuals, Next: Doc Strings and Manuals, Up: Documentation
+
+6.1 GNU Manuals
+===============
+
+The preferred document format for the GNU system is the Texinfo
+formatting language. Every GNU package should (ideally) have
+documentation in Texinfo both for reference and for learners. Texinfo
+makes it possible to produce a good quality formatted book, using TeX,
+and to generate an Info file. It is also possible to generate HTML
+output from Texinfo source. See the Texinfo manual, either the
+hardcopy, or the on-line version available through `info' or the Emacs
+Info subsystem (`C-h i').
+
+ Nowadays some other formats such as Docbook and Sgmltexi can be
+converted automatically into Texinfo. It is ok to produce the Texinfo
+documentation by conversion this way, as long as it gives good results.
+
+ Make sure your manual is clear to a reader who knows nothing about
+the topic and reads it straight through. This means covering basic
+topics at the beginning, and advanced topics only later. This also
+means defining every specialized term when it is first used.
+
+ Programmers tend to carry over the structure of the program as the
+structure for its documentation. But this structure is not necessarily
+good for explaining how to use the program; it may be irrelevant and
+confusing for a user.
+
+ Instead, the right way to structure documentation is according to the
+concepts and questions that a user will have in mind when reading it.
+This principle applies at every level, from the lowest (ordering
+sentences in a paragraph) to the highest (ordering of chapter topics
+within the manual). Sometimes this structure of ideas matches the
+structure of the implementation of the software being documented--but
+often they are different. An important part of learning to write good
+documentation is to learn to notice when you have unthinkingly
+structured the documentation like the implementation, stop yourself,
+and look for better alternatives.
+
+ For example, each program in the GNU system probably ought to be
+documented in one manual; but this does not mean each program should
+have its own manual. That would be following the structure of the
+implementation, rather than the structure that helps the user
+understand.
+
+ Instead, each manual should cover a coherent _topic_. For example,
+instead of a manual for `diff' and a manual for `diff3', we have one
+manual for "comparison of files" which covers both of those programs,
+as well as `cmp'. By documenting these programs together, we can make
+the whole subject clearer.
+
+ The manual which discusses a program should certainly document all of
+the program's command-line options and all of its commands. It should
+give examples of their use. But don't organize the manual as a list of
+features. Instead, organize it logically, by subtopics. Address the
+questions that a user will ask when thinking about the job that the
+program does. Don't just tell the reader what each feature can do--say
+what jobs it is good for, and show how to use it for those jobs.
+Explain what is recommended usage, and what kinds of usage users should
+avoid.
+
+ In general, a GNU manual should serve both as tutorial and reference.
+It should be set up for convenient access to each topic through Info,
+and for reading straight through (appendixes aside). A GNU manual
+should give a good introduction to a beginner reading through from the
+start, and should also provide all the details that hackers want. The
+Bison manual is a good example of this--please take a look at it to see
+what we mean.
+
+ That is not as hard as it first sounds. Arrange each chapter as a
+logical breakdown of its topic, but order the sections, and write their
+text, so that reading the chapter straight through makes sense. Do
+likewise when structuring the book into chapters, and when structuring a
+section into paragraphs. The watchword is, _at each point, address the
+most fundamental and important issue raised by the preceding text._
+
+ If necessary, add extra chapters at the beginning of the manual which
+are purely tutorial and cover the basics of the subject. These provide
+the framework for a beginner to understand the rest of the manual. The
+Bison manual provides a good example of how to do this.
+
+ To serve as a reference, a manual should have an Index that list all
+the functions, variables, options, and important concepts that are part
+of the program. One combined Index should do for a short manual, but
+sometimes for a complex package it is better to use multiple indices.
+The Texinfo manual includes advice on preparing good index entries, see
+*note Making Index Entries: (texinfo)Index Entries, and see *note
+Defining the Entries of an Index: (texinfo)Indexing Commands.
+
+ Don't use Unix man pages as a model for how to write GNU
+documentation; most of them are terse, badly structured, and give
+inadequate explanation of the underlying concepts. (There are, of
+course, some exceptions.) Also, Unix man pages use a particular format
+which is different from what we use in GNU manuals.
+
+ Please include an email address in the manual for where to report
+bugs _in the text of the manual_.
+
+ Please do not use the term "pathname" that is used in Unix
+documentation; use "file name" (two words) instead. We use the term
+"path" only for search paths, which are lists of directory names.
+
+ Please do not use the term "illegal" to refer to erroneous input to
+a computer program. Please use "invalid" for this, and reserve the
+term "illegal" for activities prohibited by law.
+
+ Please do not write `()' after a function name just to indicate it
+is a function. `foo ()' is not a function, it is a function call with
+no arguments.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Doc Strings and Manuals, Next: Manual Structure Details, Prev: GNU Manuals, Up: Documentation
+
+6.2 Doc Strings and Manuals
+===========================
+
+Some programming systems, such as Emacs, provide a documentation string
+for each function, command or variable. You may be tempted to write a
+reference manual by compiling the documentation strings and writing a
+little additional text to go around them--but you must not do it. That
+approach is a fundamental mistake. The text of well-written
+documentation strings will be entirely wrong for a manual.
+
+ A documentation string needs to stand alone--when it appears on the
+screen, there will be no other text to introduce or explain it.
+Meanwhile, it can be rather informal in style.
+
+ The text describing a function or variable in a manual must not stand
+alone; it appears in the context of a section or subsection. Other text
+at the beginning of the section should explain some of the concepts, and
+should often make some general points that apply to several functions or
+variables. The previous descriptions of functions and variables in the
+section will also have given information about the topic. A description
+written to stand alone would repeat some of that information; this
+redundancy looks bad. Meanwhile, the informality that is acceptable in
+a documentation string is totally unacceptable in a manual.
+
+ The only good way to use documentation strings in writing a good
+manual is to use them as a source of information for writing good text.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Manual Structure Details, Next: License for Manuals, Prev: Doc Strings and Manuals, Up: Documentation
+
+6.3 Manual Structure Details
+============================
+
+The title page of the manual should state the version of the programs or
+packages documented in the manual. The Top node of the manual should
+also contain this information. If the manual is changing more
+frequently than or independent of the program, also state a version
+number for the manual in both of these places.
+
+ Each program documented in the manual should have a node named
+`PROGRAM Invocation' or `Invoking PROGRAM'. This node (together with
+its subnodes, if any) should describe the program's command line
+arguments and how to run it (the sort of information people would look
+for in a man page). Start with an `@example' containing a template for
+all the options and arguments that the program uses.
+
+ Alternatively, put a menu item in some menu whose item name fits one
+of the above patterns. This identifies the node which that item points
+to as the node for this purpose, regardless of the node's actual name.
+
+ The `--usage' feature of the Info reader looks for such a node or
+menu item in order to find the relevant text, so it is essential for
+every Texinfo file to have one.
+
+ If one manual describes several programs, it should have such a node
+for each program described in the manual.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: License for Manuals, Next: Manual Credits, Prev: Manual Structure Details, Up: Documentation
+
+6.4 License for Manuals
+=======================
+
+Please use the GNU Free Documentation License for all GNU manuals that
+are more than a few pages long. Likewise for a collection of short
+documents--you only need one copy of the GNU FDL for the whole
+collection. For a single short document, you can use a very permissive
+non-copyleft license, to avoid taking up space with a long license.
+
+ See `http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl-howto.html' for more explanation
+of how to employ the GFDL.
+
+ Note that it is not obligatory to include a copy of the GNU GPL or
+GNU LGPL in a manual whose license is neither the GPL nor the LGPL. It
+can be a good idea to include the program's license in a large manual;
+in a short manual, whose size would be increased considerably by
+including the program's license, it is probably better not to include
+it.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Manual Credits, Next: Printed Manuals, Prev: License for Manuals, Up: Documentation
+
+6.5 Manual Credits
+==================
+
+Please credit the principal human writers of the manual as the authors,
+on the title page of the manual. If a company sponsored the work, thank
+the company in a suitable place in the manual, but do not cite the
+company as an author.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Printed Manuals, Next: NEWS File, Prev: Manual Credits, Up: Documentation
+
+6.6 Printed Manuals
+===================
+
+The FSF publishes some GNU manuals in printed form. To encourage sales
+of these manuals, the on-line versions of the manual should mention at
+the very start that the printed manual is available and should point at
+information for getting it--for instance, with a link to the page
+`http://www.gnu.org/order/order.html'. This should not be included in
+the printed manual, though, because there it is redundant.
+
+ It is also useful to explain in the on-line forms of the manual how
+the user can print out the manual from the sources.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: NEWS File, Next: Change Logs, Prev: Printed Manuals, Up: Documentation
+
+6.7 The NEWS File
+=================
+
+In addition to its manual, the package should have a file named `NEWS'
+which contains a list of user-visible changes worth mentioning. In
+each new release, add items to the front of the file and identify the
+version they pertain to. Don't discard old items; leave them in the
+file after the newer items. This way, a user upgrading from any
+previous version can see what is new.
+
+ If the `NEWS' file gets very long, move some of the older items into
+a file named `ONEWS' and put a note at the end referring the user to
+that file.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Change Logs, Next: Man Pages, Prev: NEWS File, Up: Documentation
+
+6.8 Change Logs
+===============
+
+Keep a change log to describe all the changes made to program source
+files. The purpose of this is so that people investigating bugs in the
+future will know about the changes that might have introduced the bug.
+Often a new bug can be found by looking at what was recently changed.
+More importantly, change logs can help you eliminate conceptual
+inconsistencies between different parts of a program, by giving you a
+history of how the conflicting concepts arose and who they came from.
+
+* Menu:
+
+* Change Log Concepts::
+* Style of Change Logs::
+* Simple Changes::
+* Conditional Changes::
+* Indicating the Part Changed::
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Change Log Concepts, Next: Style of Change Logs, Up: Change Logs
+
+6.8.1 Change Log Concepts
+-------------------------
+
+You can think of the change log as a conceptual "undo list" which
+explains how earlier versions were different from the current version.
+People can see the current version; they don't need the change log to
+tell them what is in it. What they want from a change log is a clear
+explanation of how the earlier version differed.
+
+ The change log file is normally called `ChangeLog' and covers an
+entire directory. Each directory can have its own change log, or a
+directory can use the change log of its parent directory--it's up to
+you.
+
+ Another alternative is to record change log information with a
+version control system such as RCS or CVS. This can be converted
+automatically to a `ChangeLog' file using `rcs2log'; in Emacs, the
+command `C-x v a' (`vc-update-change-log') does the job.
+
+ There's no need to describe the full purpose of the changes or how
+they work together. However, sometimes it is useful to write one line
+to describe the overall purpose of a change or a batch of changes. If
+you think that a change calls for explanation, you're probably right.
+Please do explain it--but please put the full explanation in comments
+in the code, where people will see it whenever they see the code. For
+example, "New function" is enough for the change log when you add a
+function, because there should be a comment before the function
+definition to explain what it does.
+
+ In the past, we recommended not mentioning changes in non-software
+files (manuals, help files, etc.) in change logs. However, we've been
+advised that it is a good idea to include them, for the sake of
+copyright records.
+
+ The easiest way to add an entry to `ChangeLog' is with the Emacs
+command `M-x add-change-log-entry'. An entry should have an asterisk,
+the name of the changed file, and then in parentheses the name of the
+changed functions, variables or whatever, followed by a colon. Then
+describe the changes you made to that function or variable.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Style of Change Logs, Next: Simple Changes, Prev: Change Log Concepts, Up: Change Logs
+
+6.8.2 Style of Change Logs
+--------------------------
+
+Here are some simple examples of change log entries, starting with the
+header line that says who made the change and when it was installed,
+followed by descriptions of specific changes. (These examples are
+drawn from Emacs and GCC.)
+
+ 1998-08-17 Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
+
+ * register.el (insert-register): Return nil.
+ (jump-to-register): Likewise.
+
+ * sort.el (sort-subr): Return nil.
+
+ * tex-mode.el (tex-bibtex-file, tex-file, tex-region):
+ Restart the tex shell if process is gone or stopped.
+ (tex-shell-running): New function.
+
+ * expr.c (store_one_arg): Round size up for move_block_to_reg.
+ (expand_call): Round up when emitting USE insns.
+ * stmt.c (assign_parms): Round size up for move_block_from_reg.
+
+ It's important to name the changed function or variable in full.
+Don't abbreviate function or variable names, and don't combine them.
+Subsequent maintainers will often search for a function name to find all
+the change log entries that pertain to it; if you abbreviate the name,
+they won't find it when they search.
+
+ For example, some people are tempted to abbreviate groups of function
+names by writing `* register.el ({insert,jump-to}-register)'; this is
+not a good idea, since searching for `jump-to-register' or
+`insert-register' would not find that entry.
+
+ Separate unrelated change log entries with blank lines. When two
+entries represent parts of the same change, so that they work together,
+then don't put blank lines between them. Then you can omit the file
+name and the asterisk when successive entries are in the same file.
+
+ Break long lists of function names by closing continued lines with
+`)', rather than `,', and opening the continuation with `(' as in this
+example:
+
+ * keyboard.c (menu_bar_items, tool_bar_items)
+ (Fexecute_extended_command): Deal with `keymap' property.
+
+ When you install someone else's changes, put the contributor's name
+in the change log entry rather than in the text of the entry. In other
+words, write this:
+
+ 2002-07-14 John Doe <jdoe@gnu.org>
+
+ * sewing.c: Make it sew.
+
+rather than this:
+
+ 2002-07-14 Usual Maintainer <usual@gnu.org>
+
+ * sewing.c: Make it sew. Patch by jdoe@gnu.org.
+
+ As for the date, that should be the date you applied the change.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Simple Changes, Next: Conditional Changes, Prev: Style of Change Logs, Up: Change Logs
+
+6.8.3 Simple Changes
+--------------------
+
+Certain simple kinds of changes don't need much detail in the change
+log.
+
+ When you change the calling sequence of a function in a simple
+fashion, and you change all the callers of the function to use the new
+calling sequence, there is no need to make individual entries for all
+the callers that you changed. Just write in the entry for the function
+being called, "All callers changed"--like this:
+
+ * keyboard.c (Fcommand_execute): New arg SPECIAL.
+ All callers changed.
+
+ When you change just comments or doc strings, it is enough to write
+an entry for the file, without mentioning the functions. Just "Doc
+fixes" is enough for the change log.
+
+ There's no technical need to make change log entries for
+documentation files. This is because documentation is not susceptible
+to bugs that are hard to fix. Documentation does not consist of parts
+that must interact in a precisely engineered fashion. To correct an
+error, you need not know the history of the erroneous passage; it is
+enough to compare what the documentation says with the way the program
+actually works.
+
+ However, you should keep change logs for documentation files when the
+project gets copyright assignments from its contributors, so as to make
+the records of authorship more accurate.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Conditional Changes, Next: Indicating the Part Changed, Prev: Simple Changes, Up: Change Logs
+
+6.8.4 Conditional Changes
+-------------------------
+
+C programs often contain compile-time `#if' conditionals. Many changes
+are conditional; sometimes you add a new definition which is entirely
+contained in a conditional. It is very useful to indicate in the
+change log the conditions for which the change applies.
+
+ Our convention for indicating conditional changes is to use square
+brackets around the name of the condition.
+
+ Here is a simple example, describing a change which is conditional
+but does not have a function or entity name associated with it:
+
+ * xterm.c [SOLARIS2]: Include string.h.
+
+ Here is an entry describing a new definition which is entirely
+conditional. This new definition for the macro `FRAME_WINDOW_P' is
+used only when `HAVE_X_WINDOWS' is defined:
+
+ * frame.h [HAVE_X_WINDOWS] (FRAME_WINDOW_P): Macro defined.
+
+ Here is an entry for a change within the function `init_display',
+whose definition as a whole is unconditional, but the changes themselves
+are contained in a `#ifdef HAVE_LIBNCURSES' conditional:
+
+ * dispnew.c (init_display) [HAVE_LIBNCURSES]: If X, call tgetent.
+
+ Here is an entry for a change that takes affect only when a certain
+macro is _not_ defined:
+
+ (gethostname) [!HAVE_SOCKETS]: Replace with winsock version.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Indicating the Part Changed, Prev: Conditional Changes, Up: Change Logs
+
+6.8.5 Indicating the Part Changed
+---------------------------------
+
+Indicate the part of a function which changed by using angle brackets
+enclosing an indication of what the changed part does. Here is an entry
+for a change in the part of the function `sh-while-getopts' that deals
+with `sh' commands:
+
+ * progmodes/sh-script.el (sh-while-getopts) <sh>: Handle case that
+ user-specified option string is empty.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Man Pages, Next: Reading other Manuals, Prev: Change Logs, Up: Documentation
+
+6.9 Man Pages
+=============
+
+In the GNU project, man pages are secondary. It is not necessary or
+expected for every GNU program to have a man page, but some of them do.
+It's your choice whether to include a man page in your program.
+
+ When you make this decision, consider that supporting a man page
+requires continual effort each time the program is changed. The time
+you spend on the man page is time taken away from more useful work.
+
+ For a simple program which changes little, updating the man page may
+be a small job. Then there is little reason not to include a man page,
+if you have one.
+
+ For a large program that changes a great deal, updating a man page
+may be a substantial burden. If a user offers to donate a man page,
+you may find this gift costly to accept. It may be better to refuse
+the man page unless the same person agrees to take full responsibility
+for maintaining it--so that you can wash your hands of it entirely. If
+this volunteer later ceases to do the job, then don't feel obliged to
+pick it up yourself; it may be better to withdraw the man page from the
+distribution until someone else agrees to update it.
+
+ When a program changes only a little, you may feel that the
+discrepancies are small enough that the man page remains useful without
+updating. If so, put a prominent note near the beginning of the man
+page explaining that you don't maintain it and that the Texinfo manual
+is more authoritative. The note should say how to access the Texinfo
+documentation.
+
+ Be sure that man pages include a copyright statement and free
+license. The simple all-permissive license is appropriate for simple
+man pages (*note License Notices for Other Files: (maintain)License
+Notices for Other Files.).
+
+ For long man pages, with enough explanation and documentation that
+they can be considered true manuals, use the GFDL (*note License for
+Manuals::).
+
+ Finally, the GNU help2man program
+(`http://www.gnu.org/software/help2man/') is one way to automate
+generation of a man page, in this case from `--help' output. This is
+sufficient in many cases.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Reading other Manuals, Prev: Man Pages, Up: Documentation
+
+6.10 Reading other Manuals
+==========================
+
+There may be non-free books or documentation files that describe the
+program you are documenting.
+
+ It is ok to use these documents for reference, just as the author of
+a new algebra textbook can read other books on algebra. A large portion
+of any non-fiction book consists of facts, in this case facts about how
+a certain program works, and these facts are necessarily the same for
+everyone who writes about the subject. But be careful not to copy your
+outline structure, wording, tables or examples from preexisting non-free
+documentation. Copying from free documentation may be ok; please check
+with the FSF about the individual case.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Managing Releases, Next: References, Prev: Documentation, Up: Top
+
+7 The Release Process
+*********************
+
+Making a release is more than just bundling up your source files in a
+tar file and putting it up for FTP. You should set up your software so
+that it can be configured to run on a variety of systems. Your Makefile
+should conform to the GNU standards described below, and your directory
+layout should also conform to the standards discussed below. Doing so
+makes it easy to include your package into the larger framework of all
+GNU software.
+
+* Menu:
+
+* Configuration:: How configuration of GNU packages should work.
+* Makefile Conventions:: Makefile conventions.
+* Releases:: Making releases
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Configuration, Next: Makefile Conventions, Up: Managing Releases
+
+7.1 How Configuration Should Work
+=================================
+
+Each GNU distribution should come with a shell script named
+`configure'. This script is given arguments which describe the kind of
+machine and system you want to compile the program for. The
+`configure' script must record the configuration options so that they
+affect compilation.
+
+ The description here is the specification of the interface for the
+`configure' script in GNU packages. Many packages implement it using
+GNU Autoconf (*note Introduction: (autoconf)Top.) and/or GNU Automake
+(*note Introduction: (automake)Top.), but you do not have to use these
+tools. You can implement it any way you like; for instance, by making
+`configure' be a wrapper around a completely different configuration
+system.
+
+ Another way for the `configure' script to operate is to make a link
+from a standard name such as `config.h' to the proper configuration
+file for the chosen system. If you use this technique, the
+distribution should _not_ contain a file named `config.h'. This is so
+that people won't be able to build the program without configuring it
+first.
+
+ Another thing that `configure' can do is to edit the Makefile. If
+you do this, the distribution should _not_ contain a file named
+`Makefile'. Instead, it should include a file `Makefile.in' which
+contains the input used for editing. Once again, this is so that people
+won't be able to build the program without configuring it first.
+
+ If `configure' does write the `Makefile', then `Makefile' should
+have a target named `Makefile' which causes `configure' to be rerun,
+setting up the same configuration that was set up last time. The files
+that `configure' reads should be listed as dependencies of `Makefile'.
+
+ All the files which are output from the `configure' script should
+have comments at the beginning explaining that they were generated
+automatically using `configure'. This is so that users won't think of
+trying to edit them by hand.
+
+ The `configure' script should write a file named `config.status'
+which describes which configuration options were specified when the
+program was last configured. This file should be a shell script which,
+if run, will recreate the same configuration.
+
+ The `configure' script should accept an option of the form
+`--srcdir=DIRNAME' to specify the directory where sources are found (if
+it is not the current directory). This makes it possible to build the
+program in a separate directory, so that the actual source directory is
+not modified.
+
+ If the user does not specify `--srcdir', then `configure' should
+check both `.' and `..' to see if it can find the sources. If it finds
+the sources in one of these places, it should use them from there.
+Otherwise, it should report that it cannot find the sources, and should
+exit with nonzero status.
+
+ Usually the easy way to support `--srcdir' is by editing a
+definition of `VPATH' into the Makefile. Some rules may need to refer
+explicitly to the specified source directory. To make this possible,
+`configure' can add to the Makefile a variable named `srcdir' whose
+value is precisely the specified directory.
+
+ In addition, the `configure' script should take options
+corresponding to most of the standard directory variables (*note
+Directory Variables::). Here is the list:
+
+ --prefix --exec-prefix --bindir --sbindir --libexecdir --sysconfdir
+ --sharedstatedir --localstatedir --libdir --includedir --oldincludedir
+ --datarootdir --datadir --infodir --localedir --mandir --docdir
+ --htmldir --dvidir --pdfdir --psdir
+
+ The `configure' script should also take an argument which specifies
+the type of system to build the program for. This argument should look
+like this:
+
+ CPU-COMPANY-SYSTEM
+
+ For example, an Athlon-based GNU/Linux system might be
+`i686-pc-linux-gnu'.
+
+ The `configure' script needs to be able to decode all plausible
+alternatives for how to describe a machine. Thus,
+`athlon-pc-gnu/linux' would be a valid alias. There is a shell script
+called `config.sub'
+(http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=config.git;a=blob_plain;f=config.sub;hb=HEAD)
+that you can use as a subroutine to validate system types and
+canonicalize aliases.
+
+ The `configure' script should also take the option
+`--build=BUILDTYPE', which should be equivalent to a plain BUILDTYPE
+argument. For example, `configure --build=i686-pc-linux-gnu' is
+equivalent to `configure i686-pc-linux-gnu'. When the build type is
+not specified by an option or argument, the `configure' script should
+normally guess it using the shell script `config.guess'
+(http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=config.git;a=blob_plain;f=config.guess;hb=HEAD).
+
+ Other options are permitted to specify in more detail the software
+or hardware present on the machine, to include or exclude optional parts
+of the package, or to adjust the name of some tools or arguments to
+them:
+
+`--enable-FEATURE[=PARAMETER]'
+ Configure the package to build and install an optional user-level
+ facility called FEATURE. This allows users to choose which
+ optional features to include. Giving an optional PARAMETER of
+ `no' should omit FEATURE, if it is built by default.
+
+ No `--enable' option should *ever* cause one feature to replace
+ another. No `--enable' option should ever substitute one useful
+ behavior for another useful behavior. The only proper use for
+ `--enable' is for questions of whether to build part of the program
+ or exclude it.
+
+`--with-PACKAGE'
+ The package PACKAGE will be installed, so configure this package
+ to work with PACKAGE.
+
+ Possible values of PACKAGE include `gnu-as' (or `gas'), `gnu-ld',
+ `gnu-libc', `gdb', `x', and `x-toolkit'.
+
+ Do not use a `--with' option to specify the file name to use to
+ find certain files. That is outside the scope of what `--with'
+ options are for.
+
+`VARIABLE=VALUE'
+ Set the value of the variable VARIABLE to VALUE. This is used to
+ override the default values of commands or arguments in the build
+ process. For example, the user could issue `configure CFLAGS=-g
+ CXXFLAGS=-g' to build with debugging information and without the
+ default optimization.
+
+ Specifying variables as arguments to `configure', like this:
+ ./configure CC=gcc
+ is preferable to setting them in environment variables:
+ CC=gcc ./configure
+ as it helps to recreate the same configuration later with
+ `config.status'. However, both methods should be supported.
+
+ All `configure' scripts should accept all of the "detail" options
+and the variable settings, whether or not they make any difference to
+the particular package at hand. In particular, they should accept any
+option that starts with `--with-' or `--enable-'. This is so users
+will be able to configure an entire GNU source tree at once with a
+single set of options.
+
+ You will note that the categories `--with-' and `--enable-' are
+narrow: they *do not* provide a place for any sort of option you might
+think of. That is deliberate. We want to limit the possible
+configuration options in GNU software. We do not want GNU programs to
+have idiosyncratic configuration options.
+
+ Packages that perform part of the compilation process may support
+cross-compilation. In such a case, the host and target machines for the
+program may be different.
+
+ The `configure' script should normally treat the specified type of
+system as both the host and the target, thus producing a program which
+works for the same type of machine that it runs on.
+
+ To compile a program to run on a host type that differs from the
+build type, use the configure option `--host=HOSTTYPE', where HOSTTYPE
+uses the same syntax as BUILDTYPE. The host type normally defaults to
+the build type.
+
+ To configure a cross-compiler, cross-assembler, or what have you, you
+should specify a target different from the host, using the configure
+option `--target=TARGETTYPE'. The syntax for TARGETTYPE is the same as
+for the host type. So the command would look like this:
+
+ ./configure --host=HOSTTYPE --target=TARGETTYPE
+
+ The target type normally defaults to the host type. Programs for
+which cross-operation is not meaningful need not accept the `--target'
+option, because configuring an entire operating system for
+cross-operation is not a meaningful operation.
+
+ Some programs have ways of configuring themselves automatically. If
+your program is set up to do this, your `configure' script can simply
+ignore most of its arguments.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Makefile Conventions, Next: Releases, Prev: Configuration, Up: Managing Releases
+
+7.2 Makefile Conventions
+========================
+
+This node describes conventions for writing the Makefiles for GNU
+programs. Using Automake will help you write a Makefile that follows
+these conventions.
+
+* Menu:
+
+* Makefile Basics:: General conventions for Makefiles.
+* Utilities in Makefiles:: Utilities to be used in Makefiles.
+* Command Variables:: Variables for specifying commands.
+* DESTDIR:: Supporting staged installs.
+* Directory Variables:: Variables for installation directories.
+* Standard Targets:: Standard targets for users.
+* Install Command Categories:: Three categories of commands in the `install'
+ rule: normal, pre-install and post-install.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Makefile Basics, Next: Utilities in Makefiles, Up: Makefile Conventions
+
+7.2.1 General Conventions for Makefiles
+---------------------------------------
+
+Every Makefile should contain this line:
+
+ SHELL = /bin/sh
+
+to avoid trouble on systems where the `SHELL' variable might be
+inherited from the environment. (This is never a problem with GNU
+`make'.)
+
+ Different `make' programs have incompatible suffix lists and
+implicit rules, and this sometimes creates confusion or misbehavior. So
+it is a good idea to set the suffix list explicitly using only the
+suffixes you need in the particular Makefile, like this:
+
+ .SUFFIXES:
+ .SUFFIXES: .c .o
+
+The first line clears out the suffix list, the second introduces all
+suffixes which may be subject to implicit rules in this Makefile.
+
+ Don't assume that `.' is in the path for command execution. When
+you need to run programs that are a part of your package during the
+make, please make sure that it uses `./' if the program is built as
+part of the make or `$(srcdir)/' if the file is an unchanging part of
+the source code. Without one of these prefixes, the current search
+path is used.
+
+ The distinction between `./' (the "build directory") and
+`$(srcdir)/' (the "source directory") is important because users can
+build in a separate directory using the `--srcdir' option to
+`configure'. A rule of the form:
+
+ foo.1 : foo.man sedscript
+ sed -e sedscript foo.man > foo.1
+
+will fail when the build directory is not the source directory, because
+`foo.man' and `sedscript' are in the source directory.
+
+ When using GNU `make', relying on `VPATH' to find the source file
+will work in the case where there is a single dependency file, since
+the `make' automatic variable `$<' will represent the source file
+wherever it is. (Many versions of `make' set `$<' only in implicit
+rules.) A Makefile target like
+
+ foo.o : bar.c
+ $(CC) -I. -I$(srcdir) $(CFLAGS) -c bar.c -o foo.o
+
+should instead be written as
+
+ foo.o : bar.c
+ $(CC) -I. -I$(srcdir) $(CFLAGS) -c $< -o $@
+
+in order to allow `VPATH' to work correctly. When the target has
+multiple dependencies, using an explicit `$(srcdir)' is the easiest way
+to make the rule work well. For example, the target above for `foo.1'
+is best written as:
+
+ foo.1 : foo.man sedscript
+ sed -e $(srcdir)/sedscript $(srcdir)/foo.man > $@
+
+ GNU distributions usually contain some files which are not source
+files--for example, Info files, and the output from Autoconf, Automake,
+Bison or Flex. Since these files normally appear in the source
+directory, they should always appear in the source directory, not in the
+build directory. So Makefile rules to update them should put the
+updated files in the source directory.
+
+ However, if a file does not appear in the distribution, then the
+Makefile should not put it in the source directory, because building a
+program in ordinary circumstances should not modify the source directory
+in any way.
+
+ Try to make the build and installation targets, at least (and all
+their subtargets) work correctly with a parallel `make'.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Utilities in Makefiles, Next: Command Variables, Prev: Makefile Basics, Up: Makefile Conventions
+
+7.2.2 Utilities in Makefiles
+----------------------------
+
+Write the Makefile commands (and any shell scripts, such as
+`configure') to run in `sh', not in `csh'. Don't use any special
+features of `ksh' or `bash'.
+
+ The `configure' script and the Makefile rules for building and
+installation should not use any utilities directly except these:
+
+ cat cmp cp diff echo egrep expr false grep install-info
+ ln ls mkdir mv pwd rm rmdir sed sleep sort tar test touch true
+
+ The compression program `gzip' can be used in the `dist' rule.
+
+ Stick to the generally supported options for these programs. For
+example, don't use `mkdir -p', convenient as it may be, because most
+systems don't support it.
+
+ It is a good idea to avoid creating symbolic links in makefiles,
+since a few systems don't support them.
+
+ The Makefile rules for building and installation can also use
+compilers and related programs, but should do so via `make' variables
+so that the user can substitute alternatives. Here are some of the
+programs we mean:
+
+ ar bison cc flex install ld ldconfig lex
+ make makeinfo ranlib texi2dvi yacc
+
+ Use the following `make' variables to run those programs:
+
+ $(AR) $(BISON) $(CC) $(FLEX) $(INSTALL) $(LD) $(LDCONFIG) $(LEX)
+ $(MAKE) $(MAKEINFO) $(RANLIB) $(TEXI2DVI) $(YACC)
+
+ When you use `ranlib' or `ldconfig', you should make sure nothing
+bad happens if the system does not have the program in question.
+Arrange to ignore an error from that command, and print a message before
+the command to tell the user that failure of this command does not mean
+a problem. (The Autoconf `AC_PROG_RANLIB' macro can help with this.)
+
+ If you use symbolic links, you should implement a fallback for
+systems that don't have symbolic links.
+
+ Additional utilities that can be used via Make variables are:
+
+ chgrp chmod chown mknod
+
+ It is ok to use other utilities in Makefile portions (or scripts)
+intended only for particular systems where you know those utilities
+exist.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Command Variables, Next: DESTDIR, Prev: Utilities in Makefiles, Up: Makefile Conventions
+
+7.2.3 Variables for Specifying Commands
+---------------------------------------
+
+Makefiles should provide variables for overriding certain commands,
+options, and so on.
+
+ In particular, you should run most utility programs via variables.
+Thus, if you use Bison, have a variable named `BISON' whose default
+value is set with `BISON = bison', and refer to it with `$(BISON)'
+whenever you need to use Bison.
+
+ File management utilities such as `ln', `rm', `mv', and so on, need
+not be referred to through variables in this way, since users don't
+need to replace them with other programs.
+
+ Each program-name variable should come with an options variable that
+is used to supply options to the program. Append `FLAGS' to the
+program-name variable name to get the options variable name--for
+example, `BISONFLAGS'. (The names `CFLAGS' for the C compiler,
+`YFLAGS' for yacc, and `LFLAGS' for lex, are exceptions to this rule,
+but we keep them because they are standard.) Use `CPPFLAGS' in any
+compilation command that runs the preprocessor, and use `LDFLAGS' in
+any compilation command that does linking as well as in any direct use
+of `ld'.
+
+ If there are C compiler options that _must_ be used for proper
+compilation of certain files, do not include them in `CFLAGS'. Users
+expect to be able to specify `CFLAGS' freely themselves. Instead,
+arrange to pass the necessary options to the C compiler independently
+of `CFLAGS', by writing them explicitly in the compilation commands or
+by defining an implicit rule, like this:
+
+ CFLAGS = -g
+ ALL_CFLAGS = -I. $(CFLAGS)
+ .c.o:
+ $(CC) -c $(CPPFLAGS) $(ALL_CFLAGS) $<
+
+ Do include the `-g' option in `CFLAGS', because that is not
+_required_ for proper compilation. You can consider it a default that
+is only recommended. If the package is set up so that it is compiled
+with GCC by default, then you might as well include `-O' in the default
+value of `CFLAGS' as well.
+
+ Put `CFLAGS' last in the compilation command, after other variables
+containing compiler options, so the user can use `CFLAGS' to override
+the others.
+
+ `CFLAGS' should be used in every invocation of the C compiler, both
+those which do compilation and those which do linking.
+
+ Every Makefile should define the variable `INSTALL', which is the
+basic command for installing a file into the system.
+
+ Every Makefile should also define the variables `INSTALL_PROGRAM'
+and `INSTALL_DATA'. (The default for `INSTALL_PROGRAM' should be
+`$(INSTALL)'; the default for `INSTALL_DATA' should be `${INSTALL} -m
+644'.) Then it should use those variables as the commands for actual
+installation, for executables and non-executables respectively.
+Minimal use of these variables is as follows:
+
+ $(INSTALL_PROGRAM) foo $(bindir)/foo
+ $(INSTALL_DATA) libfoo.a $(libdir)/libfoo.a
+
+ However, it is preferable to support a `DESTDIR' prefix on the
+target files, as explained in the next section.
+
+Always use a file name, not a directory name, as the second argument of
+the installation commands. Use a separate command for each file to be
+installed.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: DESTDIR, Next: Directory Variables, Prev: Command Variables, Up: Makefile Conventions
+
+7.2.4 `DESTDIR': support for staged installs
+--------------------------------------------
+
+`DESTDIR' is a variable prepended to each installed target file, like
+this:
+
+ $(INSTALL_PROGRAM) foo $(DESTDIR)$(bindir)/foo
+ $(INSTALL_DATA) libfoo.a $(DESTDIR)$(libdir)/libfoo.a
+
+ The `DESTDIR' variable is specified by the user on the `make'
+command line. For example:
+
+ make DESTDIR=/tmp/stage install
+
+`DESTDIR' should be supported only in the `install*' and `uninstall*'
+targets, as those are the only targets where it is useful.
+
+ If your installation step would normally install
+`/usr/local/bin/foo' and `/usr/local/lib/libfoo.a', then an
+installation invoked as in the example above would install
+`/tmp/stage/usr/local/bin/foo' and `/tmp/stage/usr/local/lib/libfoo.a'
+instead.
+
+ Prepending the variable `DESTDIR' to each target in this way
+provides for "staged installs", where the installed files are not
+placed directly into their expected location but are instead copied
+into a temporary location (`DESTDIR'). However, installed files
+maintain their relative directory structure and any embedded file names
+will not be modified.
+
+ You should not set the value of `DESTDIR' in your `Makefile' at all;
+then the files are installed into their expected locations by default.
+Also, specifying `DESTDIR' should not change the operation of the
+software in any way, so its value should not be included in any file
+contents.
+
+ `DESTDIR' support is commonly used in package creation. It is also
+helpful to users who want to understand what a given package will
+install where, and to allow users who don't normally have permissions
+to install into protected areas to build and install before gaining
+those permissions. Finally, it can be useful with tools such as
+`stow', where code is installed in one place but made to appear to be
+installed somewhere else using symbolic links or special mount
+operations. So, we strongly recommend GNU packages support `DESTDIR',
+though it is not an absolute requirement.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Directory Variables, Next: Standard Targets, Prev: DESTDIR, Up: Makefile Conventions
+
+7.2.5 Variables for Installation Directories
+--------------------------------------------
+
+Installation directories should always be named by variables, so it is
+easy to install in a nonstandard place. The standard names for these
+variables and the values they should have in GNU packages are described
+below. They are based on a standard file system layout; variants of it
+are used in GNU/Linux and other modern operating systems.
+
+ Installers are expected to override these values when calling `make'
+(e.g., `make prefix=/usr install' or `configure' (e.g., `configure
+--prefix=/usr'). GNU packages should not try to guess which value
+should be appropriate for these variables on the system they are being
+installed onto: use the default settings specified here so that all GNU
+packages behave identically, allowing the installer to achieve any
+desired layout.
+
+ These first two variables set the root for the installation. All the
+other installation directories should be subdirectories of one of these
+two, and nothing should be directly installed into these two
+directories.
+
+`prefix'
+ A prefix used in constructing the default values of the variables
+ listed below. The default value of `prefix' should be
+ `/usr/local'. When building the complete GNU system, the prefix
+ will be empty and `/usr' will be a symbolic link to `/'. (If you
+ are using Autoconf, write it as `@prefix@'.)
+
+ Running `make install' with a different value of `prefix' from the
+ one used to build the program should _not_ recompile the program.
+
+`exec_prefix'
+ A prefix used in constructing the default values of some of the
+ variables listed below. The default value of `exec_prefix' should
+ be `$(prefix)'. (If you are using Autoconf, write it as
+ `@exec_prefix@'.)
+
+ Generally, `$(exec_prefix)' is used for directories that contain
+ machine-specific files (such as executables and subroutine
+ libraries), while `$(prefix)' is used directly for other
+ directories.
+
+ Running `make install' with a different value of `exec_prefix'
+ from the one used to build the program should _not_ recompile the
+ program.
+
+ Executable programs are installed in one of the following
+directories.
+
+`bindir'
+ The directory for installing executable programs that users can
+ run. This should normally be `/usr/local/bin', but write it as
+ `$(exec_prefix)/bin'. (If you are using Autoconf, write it as
+ `@bindir@'.)
+
+`sbindir'
+ The directory for installing executable programs that can be run
+ from the shell, but are only generally useful to system
+ administrators. This should normally be `/usr/local/sbin', but
+ write it as `$(exec_prefix)/sbin'. (If you are using Autoconf,
+ write it as `@sbindir@'.)
+
+`libexecdir'
+ The directory for installing executable programs to be run by other
+ programs rather than by users. This directory should normally be
+ `/usr/local/libexec', but write it as `$(exec_prefix)/libexec'.
+ (If you are using Autoconf, write it as `@libexecdir@'.)
+
+ The definition of `libexecdir' is the same for all packages, so
+ you should install your data in a subdirectory thereof. Most
+ packages install their data under `$(libexecdir)/PACKAGE-NAME/',
+ possibly within additional subdirectories thereof, such as
+ `$(libexecdir)/PACKAGE-NAME/MACHINE/VERSION'.
+
+ Data files used by the program during its execution are divided into
+categories in two ways.
+
+ * Some files are normally modified by programs; others are never
+ normally modified (though users may edit some of these).
+
+ * Some files are architecture-independent and can be shared by all
+ machines at a site; some are architecture-dependent and can be
+ shared only by machines of the same kind and operating system;
+ others may never be shared between two machines.
+
+ This makes for six different possibilities. However, we want to
+discourage the use of architecture-dependent files, aside from object
+files and libraries. It is much cleaner to make other data files
+architecture-independent, and it is generally not hard.
+
+ Here are the variables Makefiles should use to specify directories
+to put these various kinds of files in:
+
+`datarootdir'
+ The root of the directory tree for read-only
+ architecture-independent data files. This should normally be
+ `/usr/local/share', but write it as `$(prefix)/share'. (If you
+ are using Autoconf, write it as `@datarootdir@'.) `datadir''s
+ default value is based on this variable; so are `infodir',
+ `mandir', and others.
+
+`datadir'
+ The directory for installing idiosyncratic read-only
+ architecture-independent data files for this program. This is
+ usually the same place as `datarootdir', but we use the two
+ separate variables so that you can move these program-specific
+ files without altering the location for Info files, man pages, etc.
+
+ This should normally be `/usr/local/share', but write it as
+ `$(datarootdir)'. (If you are using Autoconf, write it as
+ `@datadir@'.)
+
+ The definition of `datadir' is the same for all packages, so you
+ should install your data in a subdirectory thereof. Most packages
+ install their data under `$(datadir)/PACKAGE-NAME/'.
+
+`sysconfdir'
+ The directory for installing read-only data files that pertain to a
+ single machine-that is to say, files for configuring a host.
+ Mailer and network configuration files, `/etc/passwd', and so
+ forth belong here. All the files in this directory should be
+ ordinary ASCII text files. This directory should normally be
+ `/usr/local/etc', but write it as `$(prefix)/etc'. (If you are
+ using Autoconf, write it as `@sysconfdir@'.)
+
+ Do not install executables here in this directory (they probably
+ belong in `$(libexecdir)' or `$(sbindir)'). Also do not install
+ files that are modified in the normal course of their use (programs
+ whose purpose is to change the configuration of the system
+ excluded). Those probably belong in `$(localstatedir)'.
+
+`sharedstatedir'
+ The directory for installing architecture-independent data files
+ which the programs modify while they run. This should normally be
+ `/usr/local/com', but write it as `$(prefix)/com'. (If you are
+ using Autoconf, write it as `@sharedstatedir@'.)
+
+`localstatedir'
+ The directory for installing data files which the programs modify
+ while they run, and that pertain to one specific machine. Users
+ should never need to modify files in this directory to configure
+ the package's operation; put such configuration information in
+ separate files that go in `$(datadir)' or `$(sysconfdir)'.
+ `$(localstatedir)' should normally be `/usr/local/var', but write
+ it as `$(prefix)/var'. (If you are using Autoconf, write it as
+ `@localstatedir@'.)
+
+ These variables specify the directory for installing certain specific
+types of files, if your program has them. Every GNU package should
+have Info files, so every program needs `infodir', but not all need
+`libdir' or `lispdir'.
+
+`includedir'
+ The directory for installing header files to be included by user
+ programs with the C `#include' preprocessor directive. This
+ should normally be `/usr/local/include', but write it as
+ `$(prefix)/include'. (If you are using Autoconf, write it as
+ `@includedir@'.)
+
+ Most compilers other than GCC do not look for header files in
+ directory `/usr/local/include'. So installing the header files
+ this way is only useful with GCC. Sometimes this is not a problem
+ because some libraries are only really intended to work with GCC.
+ But some libraries are intended to work with other compilers.
+ They should install their header files in two places, one
+ specified by `includedir' and one specified by `oldincludedir'.
+
+`oldincludedir'
+ The directory for installing `#include' header files for use with
+ compilers other than GCC. This should normally be `/usr/include'.
+ (If you are using Autoconf, you can write it as `@oldincludedir@'.)
+
+ The Makefile commands should check whether the value of
+ `oldincludedir' is empty. If it is, they should not try to use
+ it; they should cancel the second installation of the header files.
+
+ A package should not replace an existing header in this directory
+ unless the header came from the same package. Thus, if your Foo
+ package provides a header file `foo.h', then it should install the
+ header file in the `oldincludedir' directory if either (1) there
+ is no `foo.h' there or (2) the `foo.h' that exists came from the
+ Foo package.
+
+ To tell whether `foo.h' came from the Foo package, put a magic
+ string in the file--part of a comment--and `grep' for that string.
+
+`docdir'
+ The directory for installing documentation files (other than Info)
+ for this package. By default, it should be
+ `/usr/local/share/doc/YOURPKG', but it should be written as
+ `$(datarootdir)/doc/YOURPKG'. (If you are using Autoconf, write
+ it as `@docdir@'.) The YOURPKG subdirectory, which may include a
+ version number, prevents collisions among files with common names,
+ such as `README'.
+
+`infodir'
+ The directory for installing the Info files for this package. By
+ default, it should be `/usr/local/share/info', but it should be
+ written as `$(datarootdir)/info'. (If you are using Autoconf,
+ write it as `@infodir@'.) `infodir' is separate from `docdir' for
+ compatibility with existing practice.
+
+`htmldir'
+`dvidir'
+`pdfdir'
+`psdir'
+ Directories for installing documentation files in the particular
+ format. They should all be set to `$(docdir)' by default. (If
+ you are using Autoconf, write them as `@htmldir@', `@dvidir@',
+ etc.) Packages which supply several translations of their
+ documentation should install them in `$(htmldir)/'LL,
+ `$(pdfdir)/'LL, etc. where LL is a locale abbreviation such as
+ `en' or `pt_BR'.
+
+`libdir'
+ The directory for object files and libraries of object code. Do
+ not install executables here, they probably ought to go in
+ `$(libexecdir)' instead. The value of `libdir' should normally be
+ `/usr/local/lib', but write it as `$(exec_prefix)/lib'. (If you
+ are using Autoconf, write it as `@libdir@'.)
+
+`lispdir'
+ The directory for installing any Emacs Lisp files in this package.
+ By default, it should be `/usr/local/share/emacs/site-lisp', but it
+ should be written as `$(datarootdir)/emacs/site-lisp'.
+
+ If you are using Autoconf, write the default as `@lispdir@'. In
+ order to make `@lispdir@' work, you need the following lines in
+ your `configure.in' file:
+
+ lispdir='${datarootdir}/emacs/site-lisp'
+ AC_SUBST(lispdir)
+
+`localedir'
+ The directory for installing locale-specific message catalogs for
+ this package. By default, it should be `/usr/local/share/locale',
+ but it should be written as `$(datarootdir)/locale'. (If you are
+ using Autoconf, write it as `@localedir@'.) This directory
+ usually has a subdirectory per locale.
+
+ Unix-style man pages are installed in one of the following:
+
+`mandir'
+ The top-level directory for installing the man pages (if any) for
+ this package. It will normally be `/usr/local/share/man', but you
+ should write it as `$(datarootdir)/man'. (If you are using
+ Autoconf, write it as `@mandir@'.)
+
+`man1dir'
+ The directory for installing section 1 man pages. Write it as
+ `$(mandir)/man1'.
+
+`man2dir'
+ The directory for installing section 2 man pages. Write it as
+ `$(mandir)/man2'
+
+`...'
+ *Don't make the primary documentation for any GNU software be a
+ man page. Write a manual in Texinfo instead. Man pages are just
+ for the sake of people running GNU software on Unix, which is a
+ secondary application only.*
+
+`manext'
+ The file name extension for the installed man page. This should
+ contain a period followed by the appropriate digit; it should
+ normally be `.1'.
+
+`man1ext'
+ The file name extension for installed section 1 man pages.
+
+`man2ext'
+ The file name extension for installed section 2 man pages.
+
+`...'
+ Use these names instead of `manext' if the package needs to
+ install man pages in more than one section of the manual.
+
+ And finally, you should set the following variable:
+
+`srcdir'
+ The directory for the sources being compiled. The value of this
+ variable is normally inserted by the `configure' shell script.
+ (If you are using Autoconf, use `srcdir = @srcdir@'.)
+
+ For example:
+
+ # Common prefix for installation directories.
+ # NOTE: This directory must exist when you start the install.
+ prefix = /usr/local
+ datarootdir = $(prefix)/share
+ datadir = $(datarootdir)
+ exec_prefix = $(prefix)
+ # Where to put the executable for the command `gcc'.
+ bindir = $(exec_prefix)/bin
+ # Where to put the directories used by the compiler.
+ libexecdir = $(exec_prefix)/libexec
+ # Where to put the Info files.
+ infodir = $(datarootdir)/info
+
+ If your program installs a large number of files into one of the
+standard user-specified directories, it might be useful to group them
+into a subdirectory particular to that program. If you do this, you
+should write the `install' rule to create these subdirectories.
+
+ Do not expect the user to include the subdirectory name in the value
+of any of the variables listed above. The idea of having a uniform set
+of variable names for installation directories is to enable the user to
+specify the exact same values for several different GNU packages. In
+order for this to be useful, all the packages must be designed so that
+they will work sensibly when the user does so.
+
+ At times, not all of these variables may be implemented in the
+current release of Autoconf and/or Automake; but as of Autoconf 2.60, we
+believe all of them are. When any are missing, the descriptions here
+serve as specifications for what Autoconf will implement. As a
+programmer, you can either use a development version of Autoconf or
+avoid using these variables until a stable release is made which
+supports them.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Standard Targets, Next: Install Command Categories, Prev: Directory Variables, Up: Makefile Conventions
+
+7.2.6 Standard Targets for Users
+--------------------------------
+
+All GNU programs should have the following targets in their Makefiles:
+
+`all'
+ Compile the entire program. This should be the default target.
+ This target need not rebuild any documentation files; Info files
+ should normally be included in the distribution, and DVI (and other
+ documentation format) files should be made only when explicitly
+ asked for.
+
+ By default, the Make rules should compile and link with `-g', so
+ that executable programs have debugging symbols. Users who don't
+ mind being helpless can strip the executables later if they wish.
+
+`install'
+ Compile the program and copy the executables, libraries, and so on
+ to the file names where they should reside for actual use. If
+ there is a simple test to verify that a program is properly
+ installed, this target should run that test.
+
+ Do not strip executables when installing them. Devil-may-care
+ users can use the `install-strip' target to do that.
+
+ If possible, write the `install' target rule so that it does not
+ modify anything in the directory where the program was built,
+ provided `make all' has just been done. This is convenient for
+ building the program under one user name and installing it under
+ another.
+
+ The commands should create all the directories in which files are
+ to be installed, if they don't already exist. This includes the
+ directories specified as the values of the variables `prefix' and
+ `exec_prefix', as well as all subdirectories that are needed. One
+ way to do this is by means of an `installdirs' target as described
+ below.
+
+ Use `-' before any command for installing a man page, so that
+ `make' will ignore any errors. This is in case there are systems
+ that don't have the Unix man page documentation system installed.
+
+ The way to install Info files is to copy them into `$(infodir)'
+ with `$(INSTALL_DATA)' (*note Command Variables::), and then run
+ the `install-info' program if it is present. `install-info' is a
+ program that edits the Info `dir' file to add or update the menu
+ entry for the given Info file; it is part of the Texinfo package.
+ Here is a sample rule to install an Info file:
+
+ $(DESTDIR)$(infodir)/foo.info: foo.info
+ $(POST_INSTALL)
+ # There may be a newer info file in . than in srcdir.
+ -if test -f foo.info; then d=.; \
+ else d=$(srcdir); fi; \
+ $(INSTALL_DATA) $$d/foo.info $(DESTDIR)$@; \
+ # Run install-info only if it exists.
+ # Use `if' instead of just prepending `-' to the
+ # line so we notice real errors from install-info.
+ # We use `$(SHELL) -c' because some shells do not
+ # fail gracefully when there is an unknown command.
+ if $(SHELL) -c 'install-info --version' \
+ >/dev/null 2>&1; then \
+ install-info --dir-file=$(DESTDIR)$(infodir)/dir \
+ $(DESTDIR)$(infodir)/foo.info; \
+ else true; fi
+
+ When writing the `install' target, you must classify all the
+ commands into three categories: normal ones, "pre-installation"
+ commands and "post-installation" commands. *Note Install Command
+ Categories::.
+
+`install-html'
+`install-dvi'
+`install-pdf'
+`install-ps'
+ These targets install documentation in formats other than Info;
+ they're intended to be called explicitly by the person installing
+ the package, if that format is desired. GNU prefers Info files,
+ so these must be installed by the `install' target.
+
+ When you have many documentation files to install, we recommend
+ that you avoid collisions and clutter by arranging for these
+ targets to install in subdirectories of the appropriate
+ installation directory, such as `htmldir'. As one example, if
+ your package has multiple manuals, and you wish to install HTML
+ documentation with many files (such as the "split" mode output by
+ `makeinfo --html'), you'll certainly want to use subdirectories,
+ or two nodes with the same name in different manuals will
+ overwrite each other.
+
+ Please make these `install-FORMAT' targets invoke the commands for
+ the FORMAT target, for example, by making FORMAT a dependency.
+
+`uninstall'
+ Delete all the installed files--the copies that the `install' and
+ `install-*' targets create.
+
+ This rule should not modify the directories where compilation is
+ done, only the directories where files are installed.
+
+ The uninstallation commands are divided into three categories,
+ just like the installation commands. *Note Install Command
+ Categories::.
+
+`install-strip'
+ Like `install', but strip the executable files while installing
+ them. In simple cases, this target can use the `install' target in
+ a simple way:
+
+ install-strip:
+ $(MAKE) INSTALL_PROGRAM='$(INSTALL_PROGRAM) -s' \
+ install
+
+ But if the package installs scripts as well as real executables,
+ the `install-strip' target can't just refer to the `install'
+ target; it has to strip the executables but not the scripts.
+
+ `install-strip' should not strip the executables in the build
+ directory which are being copied for installation. It should only
+ strip the copies that are installed.
+
+ Normally we do not recommend stripping an executable unless you
+ are sure the program has no bugs. However, it can be reasonable
+ to install a stripped executable for actual execution while saving
+ the unstripped executable elsewhere in case there is a bug.
+
+`clean'
+ Delete all files in the current directory that are normally
+ created by building the program. Also delete files in other
+ directories if they are created by this makefile. However, don't
+ delete the files that record the configuration. Also preserve
+ files that could be made by building, but normally aren't because
+ the distribution comes with them. There is no need to delete
+ parent directories that were created with `mkdir -p', since they
+ could have existed anyway.
+
+ Delete `.dvi' files here if they are not part of the distribution.
+
+`distclean'
+ Delete all files in the current directory (or created by this
+ makefile) that are created by configuring or building the program.
+ If you have unpacked the source and built the program without
+ creating any other files, `make distclean' should leave only the
+ files that were in the distribution. However, there is no need to
+ delete parent directories that were created with `mkdir -p', since
+ they could have existed anyway.
+
+`mostlyclean'
+ Like `clean', but may refrain from deleting a few files that people
+ normally don't want to recompile. For example, the `mostlyclean'
+ target for GCC does not delete `libgcc.a', because recompiling it
+ is rarely necessary and takes a lot of time.
+
+`maintainer-clean'
+ Delete almost everything that can be reconstructed with this
+ Makefile. This typically includes everything deleted by
+ `distclean', plus more: C source files produced by Bison, tags
+ tables, Info files, and so on.
+
+ The reason we say "almost everything" is that running the command
+ `make maintainer-clean' should not delete `configure' even if
+ `configure' can be remade using a rule in the Makefile. More
+ generally, `make maintainer-clean' should not delete anything that
+ needs to exist in order to run `configure' and then begin to build
+ the program. Also, there is no need to delete parent directories
+ that were created with `mkdir -p', since they could have existed
+ anyway. These are the only exceptions; `maintainer-clean' should
+ delete everything else that can be rebuilt.
+
+ The `maintainer-clean' target is intended to be used by a
+ maintainer of the package, not by ordinary users. You may need
+ special tools to reconstruct some of the files that `make
+ maintainer-clean' deletes. Since these files are normally
+ included in the distribution, we don't take care to make them easy
+ to reconstruct. If you find you need to unpack the full
+ distribution again, don't blame us.
+
+ To help make users aware of this, the commands for the special
+ `maintainer-clean' target should start with these two:
+
+ @echo 'This command is intended for maintainers to use; it'
+ @echo 'deletes files that may need special tools to rebuild.'
+
+`TAGS'
+ Update a tags table for this program.
+
+`info'
+ Generate any Info files needed. The best way to write the rules
+ is as follows:
+
+ info: foo.info
+
+ foo.info: foo.texi chap1.texi chap2.texi
+ $(MAKEINFO) $(srcdir)/foo.texi
+
+ You must define the variable `MAKEINFO' in the Makefile. It should
+ run the `makeinfo' program, which is part of the Texinfo
+ distribution.
+
+ Normally a GNU distribution comes with Info files, and that means
+ the Info files are present in the source directory. Therefore,
+ the Make rule for an info file should update it in the source
+ directory. When users build the package, ordinarily Make will not
+ update the Info files because they will already be up to date.
+
+`dvi'
+`html'
+`pdf'
+`ps'
+ Generate documentation files in the given format. These targets
+ should always exist, but any or all can be a no-op if the given
+ output format cannot be generated. These targets should not be
+ dependencies of the `all' target; the user must manually invoke
+ them.
+
+ Here's an example rule for generating DVI files from Texinfo:
+
+ dvi: foo.dvi
+
+ foo.dvi: foo.texi chap1.texi chap2.texi
+ $(TEXI2DVI) $(srcdir)/foo.texi
+
+ You must define the variable `TEXI2DVI' in the Makefile. It should
+ run the program `texi2dvi', which is part of the Texinfo
+ distribution.(1) Alternatively, write just the dependencies, and
+ allow GNU `make' to provide the command.
+
+ Here's another example, this one for generating HTML from Texinfo:
+
+ html: foo.html
+
+ foo.html: foo.texi chap1.texi chap2.texi
+ $(TEXI2HTML) $(srcdir)/foo.texi
+
+ Again, you would define the variable `TEXI2HTML' in the Makefile;
+ for example, it might run `makeinfo --no-split --html' (`makeinfo'
+ is part of the Texinfo distribution).
+
+`dist'
+ Create a distribution tar file for this program. The tar file
+ should be set up so that the file names in the tar file start with
+ a subdirectory name which is the name of the package it is a
+ distribution for. This name can include the version number.
+
+ For example, the distribution tar file of GCC version 1.40 unpacks
+ into a subdirectory named `gcc-1.40'.
+
+ The easiest way to do this is to create a subdirectory
+ appropriately named, use `ln' or `cp' to install the proper files
+ in it, and then `tar' that subdirectory.
+
+ Compress the tar file with `gzip'. For example, the actual
+ distribution file for GCC version 1.40 is called `gcc-1.40.tar.gz'.
+
+ The `dist' target should explicitly depend on all non-source files
+ that are in the distribution, to make sure they are up to date in
+ the distribution. *Note Making Releases: Releases.
+
+`check'
+ Perform self-tests (if any). The user must build the program
+ before running the tests, but need not install the program; you
+ should write the self-tests so that they work when the program is
+ built but not installed.
+
+ The following targets are suggested as conventional names, for
+programs in which they are useful.
+
+`installcheck'
+ Perform installation tests (if any). The user must build and
+ install the program before running the tests. You should not
+ assume that `$(bindir)' is in the search path.
+
+`installdirs'
+ It's useful to add a target named `installdirs' to create the
+ directories where files are installed, and their parent
+ directories. There is a script called `mkinstalldirs' which is
+ convenient for this; you can find it in the Texinfo package. You
+ can use a rule like this:
+
+ # Make sure all installation directories (e.g. $(bindir))
+ # actually exist by making them if necessary.
+ installdirs: mkinstalldirs
+ $(srcdir)/mkinstalldirs $(bindir) $(datadir) \
+ $(libdir) $(infodir) \
+ $(mandir)
+
+ or, if you wish to support `DESTDIR',
+
+ # Make sure all installation directories (e.g. $(bindir))
+ # actually exist by making them if necessary.
+ installdirs: mkinstalldirs
+ $(srcdir)/mkinstalldirs \
+ $(DESTDIR)$(bindir) $(DESTDIR)$(datadir) \
+ $(DESTDIR)$(libdir) $(DESTDIR)$(infodir) \
+ $(DESTDIR)$(mandir)
+
+ This rule should not modify the directories where compilation is
+ done. It should do nothing but create installation directories.
+
+ ---------- Footnotes ----------
+
+ (1) `texi2dvi' uses TeX to do the real work of formatting. TeX is
+not distributed with Texinfo.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Install Command Categories, Prev: Standard Targets, Up: Makefile Conventions
+
+7.2.7 Install Command Categories
+--------------------------------
+
+When writing the `install' target, you must classify all the commands
+into three categories: normal ones, "pre-installation" commands and
+"post-installation" commands.
+
+ Normal commands move files into their proper places, and set their
+modes. They may not alter any files except the ones that come entirely
+from the package they belong to.
+
+ Pre-installation and post-installation commands may alter other
+files; in particular, they can edit global configuration files or data
+bases.
+
+ Pre-installation commands are typically executed before the normal
+commands, and post-installation commands are typically run after the
+normal commands.
+
+ The most common use for a post-installation command is to run
+`install-info'. This cannot be done with a normal command, since it
+alters a file (the Info directory) which does not come entirely and
+solely from the package being installed. It is a post-installation
+command because it needs to be done after the normal command which
+installs the package's Info files.
+
+ Most programs don't need any pre-installation commands, but we have
+the feature just in case it is needed.
+
+ To classify the commands in the `install' rule into these three
+categories, insert "category lines" among them. A category line
+specifies the category for the commands that follow.
+
+ A category line consists of a tab and a reference to a special Make
+variable, plus an optional comment at the end. There are three
+variables you can use, one for each category; the variable name
+specifies the category. Category lines are no-ops in ordinary execution
+because these three Make variables are normally undefined (and you
+_should not_ define them in the makefile).
+
+ Here are the three possible category lines, each with a comment that
+explains what it means:
+
+ $(PRE_INSTALL) # Pre-install commands follow.
+ $(POST_INSTALL) # Post-install commands follow.
+ $(NORMAL_INSTALL) # Normal commands follow.
+
+ If you don't use a category line at the beginning of the `install'
+rule, all the commands are classified as normal until the first category
+line. If you don't use any category lines, all the commands are
+classified as normal.
+
+ These are the category lines for `uninstall':
+
+ $(PRE_UNINSTALL) # Pre-uninstall commands follow.
+ $(POST_UNINSTALL) # Post-uninstall commands follow.
+ $(NORMAL_UNINSTALL) # Normal commands follow.
+
+ Typically, a pre-uninstall command would be used for deleting entries
+from the Info directory.
+
+ If the `install' or `uninstall' target has any dependencies which
+act as subroutines of installation, then you should start _each_
+dependency's commands with a category line, and start the main target's
+commands with a category line also. This way, you can ensure that each
+command is placed in the right category regardless of which of the
+dependencies actually run.
+
+ Pre-installation and post-installation commands should not run any
+programs except for these:
+
+ [ basename bash cat chgrp chmod chown cmp cp dd diff echo
+ egrep expand expr false fgrep find getopt grep gunzip gzip
+ hostname install install-info kill ldconfig ln ls md5sum
+ mkdir mkfifo mknod mv printenv pwd rm rmdir sed sort tee
+ test touch true uname xargs yes
+
+ The reason for distinguishing the commands in this way is for the
+sake of making binary packages. Typically a binary package contains
+all the executables and other files that need to be installed, and has
+its own method of installing them--so it does not need to run the normal
+installation commands. But installing the binary package does need to
+execute the pre-installation and post-installation commands.
+
+ Programs to build binary packages work by extracting the
+pre-installation and post-installation commands. Here is one way of
+extracting the pre-installation commands (the `-s' option to `make' is
+needed to silence messages about entering subdirectories):
+
+ make -s -n install -o all \
+ PRE_INSTALL=pre-install \
+ POST_INSTALL=post-install \
+ NORMAL_INSTALL=normal-install \
+ | gawk -f pre-install.awk
+
+where the file `pre-install.awk' could contain this:
+
+ $0 ~ /^(normal-install|post-install)[ \t]*$/ {on = 0}
+ on {print $0}
+ $0 ~ /^pre-install[ \t]*$/ {on = 1}
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Releases, Prev: Makefile Conventions, Up: Managing Releases
+
+7.3 Making Releases
+===================
+
+You should identify each release with a pair of version numbers, a
+major version and a minor. We have no objection to using more than two
+numbers, but it is very unlikely that you really need them.
+
+ Package the distribution of `Foo version 69.96' up in a gzipped tar
+file with the name `foo-69.96.tar.gz'. It should unpack into a
+subdirectory named `foo-69.96'.
+
+ Building and installing the program should never modify any of the
+files contained in the distribution. This means that all the files
+that form part of the program in any way must be classified into "source
+files" and "non-source files". Source files are written by humans and
+never changed automatically; non-source files are produced from source
+files by programs under the control of the Makefile.
+
+ The distribution should contain a file named `README' which gives
+the name of the package, and a general description of what it does. It
+is also good to explain the purpose of each of the first-level
+subdirectories in the package, if there are any. The `README' file
+should either state the version number of the package, or refer to where
+in the package it can be found.
+
+ The `README' file should refer to the file `INSTALL', which should
+contain an explanation of the installation procedure.
+
+ The `README' file should also refer to the file which contains the
+copying conditions. The GNU GPL, if used, should be in a file called
+`COPYING'. If the GNU LGPL is used, it should be in a file called
+`COPYING.LESSER'.
+
+ Naturally, all the source files must be in the distribution. It is
+okay to include non-source files in the distribution, provided they are
+up-to-date and machine-independent, so that building the distribution
+normally will never modify them. We commonly include non-source files
+produced by Bison, `lex', TeX, and `makeinfo'; this helps avoid
+unnecessary dependencies between our distributions, so that users can
+install whichever packages they want to install.
+
+ Non-source files that might actually be modified by building and
+installing the program should *never* be included in the distribution.
+So if you do distribute non-source files, always make sure they are up
+to date when you make a new distribution.
+
+ Make sure that all the files in the distribution are world-readable,
+and that directories are world-readable and world-searchable (octal
+mode 755). We used to recommend that all directories in the
+distribution also be world-writable (octal mode 777), because ancient
+versions of `tar' would otherwise not cope when extracting the archive
+as an unprivileged user. That can easily lead to security issues when
+creating the archive, however, so now we recommend against that.
+
+ Don't include any symbolic links in the distribution itself. If the
+tar file contains symbolic links, then people cannot even unpack it on
+systems that don't support symbolic links. Also, don't use multiple
+names for one file in different directories, because certain file
+systems cannot handle this and that prevents unpacking the distribution.
+
+ Try to make sure that all the file names will be unique on MS-DOS. A
+name on MS-DOS consists of up to 8 characters, optionally followed by a
+period and up to three characters. MS-DOS will truncate extra
+characters both before and after the period. Thus, `foobarhacker.c'
+and `foobarhacker.o' are not ambiguous; they are truncated to
+`foobarha.c' and `foobarha.o', which are distinct.
+
+ Include in your distribution a copy of the `texinfo.tex' you used to
+test print any `*.texinfo' or `*.texi' files.
+
+ Likewise, if your program uses small GNU software packages like
+regex, getopt, obstack, or termcap, include them in the distribution
+file. Leaving them out would make the distribution file a little
+smaller at the expense of possible inconvenience to a user who doesn't
+know what other files to get.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: References, Next: GNU Free Documentation License, Prev: Managing Releases, Up: Top
+
+8 References to Non-Free Software and Documentation
+***************************************************
+
+A GNU program should not recommend, promote, or grant legitimacy to the
+use of any non-free program. Proprietary software is a social and
+ethical problem, and our aim is to put an end to that problem. We
+can't stop some people from writing proprietary programs, or stop other
+people from using them, but we can and should refuse to advertise them
+to new potential customers, or to give the public the idea that their
+existence is ethical.
+
+ The GNU definition of free software is found on the GNU web site at
+`http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html', and the definition of
+free documentation is found at
+`http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-doc.html'. The terms "free" and
+"non-free", used in this document, refer to those definitions.
+
+ A list of important licenses and whether they qualify as free is in
+`http://www.gnu.org/licenses/license-list.html'. If it is not clear
+whether a license qualifies as free, please ask the GNU Project by
+writing to <licensing@gnu.org>. We will answer, and if the license is
+an important one, we will add it to the list.
+
+ When a non-free program or system is well known, you can mention it
+in passing--that is harmless, since users who might want to use it
+probably already know about it. For instance, it is fine to explain
+how to build your package on top of some widely used non-free operating
+system, or how to use it together with some widely used non-free
+program.
+
+ However, you should give only the necessary information to help those
+who already use the non-free program to use your program with it--don't
+give, or refer to, any further information about the proprietary
+program, and don't imply that the proprietary program enhances your
+program, or that its existence is in any way a good thing. The goal
+should be that people already using the proprietary program will get
+the advice they need about how to use your free program with it, while
+people who don't already use the proprietary program will not see
+anything likely to lead them to take an interest in it.
+
+ If a non-free program or system is obscure in your program's domain,
+your program should not mention or support it at all, since doing so
+would tend to popularize the non-free program more than it popularizes
+your program. (You cannot hope to find many additional users for your
+program among the users of Foobar, if the existence of Foobar is not
+generally known among people who might want to use your program.)
+
+ Sometimes a program is free software in itself but depends on a
+non-free platform in order to run. For instance, many Java programs
+depend on some non-free Java libraries. To recommend or promote such a
+program is to promote the other programs it needs. This is why we are
+careful about listing Java programs in the Free Software Directory: we
+don't want to promote the non-free Java libraries.
+
+ We hope this particular problem with Java will be gone by and by, as
+we replace the remaining non-free standard Java libraries with free
+software, but the general principle will remain the same: don't
+recommend, promote or legitimize programs that depend on non-free
+software to run.
+
+ Some free programs strongly encourage the use of non-free software.
+A typical example is `mplayer'. It is free software in itself, and the
+free code can handle some kinds of files. However, `mplayer'
+recommends use of non-free codecs for other kinds of files, and users
+that install `mplayer' are very likely to install those codecs along
+with it. To recommend `mplayer' is, in effect, to promote use of the
+non-free codecs.
+
+ Thus, you should not recommend programs that strongly encourage the
+use of non-free software. This is why we do not list `mplayer' in the
+Free Software Directory.
+
+ A GNU package should not refer the user to any non-free documentation
+for free software. Free documentation that can be included in free
+operating systems is essential for completing the GNU system, or any
+free operating system, so encouraging it is a priority; to recommend
+use of documentation that we are not allowed to include undermines the
+impetus for the community to produce documentation that we can include.
+So GNU packages should never recommend non-free documentation.
+
+ By contrast, it is ok to refer to journal articles and textbooks in
+the comments of a program for explanation of how it functions, even
+though they are non-free. This is because we don't include such things
+in the GNU system even they are free--they are outside the scope of
+what a software distribution needs to include.
+
+ Referring to a web site that describes or recommends a non-free
+program is promoting that program, so please do not make links (or
+mention by name) web sites that contain such material. This policy is
+relevant particularly for the web pages for a GNU package.
+
+ Following links from nearly any web site can lead eventually to
+non-free software; this is inherent in the nature of the web. So it
+makes no sense to criticize a site for having such links. As long as
+the site does not itself recommend a non-free program, there is no need
+to consider the question of the sites that it links to for other
+reasons.
+
+ Thus, for example, you should not refer to AT&T's web site if that
+recommends AT&T's non-free software packages; you should not refer to a
+site that links to AT&T's site presenting it as a place to get some
+non-free program, because that link recommends and legitimizes the
+non-free program. However, that a site contains a link to AT&T's web
+site for some other purpose (such as long-distance telephone service)
+is not an objection against it.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: GNU Free Documentation License, Next: Index, Prev: References, Up: Top
+
+Appendix A GNU Free Documentation License
+*****************************************
+
+ Version 1.3, 3 November 2008
+
+ Copyright (C) 2000, 2001, 2002, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+ `http://fsf.org/'
+
+ Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
+ of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
+
+ 0. PREAMBLE
+
+ The purpose of this License is to make a manual, textbook, or other
+ functional and useful document "free" in the sense of freedom: to
+ assure everyone the effective freedom to copy and redistribute it,
+ with or without modifying it, either commercially or
+ noncommercially. Secondarily, this License preserves for the
+ author and publisher a way to get credit for their work, while not
+ being considered responsible for modifications made by others.
+
+ This License is a kind of "copyleft", which means that derivative
+ works of the document must themselves be free in the same sense.
+ It complements the GNU General Public License, which is a copyleft
+ license designed for free software.
+
+ We have designed this License in order to use it for manuals for
+ free software, because free software needs free documentation: a
+ free program should come with manuals providing the same freedoms
+ that the software does. But this License is not limited to
+ software manuals; it can be used for any textual work, regardless
+ of subject matter or whether it is published as a printed book.
+ We recommend this License principally for works whose purpose is
+ instruction or reference.
+
+ 1. APPLICABILITY AND DEFINITIONS
+
+ This License applies to any manual or other work, in any medium,
+ that contains a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it
+ can be distributed under the terms of this License. Such a notice
+ grants a world-wide, royalty-free license, unlimited in duration,
+ to use that work under the conditions stated herein. The
+ "Document", below, refers to any such manual or work. Any member
+ of the public is a licensee, and is addressed as "you". You
+ accept the license if you copy, modify or distribute the work in a
+ way requiring permission under copyright law.
+
+ A "Modified Version" of the Document means any work containing the
+ Document or a portion of it, either copied verbatim, or with
+ modifications and/or translated into another language.
+
+ A "Secondary Section" is a named appendix or a front-matter section
+ of the Document that deals exclusively with the relationship of the
+ publishers or authors of the Document to the Document's overall
+ subject (or to related matters) and contains nothing that could
+ fall directly within that overall subject. (Thus, if the Document
+ is in part a textbook of mathematics, a Secondary Section may not
+ explain any mathematics.) The relationship could be a matter of
+ historical connection with the subject or with related matters, or
+ of legal, commercial, philosophical, ethical or political position
+ regarding them.
+
+ The "Invariant Sections" are certain Secondary Sections whose
+ titles are designated, as being those of Invariant Sections, in
+ the notice that says that the Document is released under this
+ License. If a section does not fit the above definition of
+ Secondary then it is not allowed to be designated as Invariant.
+ The Document may contain zero Invariant Sections. If the Document
+ does not identify any Invariant Sections then there are none.
+
+ The "Cover Texts" are certain short passages of text that are
+ listed, as Front-Cover Texts or Back-Cover Texts, in the notice
+ that says that the Document is released under this License. A
+ Front-Cover Text may be at most 5 words, and a Back-Cover Text may
+ be at most 25 words.
+
+ A "Transparent" copy of the Document means a machine-readable copy,
+ represented in a format whose specification is available to the
+ general public, that is suitable for revising the document
+ straightforwardly with generic text editors or (for images
+ composed of pixels) generic paint programs or (for drawings) some
+ widely available drawing editor, and that is suitable for input to
+ text formatters or for automatic translation to a variety of
+ formats suitable for input to text formatters. A copy made in an
+ otherwise Transparent file format whose markup, or absence of
+ markup, has been arranged to thwart or discourage subsequent
+ modification by readers is not Transparent. An image format is
+ not Transparent if used for any substantial amount of text. A
+ copy that is not "Transparent" is called "Opaque".
+
+ Examples of suitable formats for Transparent copies include plain
+ ASCII without markup, Texinfo input format, LaTeX input format,
+ SGML or XML using a publicly available DTD, and
+ standard-conforming simple HTML, PostScript or PDF designed for
+ human modification. Examples of transparent image formats include
+ PNG, XCF and JPG. Opaque formats include proprietary formats that
+ can be read and edited only by proprietary word processors, SGML or
+ XML for which the DTD and/or processing tools are not generally
+ available, and the machine-generated HTML, PostScript or PDF
+ produced by some word processors for output purposes only.
+
+ The "Title Page" means, for a printed book, the title page itself,
+ plus such following pages as are needed to hold, legibly, the
+ material this License requires to appear in the title page. For
+ works in formats which do not have any title page as such, "Title
+ Page" means the text near the most prominent appearance of the
+ work's title, preceding the beginning of the body of the text.
+
+ The "publisher" means any person or entity that distributes copies
+ of the Document to the public.
+
+ A section "Entitled XYZ" means a named subunit of the Document
+ whose title either is precisely XYZ or contains XYZ in parentheses
+ following text that translates XYZ in another language. (Here XYZ
+ stands for a specific section name mentioned below, such as
+ "Acknowledgements", "Dedications", "Endorsements", or "History".)
+ To "Preserve the Title" of such a section when you modify the
+ Document means that it remains a section "Entitled XYZ" according
+ to this definition.
+
+ The Document may include Warranty Disclaimers next to the notice
+ which states that this License applies to the Document. These
+ Warranty Disclaimers are considered to be included by reference in
+ this License, but only as regards disclaiming warranties: any other
+ implication that these Warranty Disclaimers may have is void and
+ has no effect on the meaning of this License.
+
+ 2. VERBATIM COPYING
+
+ You may copy and distribute the Document in any medium, either
+ commercially or noncommercially, provided that this License, the
+ copyright notices, and the license notice saying this License
+ applies to the Document are reproduced in all copies, and that you
+ add no other conditions whatsoever to those of this License. You
+ may not use technical measures to obstruct or control the reading
+ or further copying of the copies you make or distribute. However,
+ you may accept compensation in exchange for copies. If you
+ distribute a large enough number of copies you must also follow
+ the conditions in section 3.
+
+ You may also lend copies, under the same conditions stated above,
+ and you may publicly display copies.
+
+ 3. COPYING IN QUANTITY
+
+ If you publish printed copies (or copies in media that commonly
+ have printed covers) of the Document, numbering more than 100, and
+ the Document's license notice requires Cover Texts, you must
+ enclose the copies in covers that carry, clearly and legibly, all
+ these Cover Texts: Front-Cover Texts on the front cover, and
+ Back-Cover Texts on the back cover. Both covers must also clearly
+ and legibly identify you as the publisher of these copies. The
+ front cover must present the full title with all words of the
+ title equally prominent and visible. You may add other material
+ on the covers in addition. Copying with changes limited to the
+ covers, as long as they preserve the title of the Document and
+ satisfy these conditions, can be treated as verbatim copying in
+ other respects.
+
+ If the required texts for either cover are too voluminous to fit
+ legibly, you should put the first ones listed (as many as fit
+ reasonably) on the actual cover, and continue the rest onto
+ adjacent pages.
+
+ If you publish or distribute Opaque copies of the Document
+ numbering more than 100, you must either include a
+ machine-readable Transparent copy along with each Opaque copy, or
+ state in or with each Opaque copy a computer-network location from
+ which the general network-using public has access to download
+ using public-standard network protocols a complete Transparent
+ copy of the Document, free of added material. If you use the
+ latter option, you must take reasonably prudent steps, when you
+ begin distribution of Opaque copies in quantity, to ensure that
+ this Transparent copy will remain thus accessible at the stated
+ location until at least one year after the last time you
+ distribute an Opaque copy (directly or through your agents or
+ retailers) of that edition to the public.
+
+ It is requested, but not required, that you contact the authors of
+ the Document well before redistributing any large number of
+ copies, to give them a chance to provide you with an updated
+ version of the Document.
+
+ 4. MODIFICATIONS
+
+ You may copy and distribute a Modified Version of the Document
+ under the conditions of sections 2 and 3 above, provided that you
+ release the Modified Version under precisely this License, with
+ the Modified Version filling the role of the Document, thus
+ licensing distribution and modification of the Modified Version to
+ whoever possesses a copy of it. In addition, you must do these
+ things in the Modified Version:
+
+ A. Use in the Title Page (and on the covers, if any) a title
+ distinct from that of the Document, and from those of
+ previous versions (which should, if there were any, be listed
+ in the History section of the Document). You may use the
+ same title as a previous version if the original publisher of
+ that version gives permission.
+
+ B. List on the Title Page, as authors, one or more persons or
+ entities responsible for authorship of the modifications in
+ the Modified Version, together with at least five of the
+ principal authors of the Document (all of its principal
+ authors, if it has fewer than five), unless they release you
+ from this requirement.
+
+ C. State on the Title page the name of the publisher of the
+ Modified Version, as the publisher.
+
+ D. Preserve all the copyright notices of the Document.
+
+ E. Add an appropriate copyright notice for your modifications
+ adjacent to the other copyright notices.
+
+ F. Include, immediately after the copyright notices, a license
+ notice giving the public permission to use the Modified
+ Version under the terms of this License, in the form shown in
+ the Addendum below.
+
+ G. Preserve in that license notice the full lists of Invariant
+ Sections and required Cover Texts given in the Document's
+ license notice.
+
+ H. Include an unaltered copy of this License.
+
+ I. Preserve the section Entitled "History", Preserve its Title,
+ and add to it an item stating at least the title, year, new
+ authors, and publisher of the Modified Version as given on
+ the Title Page. If there is no section Entitled "History" in
+ the Document, create one stating the title, year, authors,
+ and publisher of the Document as given on its Title Page,
+ then add an item describing the Modified Version as stated in
+ the previous sentence.
+
+ J. Preserve the network location, if any, given in the Document
+ for public access to a Transparent copy of the Document, and
+ likewise the network locations given in the Document for
+ previous versions it was based on. These may be placed in
+ the "History" section. You may omit a network location for a
+ work that was published at least four years before the
+ Document itself, or if the original publisher of the version
+ it refers to gives permission.
+
+ K. For any section Entitled "Acknowledgements" or "Dedications",
+ Preserve the Title of the section, and preserve in the
+ section all the substance and tone of each of the contributor
+ acknowledgements and/or dedications given therein.
+
+ L. Preserve all the Invariant Sections of the Document,
+ unaltered in their text and in their titles. Section numbers
+ or the equivalent are not considered part of the section
+ titles.
+
+ M. Delete any section Entitled "Endorsements". Such a section
+ may not be included in the Modified Version.
+
+ N. Do not retitle any existing section to be Entitled
+ "Endorsements" or to conflict in title with any Invariant
+ Section.
+
+ O. Preserve any Warranty Disclaimers.
+
+ If the Modified Version includes new front-matter sections or
+ appendices that qualify as Secondary Sections and contain no
+ material copied from the Document, you may at your option
+ designate some or all of these sections as invariant. To do this,
+ add their titles to the list of Invariant Sections in the Modified
+ Version's license notice. These titles must be distinct from any
+ other section titles.
+
+ You may add a section Entitled "Endorsements", provided it contains
+ nothing but endorsements of your Modified Version by various
+ parties--for example, statements of peer review or that the text
+ has been approved by an organization as the authoritative
+ definition of a standard.
+
+ You may add a passage of up to five words as a Front-Cover Text,
+ and a passage of up to 25 words as a Back-Cover Text, to the end
+ of the list of Cover Texts in the Modified Version. Only one
+ passage of Front-Cover Text and one of Back-Cover Text may be
+ added by (or through arrangements made by) any one entity. If the
+ Document already includes a cover text for the same cover,
+ previously added by you or by arrangement made by the same entity
+ you are acting on behalf of, you may not add another; but you may
+ replace the old one, on explicit permission from the previous
+ publisher that added the old one.
+
+ The author(s) and publisher(s) of the Document do not by this
+ License give permission to use their names for publicity for or to
+ assert or imply endorsement of any Modified Version.
+
+ 5. COMBINING DOCUMENTS
+
+ You may combine the Document with other documents released under
+ this License, under the terms defined in section 4 above for
+ modified versions, provided that you include in the combination
+ all of the Invariant Sections of all of the original documents,
+ unmodified, and list them all as Invariant Sections of your
+ combined work in its license notice, and that you preserve all
+ their Warranty Disclaimers.
+
+ The combined work need only contain one copy of this License, and
+ multiple identical Invariant Sections may be replaced with a single
+ copy. If there are multiple Invariant Sections with the same name
+ but different contents, make the title of each such section unique
+ by adding at the end of it, in parentheses, the name of the
+ original author or publisher of that section if known, or else a
+ unique number. Make the same adjustment to the section titles in
+ the list of Invariant Sections in the license notice of the
+ combined work.
+
+ In the combination, you must combine any sections Entitled
+ "History" in the various original documents, forming one section
+ Entitled "History"; likewise combine any sections Entitled
+ "Acknowledgements", and any sections Entitled "Dedications". You
+ must delete all sections Entitled "Endorsements."
+
+ 6. COLLECTIONS OF DOCUMENTS
+
+ You may make a collection consisting of the Document and other
+ documents released under this License, and replace the individual
+ copies of this License in the various documents with a single copy
+ that is included in the collection, provided that you follow the
+ rules of this License for verbatim copying of each of the
+ documents in all other respects.
+
+ You may extract a single document from such a collection, and
+ distribute it individually under this License, provided you insert
+ a copy of this License into the extracted document, and follow
+ this License in all other respects regarding verbatim copying of
+ that document.
+
+ 7. AGGREGATION WITH INDEPENDENT WORKS
+
+ A compilation of the Document or its derivatives with other
+ separate and independent documents or works, in or on a volume of
+ a storage or distribution medium, is called an "aggregate" if the
+ copyright resulting from the compilation is not used to limit the
+ legal rights of the compilation's users beyond what the individual
+ works permit. When the Document is included in an aggregate, this
+ License does not apply to the other works in the aggregate which
+ are not themselves derivative works of the Document.
+
+ If the Cover Text requirement of section 3 is applicable to these
+ copies of the Document, then if the Document is less than one half
+ of the entire aggregate, the Document's Cover Texts may be placed
+ on covers that bracket the Document within the aggregate, or the
+ electronic equivalent of covers if the Document is in electronic
+ form. Otherwise they must appear on printed covers that bracket
+ the whole aggregate.
+
+ 8. TRANSLATION
+
+ Translation is considered a kind of modification, so you may
+ distribute translations of the Document under the terms of section
+ 4. Replacing Invariant Sections with translations requires special
+ permission from their copyright holders, but you may include
+ translations of some or all Invariant Sections in addition to the
+ original versions of these Invariant Sections. You may include a
+ translation of this License, and all the license notices in the
+ Document, and any Warranty Disclaimers, provided that you also
+ include the original English version of this License and the
+ original versions of those notices and disclaimers. In case of a
+ disagreement between the translation and the original version of
+ this License or a notice or disclaimer, the original version will
+ prevail.
+
+ If a section in the Document is Entitled "Acknowledgements",
+ "Dedications", or "History", the requirement (section 4) to
+ Preserve its Title (section 1) will typically require changing the
+ actual title.
+
+ 9. TERMINATION
+
+ You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Document
+ except as expressly provided under this License. Any attempt
+ otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute it is void,
+ and will automatically terminate your rights under this License.
+
+ However, if you cease all violation of this License, then your
+ license from a particular copyright holder is reinstated (a)
+ provisionally, unless and until the copyright holder explicitly
+ and finally terminates your license, and (b) permanently, if the
+ copyright holder fails to notify you of the violation by some
+ reasonable means prior to 60 days after the cessation.
+
+ Moreover, your license from a particular copyright holder is
+ reinstated permanently if the copyright holder notifies you of the
+ violation by some reasonable means, this is the first time you have
+ received notice of violation of this License (for any work) from
+ that copyright holder, and you cure the violation prior to 30 days
+ after your receipt of the notice.
+
+ Termination of your rights under this section does not terminate
+ the licenses of parties who have received copies or rights from
+ you under this License. If your rights have been terminated and
+ not permanently reinstated, receipt of a copy of some or all of
+ the same material does not give you any rights to use it.
+
+ 10. FUTURE REVISIONS OF THIS LICENSE
+
+ The Free Software Foundation may publish new, revised versions of
+ the GNU Free Documentation License from time to time. Such new
+ versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may
+ differ in detail to address new problems or concerns. See
+ `http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/'.
+
+ Each version of the License is given a distinguishing version
+ number. If the Document specifies that a particular numbered
+ version of this License "or any later version" applies to it, you
+ have the option of following the terms and conditions either of
+ that specified version or of any later version that has been
+ published (not as a draft) by the Free Software Foundation. If
+ the Document does not specify a version number of this License,
+ you may choose any version ever published (not as a draft) by the
+ Free Software Foundation. If the Document specifies that a proxy
+ can decide which future versions of this License can be used, that
+ proxy's public statement of acceptance of a version permanently
+ authorizes you to choose that version for the Document.
+
+ 11. RELICENSING
+
+ "Massive Multiauthor Collaboration Site" (or "MMC Site") means any
+ World Wide Web server that publishes copyrightable works and also
+ provides prominent facilities for anybody to edit those works. A
+ public wiki that anybody can edit is an example of such a server.
+ A "Massive Multiauthor Collaboration" (or "MMC") contained in the
+ site means any set of copyrightable works thus published on the MMC
+ site.
+
+ "CC-BY-SA" means the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0
+ license published by Creative Commons Corporation, a not-for-profit
+ corporation with a principal place of business in San Francisco,
+ California, as well as future copyleft versions of that license
+ published by that same organization.
+
+ "Incorporate" means to publish or republish a Document, in whole or
+ in part, as part of another Document.
+
+ An MMC is "eligible for relicensing" if it is licensed under this
+ License, and if all works that were first published under this
+ License somewhere other than this MMC, and subsequently
+ incorporated in whole or in part into the MMC, (1) had no cover
+ texts or invariant sections, and (2) were thus incorporated prior
+ to November 1, 2008.
+
+ The operator of an MMC Site may republish an MMC contained in the
+ site under CC-BY-SA on the same site at any time before August 1,
+ 2009, provided the MMC is eligible for relicensing.
+
+
+ADDENDUM: How to use this License for your documents
+====================================================
+
+To use this License in a document you have written, include a copy of
+the License in the document and put the following copyright and license
+notices just after the title page:
+
+ Copyright (C) YEAR YOUR NAME.
+ Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
+ under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3
+ or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation;
+ with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover
+ Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU
+ Free Documentation License''.
+
+ If you have Invariant Sections, Front-Cover Texts and Back-Cover
+Texts, replace the "with...Texts." line with this:
+
+ with the Invariant Sections being LIST THEIR TITLES, with
+ the Front-Cover Texts being LIST, and with the Back-Cover Texts
+ being LIST.
+
+ If you have Invariant Sections without Cover Texts, or some other
+combination of the three, merge those two alternatives to suit the
+situation.
+
+ If your document contains nontrivial examples of program code, we
+recommend releasing these examples in parallel under your choice of
+free software license, such as the GNU General Public License, to
+permit their use in free software.
+
+
+File: standards.info, Node: Index, Prev: GNU Free Documentation License, Up: Top
+
+Index
+*****
+
+
+* Menu:
+
+* #endif, commenting: Comments. (line 60)
+* --help output: --help. (line 6)
+* --version output: --version. (line 6)
+* -Wall compiler option: Syntactic Conventions.
+ (line 10)
+* accepting contributions: Contributions. (line 6)
+* address for bug reports: --help. (line 11)
+* ANSI C standard: Standard C. (line 6)
+* arbitrary limits on data: Semantics. (line 6)
+* ASCII characters: Character Set. (line 6)
+* autoconf: System Portability. (line 23)
+* avoiding proprietary code: Reading Non-Free Code.
+ (line 6)
+* behavior, dependent on program's name: User Interfaces. (line 6)
+* binary packages: Install Command Categories.
+ (line 80)
+* bindir: Directory Variables. (line 54)
+* braces, in C source: Formatting. (line 6)
+* bug reports: --help. (line 11)
+* bug-standards@gnu.org email address: Preface. (line 30)
+* canonical name of a program: --version. (line 12)
+* casting pointers to integers: CPU Portability. (line 89)
+* CGI programs, standard options for: Command-Line Interfaces.
+ (line 31)
+* change logs: Change Logs. (line 6)
+* change logs, conditional changes: Conditional Changes. (line 6)
+* change logs, style: Style of Change Logs.
+ (line 6)
+* character set: Character Set. (line 6)
+* command-line arguments, decoding: Semantics. (line 46)
+* command-line interface: Command-Line Interfaces.
+ (line 6)
+* commenting: Comments. (line 6)
+* compatibility with C and POSIX standards: Compatibility. (line 6)
+* compiler warnings: Syntactic Conventions.
+ (line 10)
+* conditional changes, and change logs: Conditional Changes. (line 6)
+* conditionals, comments for: Comments. (line 60)
+* configure: Configuration. (line 6)
+* control-L: Formatting. (line 118)
+* conventions for makefiles: Makefile Conventions.
+ (line 6)
+* CORBA: Graphical Interfaces.
+ (line 16)
+* credits for manuals: Manual Credits. (line 6)
+* D-bus: Graphical Interfaces.
+ (line 16)
+* data types, and portability: CPU Portability. (line 6)
+* declaration for system functions: System Functions. (line 21)
+* DESTDIR: DESTDIR. (line 6)
+* documentation: Documentation. (line 6)
+* doschk: Names. (line 38)
+* downloading this manual: Preface. (line 14)
+* encodings: Character Set. (line 6)
+* error messages: Semantics. (line 19)
+* error messages, formatting: Errors. (line 6)
+* exec_prefix: Directory Variables. (line 36)
+* expressions, splitting: Formatting. (line 81)
+* FDL, GNU Free Documentation License: GNU Free Documentation License.
+ (line 6)
+* file usage: File Usage. (line 6)
+* file-name limitations: Names. (line 38)
+* formatting error messages: Errors. (line 6)
+* formatting source code: Formatting. (line 6)
+* formfeed: Formatting. (line 118)
+* function argument, declaring: Syntactic Conventions.
+ (line 6)
+* function prototypes: Standard C. (line 17)
+* getopt: Command-Line Interfaces.
+ (line 6)
+* gettext: Internationalization.
+ (line 6)
+* GNOME: Graphical Interfaces.
+ (line 16)
+* GNOME and Guile: Source Language. (line 38)
+* gnustandards project repository: Preface. (line 30)
+* gnustandards-commit@gnu.org mailing list: Preface. (line 24)
+* graphical user interface: Graphical Interfaces.
+ (line 6)
+* grave accent: Quote Characters. (line 6)
+* GTK+: Graphical Interfaces.
+ (line 6)
+* Guile: Source Language. (line 38)
+* implicit int: Syntactic Conventions.
+ (line 6)
+* impossible conditions: Semantics. (line 70)
+* installations, staged: DESTDIR. (line 6)
+* interface styles: Graphical Interfaces.
+ (line 6)
+* internationalization: Internationalization.
+ (line 6)
+* keyboard interface: Graphical Interfaces.
+ (line 16)
+* LDAP: OID Allocations. (line 6)
+* left quote: Quote Characters. (line 6)
+* legal aspects: Legal Issues. (line 6)
+* legal papers: Contributions. (line 6)
+* libexecdir: Directory Variables. (line 67)
+* libraries: Libraries. (line 6)
+* library functions, and portability: System Functions. (line 6)
+* library interface: Graphical Interfaces.
+ (line 16)
+* license for manuals: License for Manuals. (line 6)
+* lint: Syntactic Conventions.
+ (line 109)
+* locale-specific quote characters: Quote Characters. (line 6)
+* long option names: Option Table. (line 6)
+* long-named options: Command-Line Interfaces.
+ (line 12)
+* makefile, conventions for: Makefile Conventions.
+ (line 6)
+* malloc return value: Semantics. (line 25)
+* man pages: Man Pages. (line 6)
+* manual structure: Manual Structure Details.
+ (line 6)
+* memory allocation failure: Semantics. (line 25)
+* memory usage: Memory Usage. (line 6)
+* message text, and internationalization: Internationalization.
+ (line 29)
+* mmap: Mmap. (line 6)
+* multiple variables in a line: Syntactic Conventions.
+ (line 35)
+* names of variables, functions, and files: Names. (line 6)
+* NEWS file: NEWS File. (line 6)
+* non-ASCII characters: Character Set. (line 6)
+* non-POSIX systems, and portability: System Portability. (line 32)
+* non-standard extensions: Using Extensions. (line 6)
+* NUL characters: Semantics. (line 11)
+* OID allocations for GNU: OID Allocations. (line 6)
+* open brace: Formatting. (line 6)
+* optional features, configure-time: Configuration. (line 100)
+* options for compatibility: Compatibility. (line 14)
+* options, standard command-line: Command-Line Interfaces.
+ (line 31)
+* output device and program's behavior: User Interfaces. (line 13)
+* packaging: Releases. (line 6)
+* PATH_INFO, specifying standard options as: Command-Line Interfaces.
+ (line 31)
+* portability, and data types: CPU Portability. (line 6)
+* portability, and library functions: System Functions. (line 6)
+* portability, between system types: System Portability. (line 6)
+* POSIX compatibility: Compatibility. (line 6)
+* POSIXLY_CORRECT, environment variable: Compatibility. (line 21)
+* post-installation commands: Install Command Categories.
+ (line 6)
+* pre-installation commands: Install Command Categories.
+ (line 6)
+* prefix: Directory Variables. (line 26)
+* program configuration: Configuration. (line 6)
+* program design: Design Advice. (line 6)
+* program name and its behavior: User Interfaces. (line 6)
+* program's canonical name: --version. (line 12)
+* programming languages: Source Language. (line 6)
+* proprietary programs: Reading Non-Free Code.
+ (line 6)
+* quote characters: Quote Characters. (line 6)
+* README file: Releases. (line 21)
+* references to non-free material: References. (line 6)
+* releasing: Managing Releases. (line 6)
+* Savannah repository for gnustandards: Preface. (line 30)
+* sbindir: Directory Variables. (line 60)
+* signal handling: Semantics. (line 59)
+* SNMP: OID Allocations. (line 6)
+* spaces before open-paren: Formatting. (line 75)
+* staged installs: DESTDIR. (line 6)
+* standard command-line options: Command-Line Interfaces.
+ (line 31)
+* standards for makefiles: Makefile Conventions.
+ (line 6)
+* string library functions: System Functions. (line 55)
+* syntactic conventions: Syntactic Conventions.
+ (line 6)
+* table of long options: Option Table. (line 6)
+* temporary files: Semantics. (line 84)
+* temporary variables: Syntactic Conventions.
+ (line 23)
+* texinfo.tex, in a distribution: Releases. (line 70)
+* TMPDIR environment variable: Semantics. (line 84)
+* trademarks: Trademarks. (line 6)
+* user interface styles: Graphical Interfaces.
+ (line 6)
+* where to obtain standards.texi: Preface. (line 14)
+* X.509: OID Allocations. (line 6)
+
+
+
+Tag Table:
+Node: Top882
+Node: Preface2157
+Node: Legal Issues4870
+Node: Reading Non-Free Code5340
+Node: Contributions7070
+Node: Trademarks9308
+Node: Design Advice10943
+Node: Source Language11535
+Node: Compatibility13661
+Node: Using Extensions15289
+Node: Standard C16865
+Node: Conditional Compilation19268
+Node: Program Behavior20666
+Node: Non-GNU Standards21782
+Node: Semantics24063
+Node: Libraries28783
+Node: Errors30028
+Node: User Interfaces32521
+Node: Graphical Interfaces34126
+Node: Command-Line Interfaces35310
+Node: --version37342
+Node: --help43079
+Node: Option Table43952
+Node: OID Allocations58907
+Node: Memory Usage60704
+Node: File Usage61740
+Node: Writing C62490
+Node: Formatting63462
+Node: Comments67751
+Node: Syntactic Conventions71303
+Node: Names74765
+Node: System Portability76977
+Node: CPU Portability79868
+Node: System Functions83769
+Node: Internationalization88966
+Node: Character Set92960
+Node: Quote Characters93773
+Node: Mmap95293
+Node: Documentation96001
+Node: GNU Manuals97107
+Node: Doc Strings and Manuals102845
+Node: Manual Structure Details104398
+Node: License for Manuals105816
+Node: Manual Credits106790
+Node: Printed Manuals107183
+Node: NEWS File107869
+Node: Change Logs108547
+Node: Change Log Concepts109301
+Node: Style of Change Logs111404
+Node: Simple Changes113904
+Node: Conditional Changes115346
+Node: Indicating the Part Changed116768
+Node: Man Pages117295
+Node: Reading other Manuals119501
+Node: Managing Releases120292
+Node: Configuration121073
+Node: Makefile Conventions129738
+Node: Makefile Basics130620
+Node: Utilities in Makefiles133794
+Node: Command Variables135939
+Node: DESTDIR139161
+Node: Directory Variables141310
+Node: Standard Targets155803
+Ref: Standard Targets-Footnote-1169318
+Node: Install Command Categories169418
+Node: Releases173951
+Node: References177956
+Node: GNU Free Documentation License183803
+Node: Index208970
+
+End Tag Table