Provided by: ronn_0.9.1-2_all bug

NAME

       ronn - convert markdown files to manpages

SYNOPSIS

       ronn [format...] file...
       ronn -m|--man file...
       ronn -S|--server file...
       ronn --pipe file
       ronn < file
       ronn -E|--encoding encoding ...

DESCRIPTION

       Ronn  converts  textfiles to standard roff-formatted Unix manpages or HTML. ronn-format(7)
       is based on markdown(7) but includes additional rules and syntax geared  toward  authoring
       manuals.

       In  its  default mode, ronn converts one or more input files to HTML or roff output files.
       The --roff, --html, and --fragment options  dictate  which  output  files  are  generated.
       Multiple format arguments may be specified to generate multiple output files. Output files
       are named after and written to the same directory as input files.

       The --server and --man options change the output behavior from file generation to  serving
       dynamically generated HTML manpages or viewing file as with man(1).

       With no file arguments, ronn acts as simple filter. Ronn source text is read from standard
       input and roff output is written to  standard  output.  Use  the  --html,  --roff,  and/or
       --fragment options to select the output format.

FILES

       The ronn command expects input to be valid ronn-format(7) text. Source files are typically
       named name.section.ronn (e.g., example.1.ronn). The name and section should match the name
       and section defined in the file's heading.

       Source  files  must  be  in UTF-8 encoding, or the encoding specified by the -E/--encoding
       option, regardless of the locale that ronn is running under.

       When building roff or HTML output files, destination filenames are  determined  by  taking
       the  basename of the input file and adding the appropriate file extension (or removing the
       file extension in the case of roff output). For  example,  executing  ronn  example.1.ronn
       generates example.1 with roff output and example.1.html with HTML output.

OPTIONS

       These  options  control whether output is written to file(s), standard output, or directly
       to a man pager.

       ○   -m, --man: Don't generate files, display files as if man(1) were invoked on  the  roff
           output  file.  This  simulates  default man behavior by piping the roff output through
           groff(1) and the paging program specified by the MANPAGER environment variable.

       ○   -S, --server: Don't generate files, start an HTTP server at http://localhost:1207/ and
           serve   dynamically  generated  HTML  for  the  set  of  input  files.  A  file  named
           example.2.ronn is served as /example.2.html. There's also an index page  at  the  root
           with links to each file.

           The  server  respects  the  --style  and document attribute options (--manual, --date,
           etc.). These same options can be varied at  request  time  by  giving  them  as  query
           parameters: ?manual=FOO&style=dark,toc

           NOTE:  The  builtin server is designed to assist in the process of writing and styling
           manuals. It is in no way recommended as a general purpose web server.--port=port When used with -S/--server, runs the server at the specified port  instead
           of the default port 1207.

       ○   --pipe:  Don't  generate files, write generated output to standard output. This is the
           default behavior when ronn source text is piped in  on  standard  input  and  no  file
           arguments are provided.

       ○   -o=directory, --output-dir=directory: Write generated files to the specified directory
           instead of the default location.

       ○   -E=encoding, --encoding=<encoding: Specify the  encoding  that  input  files  are  in.
           Default  is UTF-8, regardless of user's locale settings. Input sent to STDIN is always
           treated as UTF-8, regardless of whether -E is passed.

       Format options control the files ronn generates, or the  output  format  when  the  --pipe
       argument  is  specified.  When  no  format  options  are given, both --roff and --html are
       assumed.

       -r, --roff
              Generate roff output. This is the default behavior when no files are given and ronn
              source text is read from standard input.

       -5, --html
              Generate output in HTML format.

       -f, --fragment
              Generate  output  in  HTML  format  but only the document fragment, not the header,
              title, or footer.

       Document attributes displayed in the header and footer  areas  of  generated  content  are
       specified with these options. (These values may also be set via the ENVIRONMENT.)

       --manual=manual
              The  name  of  the manual this man page belongs to; manual is prominently displayed
              top-center in the header area.

       --organization=name
              The name of the group, organization, or individual responsible for  publishing  the
              document; name is displayed in the bottom-left footer area.

       --date=date
              The  document's  published date; date must be formatted YYYY-MM-DD and is displayed
              in the bottom-center footer area. The file mtime is used when no date is given,  or
              the current time when no file is available.

       HTML output can be customized through the use of CSS stylesheets:

       --style=module[,module]...
              The list of CSS stylesheets to apply to the document. Multiple module arguments may
              be specified, but must be separated by commas or spaces.

              When module is a simple word, search for files named module.css in all  directories
              listed in the RONN_STYLE environment variable, and then search internal styles.

              When module includes a / character, use it as the full path to a stylesheet file.

              Internal  styles  are  man  (included  by  default),  toc,  and 80c. See STYLES for
              descriptions of features added by each module.

       Miscellaneous options:

       -w, --warnings
              Show troff warnings on standard error when performing roff conversion. Warnings are
              most often the result of a bug in ronn's HTML to roff conversion logic.

       -W     Disable  troff  warnings. Warnings are disabled by default. This option can be used
              to revert the effect of a previous -w argument.

       -v, --version
              Show ronn version and exit.

LINK INDEXES

       When generating HTML output, ronn  hyperlinks  manual  references  (like  grep(1),  ls(1),
       markdown(7))  in  source  text  based  on  reference  name  to  URL mappings defined in an
       index.txt file. Each line of the index  file  describes  a  single  reference  link,  with
       whitespace separating the reference's id from its location. Blank lines are allowed; lines
       beginning with a # character are ignored:

           # manuals included in this project:
           whisky(1)    whisky.1.ronn
           tango(5)     tango.5.ronn

           # external manuals
           grep(1)      http://man.cx/grep(1)
           ls(1)        http://man.cx/ls(1)

           # other URLs for use with markdown reference links
           src          http://github.com/

       The location is an absolute or relative URL that usually points  at  an  HTML  version  of
       manpage. It's possible to define references for things that aren't manpages.

       All  manuals  in  an individual directory share the references defined in that directory's
       index.txt file. Index references may be used explicitly in Markdown reference style  links
       using  the  syntax:  [text][id],  where  text  is the link text and id is a reference name
       defined in the index.

STYLES

       The --style option selects a list of CSS stylesheets to include  in  the  generated  HTML.
       Styles  are  applied  in  the  order  defined,  so  each  can  use the cascade to override
       previously defined styles.

   Builtin Stylesheets
       These styles are included with the distribution:

       man    Basic manpage styles: typography, definition lists,  indentation.  This  is  always
              included  regardless  of  --style  argument.  It is however possible to replace the
              default man module with a custom one by placing a man.css file  on  the  RONN_STYLE
              path.

       print  Basic print stylesheet. The generated <style> tag includes a media=print attribute.

       toc    Enables  the  Table of Contents navigation. The TOC markup is included in generated
              HTML by default but hidden with an inline display:none style rule; the  toc  module
              turns it on and applies basic TOC styles.

       dark   Light text on a dark background.

       80c    Changes  the display width to mimic the display of a classic 80 character terminal.
              The default display width causes lines to wrap at a gratuitous 100 characters.

   Custom Stylesheets
       Writing custom  stylesheets  is  straight-forward.  The  following  core  selectors  allow
       targeting all generated elements:

       .mp    The  manual  page  container  element.  Present  on  full  documents  and  document
              fragments.

       body#manpage
              Signifies that the page was fully-generated by Ronn and contains  a  single  manual
              page (.mp element).

       .man-decor
              The three-item heading and footing elements both have this class.

       .man-head, .man-foot
              The heading and footing, respectively.

       .man-title
              The  main  <h1> element. Hidden by default unless the manual has no name or section
              attributes.

       See                the                builtin                style                 sources
       http://github.com/apjanke/ronn-ng/tree/master/lib/ronn/template for examples.

EXAMPLES

       Build roff and HTML output files and view the roff manpage using man(1):

           $ ronn some-great-program.1.ronn
           roff: some-great-program.1
           html: some-great-program.1.html
           $ man ./some-great-program.1

       Build only the roff manpage for all .ronn files in the current directory:

           $ ronn --roff *.ronn
           roff: mv.1
           roff: ls.1
           roff: cd.1
           roff: sh.1

       Build only the HTML manpage for a few files and apply the dark and toc stylesheets:

           $ ronn --html --style=dark,toc mv.1.ronn ls.1.ronn
           html: mv.1.html
           html: ls.1.html

       Generate roff output on standard output and write to file:

           $ ronn <hello.1.ronn >hello.1

       View a ronn file in the same way as man(1) without building a roff file:

           $ ronn --man hello.1.ronn

       Serve HTML manpages at http://localhost:1207/ for all *.ronn files under a man/ directory:

           $ ronn --server man/*.ronn
           $ open http://localhost:1207/

ENVIRONMENT

       RONN_MANUAL
              A  default  manual name to be displayed in the top-center header area. The --manual
              option takes precedence over this value.

       RONN_ORGANIZATION
              The default manual publishing group, organization, or individual to be displayed in
              the  bottom-left  footer area. The --organization option takes precedence over this
              value.

       RONN_DATE
              The default manual date in YYYY-MM-DD format. Displayed in the bottom-center footer
              area. The --date option takes precedence over this value.

       RONN_STYLE
              A  PATH-style  list  of  directories  to check for stylesheets given to the --style
              option. Directories are separated by a :; blank  entries  are  ignored.  Use  .  to
              include the current working directory.

       MANPAGER
              The  paging  program  used  for  man pages. This is typically set to something like
              'less -is'.

       PAGER  Used instead of MANPAGER when MANPAGER is not defined.

COPYRIGHT

       Ronn-NG is Copyright (C) 2009 Ryan Tomayko http://tomayko.com/about and  (C)  2018  Andrew
       Janke https://apjanke.net

SEE ALSO

       groff(1), man(1), pandoc(1), manpages(5), markdown(7), roff(7), ronn-format(7)