1 # $Id: dist.mk,v 1.498 2005/10/09 14:41:57 tom Exp $
2 # Makefile for creating ncurses distributions.
4 # This only needs to be used directly as a makefile by developers, but
5 # configure mines the current version number out of here. To move
6 # to a new version number, just edit this file and run configure.
10 # These define the major/minor/patch versions of ncurses.
13 NCURSES_PATCH = 20051010
15 # We don't append the patch to the version, since this only applies to releases
16 VERSION = $(NCURSES_MAJOR).$(NCURSES_MINOR)
18 # The most recent html files were generated with lynx 2.8.5, configured with
19 # --without-manpage-renames
22 DUMP2 = $(DUMP) -nolist
24 GNATHTML= `type -p gnathtml || type -p gnathtml.pl`
26 # man2html 3.0.1 is a Perl script which assumes that pages are fixed size.
27 # Not all man programs agree with this assumption; some use half-spacing, which
28 # has the effect of lengthening the text portion of the page -- so man2html
29 # would remove some text. The man program on Redhat 6.1 appears to work with
30 # man2html if we set the top/bottom margins to 6 (the default is 7). Newer
31 # versions of 'man' on Linux leave no margin (and make it harder to sync with
33 MAN2HTML= man2html -botm=0 -topm=0 -cgiurl '$$title.$$section$$subsection.html'
35 ALL = ANNOUNCE doc/html/announce.html doc/ncurses-intro.doc doc/hackguide.doc manhtml adahtml
40 (cd ..; tar cvf ncurses-$(VERSION).tar `sed <ncurses-$(VERSION)/MANIFEST 's/^./ncurses-$(VERSION)/'`; gzip ncurses-$(VERSION).tar)
43 rm -f $(ALL) subst.tmp subst.sed
45 # Don't mess with announce.html.in unless you have lynx available!
46 doc/html/announce.html: announce.html.in
47 sed 's,@VERSION@,$(VERSION),' <announce.html.in > $@
49 ANNOUNCE : doc/html/announce.html
50 $(DUMP) doc/html/announce.html > $@
52 doc/ncurses-intro.doc: doc/html/ncurses-intro.html
53 $(DUMP2) doc/html/ncurses-intro.html > $@
54 doc/hackguide.doc: doc/html/hackguide.html
55 $(DUMP2) doc/html/hackguide.html > $@
57 # This is the original command:
58 # MANPROG = tbl | nroff -man
60 # This happens to work for groff 1.18.1 on Debian. At some point groff's
61 # maintainer changed the line-length (we do not want/need that here).
63 # The distributed html files are formatted using
64 # configure --without-manpage-renames
65 MANPROG = tbl | nroff -mandoc -rLL=65n -rLT=71n -Tascii
68 @rm -f doc/html/man/*.html
69 @mkdir -p doc/html/man
71 @for f in man/*.[0-9]*; do \
73 x=`echo $$m | awk -F. '{print $$2;}'` ;\
74 xu=`echo $$x | dd conv=ucase 2>/dev/null` ;\
75 if [ "$${x}" != "$${xu}" ]; then \
76 echo "s/$${xu}/$${x}/g" >> subst.tmp ;\
79 # change some things to make weblint happy:
80 @echo 's/<B>/<STRONG>/g' >> subst.tmp
81 @echo 's/<\/B>/<\/STRONG>/g' >> subst.tmp
82 @echo 's/<I>/<EM>/g' >> subst.tmp
83 @echo 's/<\/I>/<\/EM>/g' >> subst.tmp
84 @misc/csort < subst.tmp | uniq > subst.sed
85 @echo '/<\/TITLE>/a\' >> subst.sed
86 @echo '<link rev=made href="mailto:bug-ncurses@gnu.org">\' >> subst.sed
87 @echo '<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text\/html; charset=iso-8859-1">' >> subst.sed
89 @for f in man/*.[0-9]* ; do \
91 T=`egrep '^.TH' $$f|sed -e 's/^.TH //' -e s'/"//g' -e 's/[ ]\+$$//'` ; \
93 if [ -f doc/html/$$g ]; then chmod +w doc/html/$$g; fi;\
94 echo "Converting $$m to HTML" ;\
95 echo '<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN">' > doc/html/man/$$g ;\
96 echo '<!-- ' >> doc/html/man/$$g ;\
97 egrep '^.\\"[^#]' $$f | \
102 >> doc/html/man/$$g ;\
103 echo '-->' >> doc/html/man/$$g ;\
104 ./edit_man.sh normal editing /usr/man man $$f | $(MANPROG) | tr '\255' '-' | $(MAN2HTML) -title "$$T" | \
106 sed -e 's/"curses.3x.html"/"ncurses.3x.html"/g' \
107 >> doc/html/man/$$g ;\
112 # Please note that this target can only be properly built if the build of the
113 # Ada95 subdir has been done. The reason is, that the gnathtml tool uses the
114 # .ali files generated by the Ada95 compiler during the build process. These
115 # .ali files contain cross referencing information required by gnathtml.
117 if [ ! -z "$(GNATHTML)" ]; then \
118 (cd ./Ada95/gen ; make html) ;\
121 # This only works on a clean source tree, of course.
125 find . -type f -print |misc/csort | fgrep -v .lsm |fgrep -v .spec >$@