Minix Man Pages
Copyright (c) 2015 Lionel Sambuc
This script has been taken from http://man.freebsd.org, and adapted
by myself for use on the minix3.org website.
Copyright (c) 1996-2012 Wolfram Schneider
Copyright (c) 1993-1995 Berkeley Software Design, Inc.
This data is part of a licensed program from BERKELEY SOFTWARE
DESIGN, INC. Portions are copyrighted by BSDI, The Regents of
the University of California, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, Free Software Foundation, The FreeBSD Project, and others.
This script has the revsion: $$
Copyright (c) for man pages by OS vendors.
Minix,
NetBSD,
X11R6
FAQ
- Get the source of the man.cgi script
- Troff macros works only if defined in FreeBSD/groff. OS specific
macros like `appeared in NetBSD version 1.2' are not supported.
- Some OSs provide only formatted manual pages (catpages), e.g., NetBSD
and OpenBSD. In this case it is not possible to create Postscript
and troff output.
- The
Unix family tree, BSD part.
- The
FreeBSD Ports Changes script.
- Copyright (c) and download for man pages by
OS vendors
Shortcuts for FreeBSD manual pages
Releases
Releases and Releases Aliases are information how
to make a link to this script to the right OS version.
You may download the manpages as gzip'd tar archive
for private use. A tarball is usually 5MB big.
- [download] "Minix" -> /cgi-bin/man.cgi?manpath=Minix
- [download] "Minix 2.0.0" -> /cgi-bin/man.cgi?manpath=Minix+2.0.0
- [download] "Minix 3.1.5" -> /cgi-bin/man.cgi?manpath=Minix+3.1.5
- [download] "Minix 3.1.6" -> /cgi-bin/man.cgi?manpath=Minix+3.1.6
- [download] "Minix 3.1.7" -> /cgi-bin/man.cgi?manpath=Minix+3.1.7
- [download] "Minix 3.1.8" -> /cgi-bin/man.cgi?manpath=Minix+3.1.8
- [download] "Minix 3.2.0" -> /cgi-bin/man.cgi?manpath=Minix+3.2.0
- [download] "Minix 3.2.1" -> /cgi-bin/man.cgi?manpath=Minix+3.2.1
- [download] "Minix 3.3.0" -> /cgi-bin/man.cgi?manpath=Minix+3.3.0
- [download] "X11R7" -> /cgi-bin/man.cgi?manpath=X11R7
Releases Aliases
Release aliases are for lazy people. Plus, they have a longer
lifetime, eg. 'openbsd' points always to the latest OpenBSD release.