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GSoC Project for NetBSD. Aim of the project is to develop a replacement for apropos(1) using mandoc and FTS engine of Sqlite
abhinav-upadhyay/apropos_replacement
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0. Linux Support: Recently I started work on porting this code to GNU/Linux. I have been successfully able to build it on Ubuntu 12.04/12.10 and the code is available in the linux branch of this repository. 1. INTRODUCTION Unix systems have had a culture and one of the main reasons behind the long standing success of Unix has been to follow this culture and philosophy over the years. Part of this culture and philosophy is to provide documentation for each component of the Operating System, whether it is a command line utility, a system call, a library function, a configuration file or anything that should be documented to make the life of the end user easier. This documentation has been primarly shipped in the form of Manual pages (man pages in short), which can be easily accessed using the 'man' command. A couple of utilities are also provided to search the documentation easily. apropos(1) can be used to search for man pages. How apropos(1) works is very simple. The name section of the man pages has been indexed in a file (typically named whatis.db) and apropos(1) performs search on this file for the keywords specified by the user. While apropos(1) was designed keeping in mind the resources (both hardware and software) available during the early days, but things have changed drastically over the time. Now we have the resources available and in the Google era it behooves us to rethink the design and implementation of apropos(1). It is now possible to implement apropos(1) in a better manner so as to allow more extensive and flexible searches and that too over the complete content of the man pages rather than limiting it to the name section. More often than not we are not sure of the exact keywords to search for and apropos(1) does not give us the right results (or no results at all) in which case we turn to Google. The idea behind this project is to mend this problem by reimplementing apropos(1) to enable full text search capabilities and in the process enhancing and modifying other man utilities as required. We have decided to use the FTS engine of Sqlite [1] for this purpose. 2. REQUIREMENTS FOR BUILDING & RUNNING: The project has been developed on NetBSD so I can only claim that it works well on a NetBSD system (that too the current development snapshot). Though it should be possible to build it and run on other BSD systems with little or no changes. Following are the requirements for building and running it on NetBSD: 2.1 -CURRENT version of NetBSD (or at least man pages from -CURRENT) 2.2 mdocml While for other BSDs like FreeBSD or DragonFlyBSD the requirements should be about same. Though I made a patch to man.c for adding a new option 'p' to man(1) which would print the search path for man pages in a new line separated format on stdout. That is required for building the Full Text Search Index using makemandb. And of course the Makefile might require some modifications. GNU/Linux: Please checkout the linux branch for using this code on Linux. Currently, it is still a work in progress. 3. USING: There are two command line utilities 'makemandb' and 'apropos'. You would first need to build the Full Text Search (FTS) Index using makemandb(1) and then you can use apropos(1) (the one provided by this project) to perform searches. 3.1 makemandb: Simply running makemandb will build the FTS index and tell you the number of pages indexed. Some of the pages might not get indexed on the way which will be indicated by error messages on the screen but nothing to worry about that. NOTE: The default behavior of makemandb is incremental updation. That is to say it will try to add only those pages to the index which it did not have previously and also it will remove those pages from the index which are no more on the file system. Of course if there is no existing index it will build it from scratch. makemandb supports following options: [-f]: The option 'f' will tell makemandb(1) to prune the existing index (if there exists one) and rebuild the database from scratch. [-l]: The option 'l' will tell makemand(1) to limit the indexing to only the NAME section of the man pages. This option can be used to mimic the behavior of the "classical apropos" although with improved search capabilities. This option might be useful if you want to save few MB of disk space. [-o]: The option 'o' is for optimizing the index. makemand(1) will try to optimize the FTS index for faster search performance and also it will optimize the storage of the data to optimize disk space usage. 3.2 apropos: Once you have built the database you can fire apropos(1) and pass a query to do a search. For example: $apropos "add a new user" apropos supports following options: [-1234569]: You can pass section numbers as options to apropos which will make apropos to search only within the specified set of sections. [-p]: By default apropos(1) will display the top 10 ranked results on stdout. So if you would like to see more results then use 'p'. It will allow apropos(1) to display all the results and also it will pipe the results to a pager (more(1)). 4. OTHER DELIVERABLES: Besides the two command line tools, I have also developed a very small library to allow and build a search application on top of the FTS index built by makemandb. It has following public functions: 4.1 init_db(): To initialize a connection to the database. 4.2 run_query(): To run a query as entered by the user and process the rows obtained in a callback function (apropos.c uses it). 4.3 run_query_html(): Similar to run_query() but it formats the results obtained in the form of an HTML fragment. This can be used to build a CGI application to do searches from a browser. 4.4 run_query_pager(): Similar to run_query_html but it formats the results so that the matching text appears highlighted when piped to a pager. apropos.c uses it when the -p option is specified. 4.5 close_db(): To close the database connection and release any resources. For more detailed documentation you can read up the man pages of the individual components.
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GSoC Project for NetBSD. Aim of the project is to develop a replacement for apropos(1) using mandoc and FTS engine of Sqlite
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