Copyright 1989-2023 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, are permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright notice and this notice are preserved. This file describes various problems that have been encountered in compiling, installing and running groff. Suggestions for additions or other improvements to this file are welcome. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Problems are organized into categories underscored with equals signs. * General Problems * Printing and Display Problems * Platform-Dependent Macro Problems * Compilation Problems Within each category, items are organized in reverse chronological order (that is, with the most recent first). groff version numbers corresponding to their inclusion in this file are included as guideposts. Entries have been revised for clarity in the years since. In the following discussions, several references to "/usr/local" are made. You should read this directory name as the destination directory you set up with the "--prefix" option to groff's "configure" script. General Problems ================ [groff 1.23.0] * gdiffmk doesn't work / its automated test fails. Some portability issues are known to affect groff's gdiffmk utility. - A defect in GNU diffutils 3.9 (January 2023) causes gdiffmk to malfunction and its automated test to fail. See . - gdiffmk does not work with BusyBox diff (which does not implement GNU diff's "-D" option). - gdiffmk does not work on FreeBSD due to specifics of that platform's expr(1) implementation. gdiffmk uses the expr(1) command to parse its arguments. FreeBSD has extended the syntax of its expr command in a non-backward compatible way that it claims better conforms with POSIX's utility syntax guidelines with respect to option processing: however, POSIX mandates no options for expr. Other implementations of expr do not support traditional Unix-style options ('-a', '-b', ...), and perhaps as a consequence do not follow FreeBSD's interpretation of the guidelines. You way want to set $EXPR_COMPAT in your shell environment. We hope to have a workaround for this behavior in a future release. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * The `PDFPIC` macro doesn't work / its automated test fails. FAIL: tmac/tests/pdfpic_does-not-choke-on-bad-pdfinfo-output.sh Due to a limitation (shared by AT&T troff) in the way the `sy` request constructs a C string argument to the C library's system(3) function, groff requires a GNU sed(1) extension that interprets "\n" as a newline in the replacement text of the 's' command. (We might enhance GNU troff's `sy` request to avoid this dependency in the future.) We have observed this problem on Solaris 10 and 11 and Mac OS X 10.11.6, but not macOS 12: the last's sed supports the extension in question. Install GNU sed in the default $PATH as "gsed" and edit tmac/pdfpic.tmac. On line 172, change "sed" to "gsed". Alternatively, you can use the absolute path to GNU sed's location. (`system()` sanitizes $PATH to avoid privilege escalation.) Then (re-)make the "check" target or format your PDFPIC-employing document again. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.19.2] * When viewing man pages, some characters on my UTF-8 terminal emulator look funny or copy-and-paste wrong. Why? Some Unicode Basic Latin ("ASCII") input characters are mapped to non-Basic Latin code points in output for consistency with other output devices, like PDF. See groff_man_style(7) and groff_char(7) for correct input conventions and background. If you use the correct groff special character escape sequences to input them, you will get correct output no matter what device the input is formatted for. However, many man pages are written in ignorance of the correct special characters to obtain the desired glyphs. You can conceal these errors by adding the following to your site-local man(7) configuration. The file is called "man.local"; its installation directory depends on how groff was configured when it was built. --- start --- .if '\*[.T]'utf8' \{\ . char ' \[aq] . char - \- . char ^ \[ha] . char ` \[ga] . char ~ \[ti] .\} --- end --- You may also wish to do the same for "mdoc.local". In man pages (only), groff maps the minus sign special character '\-' to the Basic Latin hyphen-minus (U+002D) because man pages require this glyph and there is no historically established *roff input character, ordinary or special, for obtaining it when a hyphen and minus sign are both separately available. To obtain a true minus sign, use the special character escape sequences '\(mi' or '\[mi]'. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * Displaying a man page on a terminal with/without my favorite pager shows garbage. groff's terminal output driver, grotty, by default uses ISO 6429/ECMA-48 escape sequences understood by video terminals and their emulators, rather than the overstriking sequences implemented for typewriter-like terminals used in the 1960s and 1970s. These escape sequences control display attributes like bold and italic or oblique typefaces, underlining, foreground and background color selection, and hyperlink marking. Terminal emulators that claim compatibility with the DEC VT100, Linux console driver, or xterm should ignore well-formed escape sequences that they are not able to support, but some implementations are buggy. Furthermore, the popular "less" pager by default assumes that its input will use overstriking sequences. (This is a surprising choice, as users of paper terminals had no need for pager programs; to "scroll back", the operator would simply physically pull up the spool of ejected paper to read it.) less(1) must instead be given the '-R' option to interpret escape sequences used by video terminals. Be aware that the overstriking convention is inescapably ambiguous in some output sequences. See the grotty(1) man page. Hyperlink support in terminal emulators is a relatively new initiative (as of 2022) employing a sequence known as "OSC 8". https://gist.github.com/egmontkob/eb114294efbcd5adb1944c9f3cb5feda Due to the feature's young age, the man and mdoc macro packages have a configuration switch for hyperlink support, and it may be disabled in your site's man.local and mdoc.local files. Use a command like printf '\033]8;;man:grotty(1)\033\\grotty(1)\033]8;;\033\\\n' | more to check your terminal and pager for OSC 8 support. If you see "grotty(1)" and no additional garbage characters, then you may wish to edit those site files to remove any lines that disable this feature. There are a couple of workarounds if you prefer or require overstriking sequences rather than ISO 6429/ECMA-48 escape sequences. 1. Set the GROFF_NO_SGR environment variable to any value. 2. Pass option '-c' to grotty (that is, add '-P-c' to groff's command-line options). The third and probably best option is to use terminal and pager programs that handle standardized video terminal escape sequences well. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.16] * My document says that the current year is 19100, not 2000. In groff, as in traditional troff, the yr number register yields the year minus 1900. Unfortunately, the Bell Labs document "Troff User's Manual" (Computing Science Technical Report #54) incorrectly claims that yr is the last two digits of the year. This claim has never been true AT&T troff nor of groff. If your text looks like this: .\" Wrong: This document was formatted in 19\n(yr. you can correct it as follows: This document was formatted in \n[year]. or, if you want to be portable to older troff versions, as follows: .nr y4 1900+\n(yr This document was formatted in \n(y4. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.09] * Where can I get grap? Ted Faber has written a freely available grap: http://www.lunabase.org/~faber/Vault/software/grap/ You need version 1.42 or newer. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * The \n(st and \n(sb registers don't seem to work. I thought \w set them to the height and depth of its argument, but the registers always seem to be 0. \n(st and \n(sb don't give the height and depth of the argument to \w, but the maximum vertical displacements of the text baseline above (\n(st) and below (\n(sb) its original position. Consider an example where no text is formatted, but small vertical motions are used. \w"\v'-1u'\v'3u'" .tm st=\n(st, sb=\n(sb st=1, sb=-2 Observe that the sign convention of these registers is opposite that of relative vertical motion. (This is how Documenter's Workbench troff and Heirloom Doctools troff work as well.) The height and depth of formatted text in the \w argument are available in the \n[rst] and \n[rsb] registers; these are groff extensions. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.08] * I'm having problems formatting man pages produced by the perl wrapman script. Some versions of wrapman have a superfluous blank line before the .TH line. This must be deleted. Then either use groff -C, or apply the following patch: *** wrapman.~2~ Sun Jan 19 12:10:24 1992 --- wrapman Tue Aug 10 02:06:41 1993 *************** *** 35,41 **** $line1 .= if $line1 =~ /eval/; $line1 .= if $line1 =~ /argv/; $line2 = ; ! next if $line2 eq "'di';\n"; # Pull the old switcheroo. --- 35,41 ---- $line1 .= if $line1 =~ /eval/; $line1 .= if $line1 =~ /argv/; $line2 = ; ! next if $line2 eq "'di ';\n" || $line2 eq "'di';\n"; # Pull the old switcheroo. *************** *** 49,56 **** print OUT $line1; print OUT <0 .if \\n(YE=0 .LP --- 22,30 ---- .. . \" EN - end of a displayed equation .de EN ! .if \\n(.k>0 .br .di + .ds 10 \\*(EZ\\ .rm EZ .nr ZN \\n(dn .if \\n(ZN>0 .if \\n(YE=0 .LP ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * gpic doesn't accept the syntax `chop N M' for chopping both ends of a line. The correct syntax is `chop N chop M'. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * With gpic -t, when I print `line ->; box' using a dvi to ps program, the arrow head sticks through into the inside of the box. The dvi to ps program should be modified to set the line cap and line join parameters to 1 while printing tpic specials. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * gtroff doesn't understand lines like `.ce99' with no space between the name of the request or macro and the arguments. gtroff requires a space between macro or request and its arguments because it allows the use of long names for macros and requests. You can use the -C option or the `cp' request to put gtroff into a compatibility mode in which it is not possible to use long names for macros but in which no space is required between macros and their arguments. The use of compatibility mode is strongly discouraged. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * gtroff gives warnings about lines like .ev \" a comment (with a tab after the .ev). A tab character cannot be used as a substitute for a space character (except in one case: between a control character at the beginning of a line and the name of a macro or request). For example, in Unix troff .ps \" restore the previous point size (with a tab after the .ps) does NOT restore the previous point-size; instead it is silently ignored. Since this is very likely to be an error, gtroff can give a warning about it. If you want to align comments, you can do it like this: .ev\" \" a comment ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * I don't like the page headers and footers produced by groff -man. There seem to be many different styles of page header and footer produced by different versions of the -man macros. You need to put modified macros from tmac/an.tmac into man.local. More information is available in groff_man(7). ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * While formatting a manual page, groff complains about not being able to break lines. A line like the following seems to cause this. .TP \w'label'+2 The groff_man(7) man page says that the default scaling unit for the `TP` macro is 'n' (ens), and that is how the groff man macros are implemented. Consequently, the macro argument above is evaluated equivalently to this expression. \w'label'n+2n AT&T troff's man macros don't implement this correctly (probably because it's hard to do in that troff); instead, they append 'n' to the entire argument, so that it is evaluated as if it were written as follows. \w'label'u+2n The solution is to fix the manual page. .TP \w'label'u+2 It might be better still to avoid such computations in macro arguments, however; programs that are not *roff formatters that attempt to interpret man pages can lack the ability to interpret numeric expressions. See section "Portability" of groff_man_style(7). Printing and Display Problems ============================= [groff 1.09] * How can I use groff with an old LaserJet printer that doesn't work with groff -Tlj4? You have at least 3 options: - use groff -Tps with GNU Ghostscript; - use groff -Tdvi with a TeX .dvi to LaserJet driver; - use groff with the LaserJet driver in Chris Lewis' psroff package (available for ftp from: ftp.uunet.ca:/distrib/chris_lewis/psroff3.0pl17). ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * Groff seems to generate level 3 Postscript, but my printer is only a level 1 or 2 PostScript printer. In fact groff generates only level 2 PostScript (or rather level 1 with some extensions; see grops(1) for more information how to disable them). The `%!PS-Adobe-3.0' comment at the beginning of PostScript output generated by groff indicates that the file conforms to version 3.0 of the Adobe Document Structuring Conventions. The output generated by groff should be printable on any PostScript printer. Problems with groff output's not printing are most often caused by the spooling system. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.04] * When I try to run gxditview, I get the error: Error: Widget viewport has zero width and/or height This error means you haven't correctly installed the application defaults file, GXditview.ad; `make install' does this for you automatically, so either you didn't do `make install', or you haven't passed a good `--appdefdir=' argument to groff's configure script. See the X(7) man page for information how and where application defaults files have to be located. Look for the XAPPLRESDIR and XUSERFILESEARCHPATH environment variables. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.01] * I'm having problems including PostScript illustrations (EPS) using the PSPIC macro and/or \X'ps: import ...'. A PostScript document must meet three requirements in order to be included with the PSPIC macro: it must comply with the Adobe Document Structuring Conventions; it must contain a BoundingBox line; it must be `well-behaved'. The BoundingBox line should be of the form: %%BoundingBox: llx lly urx ury where llx, lly, urx, ury are the coordinates of the lower left x, lower left y, upper right x, upper right y of the bounding box of marks on the page expressed as integers in the default PostScript coordinate system (72 units per inch, origin at bottom left corner). The most convenient program to get the bounding box of a document is the `ps2epsi' script coming with GhostScript. If you can't use this program, another useful tactic is to print out the illustration by itself (you may need to add a `showpage' at the end), and physically measure the bounding box. For more detail on these requirements, read the specification of Encapsulated PostScript format. (This is available from the Adobe file server; send a message with a body of `help' to ps-file-server@adobe.com.) If an EPS file to be included via \X'ps: import' does not start with `%!PS-Adobe-...', gtroff still includes the file, but grops does not add any fonts to the generated output file that are listed in the EPS file, even though the files are listed in the `download' file and are available in the devps directory. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * I've configured groff for A4 paper, but gtroff still seems to think that the length of a page (as returned by `\n(.p') is 11 inches. This is intentional. The PAGE option during configuration is used only by grops. For compatibility with AT&T troff, the default page length in GNU troff is always 11 inches. The page length can be changed with the `pl' request. A convenient way to set paper dimensions is to use the -dpaper option of groff, together with proper -P options for the postprocessor (overriding the default). For example, use the following command for PostScript output on A4 paper in landscape orientation. groff -Tps -dpaper=a4l -P-pa4 -P-l -ms foo.ms > foo.ps See groff(1) and groff_tmac(5) for more information. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * When I print the output of groff -Tps, the output is always shifted up by about 0.7 inches; I'm using 8.5x11 inch paper. Make sure that the paper format is "letter". See groff_tmac(5). ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * When I try to print the output of groff -Tps, I get no output at all from the printer, and the log file shows the error %%[ error: undefined; offendingcommand: BP ]%% I'm using TranScript spooling software. This is a bug in the page reversal filter in early versions of TranScript. Change the `broken' parameter in /usr/local/lib/groff/font/devps/DESC to 7. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * When I preview groff -Tps output using the Sun OpenWindows 2.0 pageview program, all the pages are displayed on top of each other. This is a defect in pageview. Change the `broken' parameter in /usr/local/lib/groff/font/devps/DESC to 2. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * With groff -TX75, -TX100 or -X, I can only view the first page. The left mouse button brings up a menu that allows you to view other pages. You can also press and to advance and retreat the current page view, respectively. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * When I print the output of groff -Tdvi, I just get a black dot in upper left corner. Some dvi drivers (notably early versions of xtex) do not correctly handle dvi files that use a resolution different from that used by dvi files produced by TeX. Try getting a more up to date driver. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * When I preview documents using -TX75 or -TX100, the layout is not the same as when I print the document with -Tps: the line and page breaks come in different places. Use `groff -X -Tps'. Platform-Dependent Macro Problems ================================= [groff 1.17] * groff produces wrapper macros for `ms' and friends which call the system's original macros. Then, to get groff's ms macro package I have to use `-mgs' instead `-ms'. Can I avoid this? Yes. Configure and compile groff as usual, but install it with make install tmac_wrap="" Then no wrapper files are produced, and `-ms' uses groff's `ms' macros. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.09] * On an SGI system, how can I make the man command use groff? From David Hinds (some of these steps are unnecessary if you install with the `g' Makefile variable defined as empty): Create a script called `eqn': > #!/bin/sh > if [ ${1:-""} = /usr/pub/eqnchar ] ; then shift ; fi > geqn $* and a script called `neqn': > #!/bin/sh > if [ ${1:-""} = /usr/pub/eqnchar ] ; then shift ; fi > geqn -Tascii $* and do: > ln -s gnroff nroff and edit the end of the gnroff script to be: > rest=`echo ${1+"$@"} | sed -e 's+/usr/lib/tmac+/usr/local/lib/groff/tmac+'` > exec groff -Wall -mtty-char $T $opts $rest To get PostScript output from `man -t', you also need to create a `psroff' script similar to `nroff'. Here are the context diffs: *** /usr/local/bin/nroff Sat Feb 13 15:51:09 1993 --- /usr/local/bin/psroff Sat Feb 13 17:45:46 1993 *************** *** 1,8 **** #! /bin/sh ! # Emulate nroff with groff. prog="$0" ! T=-Tascii opts= for i --- 1,8 ---- #! /bin/sh ! # Emulate psroff with groff. prog="$0" ! T=-Tps opts= for i *************** *** 25,30 **** --- 25,33 ---- -Tascii|-Tlatin1) T=$1 ;; + -t) + # ignore -- default is send to stdout + ;; -T*) # ignore other devices ;; *************** *** 49,53 **** rest=`echo ${1+"$@"} | sed -e 's+/usr/lib/tmac+/usr/local/lib/groff/tmac+'` # This shell script is intended for use with man, so warnings are # probably not wanted. Also load nroff-style character definitions. ! exec groff -Wall -mtty-char $T $opts $rest --- 52,56 ---- rest=`echo ${1+"$@"} | sed -e 's+/usr/lib/tmac+/usr/local/lib/groff/tmac+'` # This shell script is intended for use with man, so warnings are ! # probably not wanted. ! exec groff -Wall $T $opts $rest ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.08] * I'm having problems formatting HP-UX 9.0 man pages with groff -man. Copy HP's tmac.an into /usr/local/share/groff/site-tmac/an.tmac, and either put `.cp 1' at the beginning or filter it (and any files it .so's) through tmac/fixmacros.sed. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.07] * I'm having problems formatting Ultrix man pages with groff -man. The Ultrix man pages use a number of non-standard extensions to the Unix man macros. [To be fair, SunOS did too, albeit not as many; see groff_man(7). groff embraced SunOS's extensions early on, but not Ultrix's. --GBR in 2023] One solution is to use the Ultrix -man macros with groff. Copy /usr/lib/tmac/tmac.an to /usr/local/share/groff/site-tmac/an.tmac and apply the following patch (from Frank Wortner): *** /usr/local/lib/groff/tmac/tmac.an Wed Sep 9 12:29:28 1992 --- /usr/lib/tmac/tmac.an Fri Jul 24 19:58:19 1992 *************** *** 489,495 **** . \" make special case of shift out of italic .de }S .ds ]F ! .if \\$12 .if !\\$5 .ds ]F \^ .ie !\\$4 .}S \\$2 \\$1 "\\$3\f\\$1\\$4\\*(]F" "\\$5" "\\$6" "\\$7" "\\$8" "\\$9" .el \\$3 .}f --- 489,495 ---- . \" make special case of shift out of italic .de }S .ds ]F ! .if \\$12 .if !\\$5 .ds ]F\^ .ie !\\$4 .}S \\$2 \\$1 "\\$3\f\\$1\\$4\\*(]F" "\\$5" "\\$6" "\\$7" "\\$8" "\\$9" .el \\$3 .}f Another possible solution is to install tmac/man.ultrix as /usr/local/share/groff/site-tmac/man.local. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.01] * I get lots of errors when I use groff with the AT&T -mm macros. Use the groff -mm macros. Compilation Problems ==================== [groff 1.23.0] * The "initialization_is_quiet" test fails on my NetBSD box. This is a known problem. We haven't tracked down the cause yet, but have improved the reporting of the test output in hopes that we can isolate it in a future release. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * I get a build failure on Cygwin / a system using newlib and GCC 11. "newlib" defines a function called "utoa" which conflicts with a static (file scope-local) function in src/libs/libxutil/XFontName.c. We expect to fix this in the near future; in the meantime, you can patch the file to rename the function (and update its call sites) or, if you don't require the "gxditview" output previewer or "xtotroff" utility, you can build groff without X11 support. $ make distclean $ ./configure --without-x ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * The "check-default-foundry" test fails when I run "make check". Your Ghostscript installation may have its fonts embedded in the executable; this can be discerned by searching for the pattern "%rom%" in its search path. $ gs -h | grep '%rom%' The consequence is that gropdf(1) will be unable to embed fonts into PDF files it generates (apart from groff's "EURO" font) when the default foundry is used. This is the same outcome as if Ghostscript were not installed at all. If you install URW fonts (see "INSTALL.extra"), you will be able to embed them all by using the "U" foundry with gropdf to overcome this problem. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * I get a lot of warnings about "sprintf" on macOS. Apple has decided to treat the sprintf() standard C library function as deprecated even though the C standard itself has not. https://developer.apple.com/forums/thread/714675 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * I get a make(1) failure involving grep and the groff_man.7.man.in file on Solaris 11. Solaris make(1) has a bug easily exhibited by the following Makefile. all: ! false Use GNU make instead; it may be available in /opt/csw/bin/gmake. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * Tests fail when I run "make check" on Solaris 10 or 11. The test suite expects a POSIX-conforming shell and utilities. Solaris 10 does not offer these in the default $PATH. We try to use features standardized no later than POSIX Issue 4 (1994). Unfortunately even that is too recent for some implementations. Solaris 11 has a (mostly) conforming shell. It may help to ensure that "/usr/xpg6/bin" and "/usr/xpg4/bin" precede "/usr/bin" in the $PATH when building groff. For Solaris 10, it is necessary to modify the shell-based test scripts in place to use a conforming shell. Here is an example. $ gsed -i -e '1s@#!/bin/sh@#!/usr/xpg4/bin/sh@' \ `find . -name '*.sh' | grep /tests/` $ PATH=/usr/xpg4/bin:$PATH gmake check Some test failures remain expected on Solaris 10 and/or 11. 1. FAIL: contrib/hdtbl/examples/test-hdtbl.sh /usr/bin/tr on Solaris 10 is non-conforming with the POSIX Issue 4 standard. It furthermore issues anonymous diagnostics, saying only "Bad string". Install tr from GNU coreutils in the $PATH. Edit line 57 of each of contrib/hdtbl/examples/fonts_x.in and contrib/hdtbl/examples/fonts_n.in. Change "tr" to "gtr". Alternatively, you can use the absolute path to GNU tr's location. Re-run "gmake check" as above. (Some files will be rebuilt.) The tr commands in /usr/xpg4/bin and /usr/xpg6/bin also work, but the documents constructed from the above inputs use groff's `pso` request, which wraps the standard C library `popen()` function, which sanitizes $PATH to avoid privilege escalation, thus making it likely that the non-conforming tr in /usr/bin will be found first. 2. FAIL: src/roff/groff/tests/initialization_is_quiet.sh FAIL: src/roff/groff/tests/msoquiet_works.sh FAIL: src/roff/groff/tests/soquiet_works.sh (The first of these might be SKIPped instead.) /usr/xpg4/bin/sh is non-conforming with the POSIX Issue 4 standard, despite its name. Its "unset" builtin is buggy. (The /usr/bin/sh in Solaris 11 does not have this problem.) These tests use the "unset" shell builtin command to prevent environment variables from confounding test results. POSIX says "[u]nsetting a variable ... that was not previously set is not considered an error and will not cause the shell to abort." Nevertheless this builtin returns an error exit status in this circumstance. $ /usr/xpg4/bin/sh -c 'unset _NON_EXISTENT_XYZ; echo $?' 1 You may disregard these failures, edit the test scripts to append "|| true" to the "unset" commands, or change the scripts to use GNU Bash or some other POSIX-conforming shell as illustrated above. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * I get warnings from afmtodit about names already being mapped. afmtodit: AGL name 'Delta' already mapped to groff name '*D'; ignoring AGL name 'uni0394' You can ignore these if they're in the form shown above, where the ignored AGL name is 'uniXXXX' and 'XXXX' is four hexadecimal digits. The Adobe Glyph List (AGL) has its own names for glyphs; they are often different from groff's special character names. The afmtodit program is constructing a mapping from groff special character names to AGL names; this can be a one-to-one or many-to-one mapping, but one-to-many will not work, so afmtodit discards the excessive mappings. The example you see above is telling you that the groff font description that afmtodit is writing cannot map the groff special character '*D' to both 'Delta' and 'uni0394'. Which, if any, such warnings you see depends on the version of the URW fonts you are building groff against. See the '--with-urw-fonts-dir' option to the "configure" script, and the afmtodit(1) and groff_char(7) man pages for more background. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * I am building from the Git repository, using 'autoreconf' from a GNU Autoconf release earlier than 2.69, and I get this. /usr/share/aclocal/gtkglextmm-1.2.m4:225: warning: underquoted definition of AC_GTKGLEXTMM_SUPPORTS_MULTIHEAD /usr/share/aclocal/gtkglextmm-1.2.m4:225: run info '(automake)Extending aclocal' /usr/share/aclocal/gtkglextmm-1.2.m4:225: or see http://www.gnu.org/software/automake/manual/automake.html#Extending-aclocal Ignore this. It doesn't occur in more recent versions of 'autoreconf'. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * I get warnings about special characters in the groff_char(7) man page. troff:man/groff_char.7:1033: warning: special character '.j' not defined (...and similar for 'vA', 'bs', '-+', 'coproduct', and '+e'.) You can ignore these. groff defines a handful of special characters for which historical PostScript fonts usually did not possess glyphs. Except for 'bs' (the Bell System logo), we hope to provide fallbacks or a supplementary PostScript font in groff in the future (as was done for the Euro glyph). ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * I get warnings about the "vasnprintf" function. lib/vasnprintf.c: In function 'vasnprintf': lib/vasnprintf.c:5268:27: warning: format not a string literal, argument types not checked [-Wformat-nonliteral] (and similar) The groff source tree includes gnulib, the GNU portability library . These warnings are about its source code and that project's responsibility to resolve. We expect a future release of gnulib to do so. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.22.4] * When compiling on NetBSD, make issues warnings like Warning: line 28: Unable to locate font(s) URWGothicL-Demi,a010015l.pfb on the given path(s) and Warning: line 77: Failed to create groff font 'U-AB' by running afmtodit In this case install the package "urw-fonts": pkgin install urw-fonts and make the font path known to ghostscript, e.g. with (ksh): export GS_LIB=/usr/pkg/share/fonts/urw ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * Currently (December 2015) building groff fails on NetBSD and FreeBSD with the message: make[1]: don't know how to make contrib/chem/chem.1. Stop The reason is a bug in the make(1) tool used on those systems related to .SUFFIXES lines. A temporary workaround is to change the Makefile line .SUFFIXES: .roff .in .ps .mom .pdf .me .ms .ps .html .txt .texi \ .dvi .pdf .xhtml .man .c .cpp .log .o .obj .sed .sin \ .test .test$(EXEEXT) .trs .ypp into .SUFFIXES: .man .roff .in .ps .mom .pdf .me .ms .ps .html .txt \ .texi .dvi .pdf .xhtml .c .cpp .log .o .obj .sed .sin \ .test .test$(EXEEXT) .trs .ypp (put .man at begin of the list). The bug is reported to the maintainer of the make(1) tool of those systems. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.22.3] * Configuration on MacOS X 10.6 doesn't succeed. Use ./configure CXX=g++-4.2 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.21] * In MacOS X, I want to completely replace the groff that came with the system. Use ./configure --prefix=/usr --mandir=/usr/share/man then make make install Note that subsequent system updates may replace your groff. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.19.2] * I get warnings from the Sun linker while using gcc 3.4.0: ld: warning: relocation error: R_SPARC_UA32: file groff/src/libs/libgroff/libgroff.a(getopt.o): symbol optarg: external symbolic relocation against non-allocatable section .debug_info; cannot be processed at runtime: relocation ignored This seems to be a known problem (Sun bugs #4910101 and #4910810, filed in September 2003; gcc bug #15599, filed May 2004) without a public fix as of this writing. A work-around is to use option `-gstabs+' instead of `-g' (and a high probability that the output is only debuggable with gdb but not with Sun's debuggers). ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.19] * When compiling on MacOS X 10.2, groff compiles but does not run well, especially `eqn', causing many `can't break line' messages. Use ./configure CXX=g++2 then make as usual. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.18.0] * Compilation dies with y.tab.c: In function `int yyparse()': y.tab.c: `size_t' undeclared in namespace `std' * bison reports conflicts (either on stderr or in the `pic.output' file) while processing `pic.y', and the produced pic binary doesn't work at all. You need bison version 1.875b or greater. Alternatively, use yacc or byacc. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.17] * On HP-UX, the compiler complains about missing symbol `alloca'. Say export LDFLAGS=-lPW before starting the configure script. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.16.1] * On a host using Unix make (e.g. Solaris), if you are compiling for multiple architectures by building in a subdirectory, the make stops with a message like this: make: Fatal error: Don't know how to make target `assert.o' or like this: make: Fatal error: Can't find /u/src/groff/src/include/Makefile.sub': No such file or directory This occurs because GNU make and Unix make handle VPATH differently, and the groff build relies on GNU make's VPATH handling. Use GNU make to work around this. In Solaris 8 and 9, GNU make is on the Software Companion CD in package SFWgmake and is installed as /opt/sfw/bin/gmake. Prebuilt versions of GNU make for Solaris are also available from sunfreeware.com. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * There are many empty `Makefile.dep' files. Is this a bug? No. Real dependency files are created with a `make depend' call. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.16] * The configure script fails on OS/390 (z/OS) Unix. [This has been fixed in z/OS V1R3 (aka OS/390 R13).] There is a bug in the Language Environment (LE) whereby the test program for static destructors fails. You see the message `configure: error: a working C++ compiler is required'. Applying PTF UQ42006 is supposed to fix this, but the test program is still returning the wrong value (1). To work around this problem, you can comment out the following in the configure script (near line 2029). This effectively bypasses the test (static constructors and destructors do actually work properly): #if { (eval echo "$as_me:2029: \"$ac_link\"") >&5 # (eval $ac_link) 2>&5 # ac_status=$? # echo "$as_me:2032: \$? = $ac_status" >&5 # (exit $ac_status); } && { ac_try='./conftest$ac_exeext' # { (eval echo "$as_me:2034: \"$ac_try\"") >&5 # (eval $ac_try) 2>&5 # ac_status=$? # echo "$as_me:2037: \$? = $ac_status" >&5 # (exit $ac_status); }; }; then # echo "$as_me:2039: result: yes" >&5 #echo "${ECHO_T}yes" >&6 #else # echo "$as_me: program exited with status $ac_status" >&5 #echo "$as_me: failed program was:" >&5 #cat conftest.$ac_ext >&5 #echo "$as_me:2045: result: no" >&5 #echo "${ECHO_T}no" >&6;{ { echo "$as_me:2046: error: a working C++ compiler is required" >&5 #echo "$as_me: error: a working C++ compiler is required" >&2;} # { (exit 1); exit 1; }; } #fi ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.15] * I get errors when I try to compile groff with Forte Development 6 or 6u1, or Sun C++ version 5.0 through 5.2. This is a known problem; see Sun bug #4301919. See Sun patches 109482, 109490, 109508, and 109509 for fixes. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.08] * I'm having problems compiling groff on 386BSD 0.1. If you're using ash as /bin/sh, you'll need the following patch. *** gendef.sh.org Sun Jun 30 13:30:36 1991 --- gendef.sh Sun Feb 28 10:23:49 1993 *************** *** 3,9 **** file=$1 shift ! defs="#define $1" shift for def do --- 3,10 ---- file=$1 shift ! x=$1 ! defs="#define $x" shift for def do You'll also need to change dirnamemax.c so that it doesn't use pathconf(). ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * While compiling on Xenix, ranlib libgroff.a fails. The system ranlib can't handle externals longer than 40 characters. Use the ranlib included in demon.co.uk:/pub/xenix/g++-1.40.3a.v1 instead. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.07] * I get errors when I try to compile groff with DEC C++. Fix the declaration of write() in so that the second argument is a const char *. Fix the declaration of open() in so that the first argument is a const char *. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * On Ultrix, the make program stops with the message *** Error code 1 Stop. for no apparent reason. Use GNU make. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [groff 1.01] * I get errors when I try to compile groff with Sun C++ version 3 or earlier. Groff requires header files that are moderately compatible with AT&T C++ and ANSI C. With some versions of Sun C++, the supplied header files need some of the following changes to meet this requirement: must declare the mem* functions, (just add `#include ' to ); the first argument to fopen and freopen should be declared as `const char *'; the first argument to fread should be declared as `void *'; the first argument to fwrite should be declared as `const void *'; malloc should be declared to return `void *'; in , the declaration `extern "C" { void *__builtin_alloca(int); }' should be added; in the return type and the second argument type of signal() should be changed to be `void (*)(int)'. You can either change them in place, or copy them to some other directory and include that directory with a -I option. ##### Editor settings Local Variables: fill-column: 72 mode: text End: vim: set autoindent textwidth=72: