telodendria/man/man5/hdoc.5

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2023-05-21 00:21:39 +00:00
.Dd $Mdocdate: May 21 2023 $
.Dt HDOC 5
.Os Cytoplasm
.Sh NAME
.Nm hdoc
.Nd C header file format accepted by the documentation generator.
.Sh DESCRIPTION
.Pp
.Nm
uses an extremely primitive parser to generate documentation from
C header files. As such, the format accepted by
.Nm
is rather strict and may not be suitable for other projects beyond
of Cytoplasm. This document describes what
.Nm
considers to be a valid C header file, and how that header file can
be annotated to produce a nicely-formatted man page.
.Pp
At the very top level, a C header is a sequences of tokens that
represent the following:
.Bl -bullet -offset indent
.It
An ANSI C89 comment.
.It
A preprocessor directive.
.It
A typedef declaration.
.It
A constant or other global variable declaration.
.It
A function declaration.
.El
.Pp
Note that global variables and functions
.Em must
be marked with
.Ar extern ,
otherwise the parser will fail to recognize them. This is by
design; a header should make everything extern by default,
because it does not actually implement or declare anything.
.Pp
Preprocessor directives are completely ignored. Regular C
comments are also ignored.
.Nm
is primarily concerned with type declarations, global
variables, and functions. It also inspects specially-formatted
C comments, which are used to annotate these elements of the
header. The format of these comments is described here.
.Pp
There are two types of special comments recognized, the first
of which is called the ``main'' comment block, as it documents
the header itself, not the declarations contained in it. Main
comment blocks also control the behavior of the parser and the
resulting man page by setting registers. The format of the
main comment block, which typically appears only once at the
top of the header, although this is not a requirement, is as
follows:
.Bl -bullet -offset indent
.It
The comment should start with a ``triple star,'' like this:
.Bd -literal -offset indent
/***
*
*/
.Ed
.It
Any lines that start with a ``@'' are parser directives that
set registers. The name of the register to set follows
immediately after the ``@'' sigil, and continues until the first
whitespace. The rest of the line is the value of the register.
A list of registers recognized by
.Nm
is as follows. These registers control the man page output,
and the last value set is the one that is used:
.Bl -tag -width Ds
.It \&Nm
The name register. The name of the man page will be set to the
contents of this register. It defaults to ``Unnmamed.''
.It \&Dd
The date register. The date of the man page will be set to the
contents of this register. If left unset, it defaults to the
current date.
.It \&Os
The operating system register. The Os value, which appears in
the bottom left and right corners of the man page, will be set
to the contents of this register. If left unset, it is not
output.
.It \&Nd
The description register. The description of the man page will
be set to the contents of this register. It defaults to
``No description.''
.It \&Xr
The cross reference register. The SEE ALSO section of the man
page will list the specified cross references, which are to be
separated by a single space. The section shall be omitted,
because it is set automatically to the same section that the
current man page will belong to. This limitation may be removed
in the future.
.El
.Pp
These registers control the parser itself, modifying its
behavior as soon as the appear in the file:
.Bl -tag -width Ds
.It ignore-typedefs
Don't throw an error for an undocumented type declaration.
The value doesn't matter; as soon as this register shows
up, it's set. In most cases, it should not be used, however,
it may be helpful in a few scenarios, such as when there are
multiple typedefs that do the same thing, but are controlled
by preprocessor macros.
.It suppress-warnings
Don't issue a warning for invalid or unrecognized top-level
tokens. They will instead be ignored until the next
recognized top-level token is found. The value doesn't
matter; as soon as this register shows up, it is set. In most
cases, it should not be used, however it may be helpful in a
few scenarios, such as when function declarations are generated
by preprocessor directives and thus don't follow the standard
form.
.El
.It
Any other lines in the main block are output to the DESCRIPTION
section of the main page. This description may contain mdoc
directives in it, as the lines are copied verbatim. If multiple
main comment blocks appear in a single header, their description
lines are appended in the order they appear.
.El
.Pp
Declaration documentation comments are created as follows:
.Bl -bullet -offset indent
.It
The comment should start with a ``double star,'' like this:
.Bd -literal -offset indent
/**
*
*/
.Ed
.It
The contents of the comment are copied verbatim into the output,
so the comment may contain mdoc directives.
.It
The comment must appear before a declaration. If multiple
documentation comments appear before a declaration, the last
one before the declaration is used.
.El
.Pp
The generated man page includes the name and description of the
header, a synopsis section that lists all of the functions in
the header, a description section that contains all the non-register
lines of the main comment blocks, and then all of the documentation
for each function, with the function prototype displayed as a
subsection header, and the documentation displayed under it.
.Sh EXAMPLES
.Pp
Consider the following simple C header:
.Bd -literal -offset indent
#include <stdio.h>
extern void SayHello(FILE *);
.Ed
.Pp
To annotate this header in the manner
.Nm
expects, do something like this:
.Bd -literal -offset indent
/***
* @Nm Hello
* @Nd Say hello.
* @Dd May 17 2023
*
* .Nm
* provides functionality to write hello world messages
* into standard C file descriptors.
*
* @Xr fputs fprintf
*/
#include <stdio.h>
/**
* This function writes "hello world" to the given file
* descriptor.
* .Pp
* There really isn't much more to be said about it.
*/
extern void SayHello(FILE *);
.Ed
.Pp
This example shows how mdoc directives can be placed in
documentation comments. Note that the triple-star comment
documents the header itself, and the double-star comment
documents the type declaration or function definition
below it.
.Sh SEE ALSO
.Xr hdoc 5 ,
.Xr HeaderParser 3