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You should install manual pages in nroff
source form, in
appropriate places under /usr/share/man
. You should only use
sections 1 to 9 (see the FHS for more details). You must not install a
pre-formatted "cat page".
Each program, utility, and function should have an associated manual page included in the same package. It is suggested that all configuration files also have a manual page included as well. Manual pages for protocols and other auxiliary things are optional.
If no manual page is available, this is considered as a bug and should be reported to the Ubuntu Bug Tracking System (the maintainer of the package is allowed to write this bug report themselves, if they so desire). Do not close the bug report until a proper man page is available.[90]
You may forward a complaint about a missing man page to the upstream authors, and mark the bug as forwarded in the Ubuntu bug tracking system. Even though the GNU Project do not in general consider the lack of a man page to be a bug, we do; if they tell you that they don't consider it a bug you should leave the bug in our bug tracking system open anyway.
Manual pages should be installed compressed using gzip -9.
If one man page needs to be accessible via several names it is better to use a
symbolic link than the .so
feature, but there is no need to fiddle
with the relevant parts of the upstream source to change from .so
to symlinks: don't do it unless it's easy. You should not create hard links in
the manual page directories, nor put absolute filenames in .so
directives. The filename in a .so
in a man page should be
relative to the base of the man page tree (usually
/usr/share/man
). If you do not create any links (whether
symlinks, hard links, or .so directives) in the file system to the
alternate names of the man page, then you should not rely on man
finding your man page under those names based solely on the information in the
man page's header.[91]
Manual pages in locale-specific subdirectories of /usr/share/man
should use either UTF-8 or the usual legacy encoding for that language
(normally the one corresponding to the shortest relevant locale name in
/usr/share/i18n/SUPPORTED
). For example, pages under
/usr/share/man/fr
should use either UTF-8 or ISO-8859-1.[92]
A country name (the DE in de_DE) should not be included in the subdirectory name unless it indicates a significant difference in the language, as this excludes speakers of the language in other countries.[93]
Due to limitations in current implementations, all characters in the manual
page source should be representable in the usual legacy encoding for that
language, even if the file is actually encoded in UTF-8. Safe alternative ways
to write many characters outside that range may be found in
groff_char(7)
.
Info documents should be installed in /usr/share/info
. They
should be compressed with gzip -9.
Your package should call install-info
to update the Info
dir
file in its postinst
script when called with a
configure argument, for example:
install-info --quiet --section Development Development \ /usr/share/info/foobar.info
It is a good idea to specify a section for the location of your program; this
is done with the --section switch. To determine which section to
use, you should look at /usr/share/info/dir
on your system and
choose the most relevant (or create a new section if none of the current
sections are relevant). Note that the --section flag takes two
arguments; the first is a regular expression to match (case-insensitively)
against an existing section, the second is used when creating a new one.
You should remove the entries in the prerm
script when called with
a remove argument:
install-info --quiet --remove /usr/share/info/foobar.info
If install-info
cannot find a description entry in the Info file
you must supply one. See install-info(8)
for details.
Any additional documentation that comes with the package may be installed at
the discretion of the package maintainer. Plain text documentation should be
installed in the directory /usr/share/doc/package
,
where package is the name of the package, and compressed with
gzip -9 unless it is small.
If a package comes with large amounts of documentation which many users of the package will not require you should create a separate binary package to contain it, so that it does not take up disk space on the machines of users who do not need or want it installed.
It is often a good idea to put text information files (README
s,
changelogs, and so forth) that come with the source package in
/usr/share/doc/package
in the binary package. However,
you don't need to install the instructions for building and installing the
package, of course!
Packages must not require the existence of any files in
/usr/share/doc/
in order to function [94]. Any files that are referenced by programs but are also
useful as stand alone documentation should be installed under
/usr/share/package/
with symbolic links from
/usr/share/doc/package
.
/usr/share/doc/package
may be a symbolic link to
another directory in /usr/share/doc
only if the two packages both
come from the same source and the first package Depends on the second.[95]
Former Debian releases placed all additional documentation in
/usr/doc/package
. This has been changed to
/usr/share/doc/package
, and packages must not put
documentation in the directory /usr/doc/package
. [96]
The unification of Ubuntu documentation is being carried out via HTML.
If your package comes with extensive documentation in a markup format that can
be converted to various other formats you should if possible ship HTML versions
in a binary package, in the directory
/usr/share/doc/appropriate-package
or its
subdirectories.[97]
Other formats such as PostScript may be provided at the package maintainer's discretion.
Every package must be accompanied by a verbatim copy of its copyright and
distribution license in the file
/usr/share/doc/package/copyright
. This file must
neither be compressed nor be a symbolic link.
In addition, the copyright file must say where the upstream sources (if any) were obtained. It should name the original authors of the package and the Ubuntu maintainer(s) who were involved with its creation.
A copy of the file which will be installed in
/usr/share/doc/package/copyright
should be in
debian/copyright
in the source package.
/usr/share/doc/package
may be a symbolic link to
another directory in /usr/share/doc
only if the two packages both
come from the same source and the first package Depends on the second. These
rules are important because copyrights must be extractable by mechanical means.
Packages distributed under the UCB BSD license, the Apache license (version
2.0), the Artistic license, the GNU GPL (version 2 or 3), the GNU LGPL
(versions 2, 2.1, or 3), and the GNU FDL (versions 1.2 or 1.3) should refer to
the corresponding files under /usr/share/common-licenses
,[98] rather than quoting them in the
copyright file.
You should not use the copyright file as a general README
file.
If your package has such a file it should be installed in
/usr/share/doc/package/README
or
README.Debian
or some other appropriate place.
Any examples (configurations, source files, whatever), should be installed in a
directory /usr/share/doc/package/examples
. These files
should not be referenced by any program: they're there for the benefit of the
system administrator and users as documentation only. Architecture-specific
example files should be installed in a directory
/usr/lib/package/examples
with symbolic links to them
from /usr/share/doc/package/examples
, or the latter
directory itself may be a symbolic link to the former.
If the purpose of a package is to provide examples, then the example files may
be installed into /usr/share/doc/package
.
Packages that are not Debian-native must contain a compressed copy of the
debian/changelog
file from the Debian source tree in
/usr/share/doc/package
with the name
changelog.Debian.gz
.
If an upstream changelog is available, it should be accessible as
/usr/share/doc/package/changelog.gz
in plain text. If
the upstream changelog is distributed in HTML, it should be made available in
that form as /usr/share/doc/package/changelog.html.gz
and a plain text changelog.gz
should be generated from it using,
for example, lynx -dump -nolist. If the upstream changelog files
do not already conform to this naming convention, then this may be achieved
either by renaming the files, or by adding a symbolic link, at the maintainer's
discretion.[99]
All of these files should be installed compressed using gzip -9, as they will become large with time even if they start out small.
If the package has only one changelog which is used both as the Debian
changelog and the upstream one because there is no separate upstream maintainer
then that changelog should usually be installed as
/usr/share/doc/package/changelog.gz
; if there is a
separate upstream maintainer, but no upstream changelog, then the Debian
changelog should still be called changelog.Debian.gz
.
For details about the format and contents of the Debian changelog file, please
see Ubuntu changelog:
debian/changelog
, Section 4.4.
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Ubuntu Policy Manual
version 3.8.2.0kylin3, 2018-03-23