$Id: refentry.xsl 6243 2006-09-02 04:54:17Z xmldoc $
Copyright © 2005 by The DocBook Project. No Warranty.
This is technical reference documentation for the "refentry metadata gathering" templates in the DocBook XSL Stylesheets.
This is not intended to be user documentation. It is provided for developers writing customization layers for the stylesheets.
Currently, only the manpages stylesheets make use of these templates. They are, however, potentially useful elsewhere. |
Table of Contents
get.refentry.metadata — Gathers metadata from a refentry and its ancestors
<xsl:template name="get.refentry.metadata"> <xsl:param name="refname"/> <xsl:param name="info"/> <xsl:param name="prefs"/> ... </xsl:template>
Reference documentation for particular commands, functions,
etc., is sometimes viewed in isolation from its greater "context". For
example, users view Unix man pages as, well, individual pages, not as
part of a "book" of some kind. Therefore, it is sometimes necessary to
embed "context" information in output for each refentry
.
However, one problem is that different users mark up that
context information in different ways. Often (usually), the
context information is not actually part of the content of the
refentry
itself, but instead part of the content of a
parent or ancestor element to the the refentry
. And
even then, DocBook provides a variety of elements that users might
potentially use to mark up the same kind of information. One user
might use the productnumber
element to mark up version
information about a particular product, while another might use
the releaseinfo
element.
Taking all that in mind, the
get.refentry.metadata
function tries to gather
metadata from a refentry
element and its ancestor
elements in an intelligent and user-configurable way. The basic
mechanism used in the XPath expressions throughout this stylesheet
is to select the relevant metadata from the *info element that is
closest to the actual refentry
– either on the
refentry
itself, or on its nearest ancestor.
The |
The first refname
in the refentry
A set of info nodes (from a refentry
element and its ancestors)
A node containing user preferences (from global stylesheet parameters)
Returns a node set with the following elements. The
descriptions are verbatim from the man(7)
man
page.
the title of the man page (e.g., MAN
)
the section number the man page should be placed in (e.g.,
7
)
the date of the last revision
the source of the command
the title of the manual (e.g., Linux Programmer's Manual)
get.refentry.title — Gets title metadata for a refentry
<xsl:template name="get.refentry.title"> <xsl:param name="refname"/> ... </xsl:template>
get.refentry.section — Gets section metadata for a refentry
<xsl:template name="get.refentry.section"> <xsl:param name="refname"/> <xsl:param name="quiet" select="0"/> ... </xsl:template>
The man(7)
man page describes this as "the
section number the man page should be placed in (e.g.,
7
)". If we do not find a manvolnum
specified in the source, and we find that the refentry
is
for a function, we use the section number 3
["Library calls (functions within program libraries)"]; otherwise, we
default to using 1
["Executable programs or shell
commands"].
get.refentry.date — Gets date metadata for a refentry
<xsl:template name="get.refentry.date"> <xsl:param name="refname"/> <xsl:param name="info"/> <xsl:param name="prefs"/> ... </xsl:template>
The man(7)
man page describes this as "the
date of the last revision". If we cannot find a date in the source, we
generate one.
get.refentry.source — Gets source metadata for a refentry
<xsl:template name="get.refentry.source"> <xsl:param name="refname"/> <xsl:param name="info"/> <xsl:param name="prefs"/> ... </xsl:template>
The man(7)
man page describes this as "the
source of the command", and provides the following examples:
For binaries, use something like: GNU, NET-2, SLS Distribution, MCC Distribution.
For system calls, use the version of the kernel that you are currently looking at: Linux 0.99.11.
For library calls, use the source of the function: GNU, BSD 4.3, Linux DLL 4.4.1.
The solbook(5)
man page describes
something very much like what man(7)
calls
"source", except that solbook(5)
names it
"software" and describes it like this:
This is the name of the software product that the topic discussed on the reference page belongs to. For example UNIX commands are part of the
SunOS x.x
release.
In practice, there are many pages that simply have a version
number in the "source" field. So, it looks like what we have is a
two-part field,
Name
Version
,
where:
product name (e.g., BSD) or org. name (e.g., GNU)
version name
Each part is optional. If the Name
is a
product name, then the Version
is probably
the version of the product. Or there may be no
Name
, in which case, if there is a
Version
, it is probably the version of the
item itself, not the product it is part of. Or, if the
Name
is an organization name, then there
probably will be no Version
.
get.refentry.source.name — Gets source-name metadata for a refentry
<xsl:template name="get.refentry.source.name"> <xsl:param name="refname"/> <xsl:param name="info"/> <xsl:param name="prefs"/> ... </xsl:template>
A "source name" is one part of a (potentially) two-part
Name
Version
source field. For more details, see the documentation for the
get.refentry.source
template.
get.refentry.version — Gets version metadata for a refentry
<xsl:template name="get.refentry.version"> <xsl:param name="refname"/> <xsl:param name="info"/> <xsl:param name="prefs"/> ... </xsl:template>
A "version" is one part of a (potentially) two-part
Name
Version
source field. For more details, see the documentation for the
get.refentry.source
template.
get.refentry.manual — Gets source metadata for a refentry
<xsl:template name="get.refentry.manual"> <xsl:param name="refname"/> <xsl:param name="info"/> <xsl:param name="prefs"/> ... </xsl:template>
The man(7)
man page describes this as "the
title of the manual (e.g., Linux Programmer's
Manual)". Here are some examples from existing man pages:
dpkg utilities (dpkg-name)
User Contributed Perl Documentation (GET)
GNU Development Tools (ld)
Emperor Norton Utilities (ddate)
Debian GNU/Linux manual (faked)
GIMP Manual Pages (gimp)
KDOC Documentation System (qt2kdoc)
The solbook(5)
man page describes
something very much like what man(7)
calls
"manual", except that solbook(5)
names it
"sectdesc" and describes it like this:
This is the section title of the reference page; for example
User Commands
.
get.refentry.metadata.prefs — Gets user preferences for refentry metadata gathering
<xsl:template name="get.refentry.metadata.prefs"/>
The DocBook XSL stylesheets include several user-configurable
global stylesheet parameters for controlling refentry
metadata gathering. Those parameters are not read directly by the
other refentry
metadata-gathering functions. Instead, they
are read only by the get.refentry.metadata.prefs
function, which assembles them into a structure that is then passed to
the other refentry
metadata-gathering functions.
So the, get.refentry.metadata.prefs
function is the only interface to collecting stylesheet parameters for
controlling refentry
metadata gathering.
set.refentry.metadata — Sets content of a refentry metadata item
<xsl:template name="set.refentry.metadata"> <xsl:param name="refname"/> <xsl:param name="info"/> <xsl:param name="contents"/> <xsl:param name="context"/> <xsl:param name="preferred"/> ... </xsl:template>
The set.refentry.metadata
function is
called each time a suitable source element is found for a certain
metadata field.
The first refname
in the refentry
A single *info node that contains the selected source element.
A node containing the selected source element.
A string describing the metadata context in which the
set.refentry.metadata
function was
called: either "date", "source", "version", or "manual".