On Tue, Sep 13, 2022 at 06:54:40PM -0400, luna wrote:
> On Tue, Sep 13, 2022 at 07:04:55 +0100, Jason McIntyre wrote:
> > hi.
> > 
> > we stopped installing them because many of them were falling out of date
> > and there wasn;t really the resources (or motivation) to update them.
> > however not all of them were removed. although no longer installed, some
> > of the better ones remain in the source tree. from a quick look:
> 
> Note that you'll need to pull /usr/src/share/mk/bsd.doc.mk out of the 
> attic and install it in /usr/share/mk, and then you'll need a copy of 
> groff to build these documents. I haven't tested this on a recent 
> version of OpenBSD, though I can say that older versions of both 
> OpenBSD and FreeBSD work quite well for building these old docs. If you 
> want versions you can read on your terminal, you can pass -Tascii to 
> groff like FreeBSD's bsd.doc.mk does, which is (handwaving over other 
> details here) what groff does to render manpages.
> 
> I can wholeheartedly recommend building and reading the ones you can
> find, especially if you're interested in Unix history. They're something
> of a time capsule, providing a snapshot of what Unix was at the time and
> how people used it. In addition, as said above, some of them are just as
> applicable today as when they were written.
> 

also, although it won;t be pretty, you can just pass the documents to
mandoc and get something that's at least semi-readable.

jmc

Reply via email to