61614fe0ad
Reviewed by: Paul Richards, Garrett Wollman
148 lines
4.6 KiB
INI
148 lines
4.6 KiB
INI
/* unix.cfg: Configuration file for sgmls on Unix. */
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/* A list of filename templates to use for searching for external entities.
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The filenames are separated by the character specified in PATH_FILE_SEP.
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See sgmls.man for details. */
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#define DEFAULT_PATH "/usr/local/lib/sgml/%O/%C/%T:%N.%X:%N.%D"
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/* The character that separates the filenames templates. */
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#define PATH_FILE_SEP ':'
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/* The character that separates filenames in a system identifier.
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Usually the same as PATH_FILE_SEP. */
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#define SYSID_FILE_SEP ':'
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/* The environment variable that contains the list of filename templates. */
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#define PATH_ENV_VAR "SGML_PATH"
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/* MIN_DAT_SUBS_FROM and MIN_DATS_SUBS_TO tell sgmls how to transform a name
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or system identifier into a legal filename. A character in
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MIN_DAT_SUBS_FROM will be transformed into the character in the
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corresponding position in MIN_DAT_SUBS_TO. If there is no such
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position, then the character is removed. */
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/* This says that spaces should be transformed to underscores, and
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slashes to percents. */
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#define MIN_DAT_SUBS_FROM " /"
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#define MIN_DAT_SUBS_TO "_%"
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/* Define this to allow tracing. */
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/* #define TRACE 1 */
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/* Define this you want support for subdocuments. This is implemented
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using features that are not part of Standard C, so you might not want
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to define it if you are porting to a new system. Otherwise I suggest
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you leave it defined. */
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#define SUPPORT_SUBDOC 1
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/* Define HAVE_EXTENDED_PRINTF if your *printf functions supports
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X/Open extensions; if they do, then, for example,
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printf("%2$s%1$s", "bar", "foo")
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should print `foobar'. */
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/* #define HAVE_EXTENDED_PRINTF 1 */
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/* Define HAVE_CAT if your system provides the X/Open message
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catalogue functions catopen() and catgets(), and you want to use them.
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An implementations of these functions is included and will be used if
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you don't define this. On SunOS 4.1.1, if you do define this you
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should set CC=/usr/xpg2bin/cc in the makefile. */
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/* #define HAVE_CAT 1 */
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#ifdef __STDC__
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/* Define this if your compiler supports prototypes. */
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#define USE_PROTOTYPES 1
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#endif
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/* Can't use <stdarg.h> without prototypes. */
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#ifndef USE_PROTOTYPES
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#define VARARGS 1
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#endif
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/* If your compiler defines __STDC__ but doesn't provide <stdarg.h>,
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you must define VARARGS yourself here. */
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/* #define VARARGS 1 */
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/* Define this if you do not have strerror(). */
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#define STRERROR_MISSING 1
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/* Define this unless the character testing functions in ctype.h
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are defined for all values representable as an unsigned char. You do
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not need to define this if your system is ANSI C conformant. You
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should define for old Unix systems. */
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/* #define USE_ISASCII 1 */
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/* Define this if your system provides the BSD style string operations
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rather than ANSI C ones (eg bcopy() rather than memcpy(), and index()
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rather than strchr()). */
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/* #define BSD_STRINGS 1 */
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/* Define this if you have getopt(). */
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#define HAVE_GETOPT 1
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/* Define this if you have access(). */
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#define HAVE_ACCESS 1
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/* Define this if you have <unistd.h>. */
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#define HAVE_UNISTD_H 1
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/* Define this if you have <sys/stat.h>. */
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#define HAVE_SYS_STAT_H 1
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/* Define this if you have waitpid(). */
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#define HAVE_WAITPID 1
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/* Define this if your system is POSIX.1 (ISO 9945-1:1990) compliant. */
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#define POSIX 1
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/* Define this if you have the vfork() system call. */
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#define HAVE_VFORK 1
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/* Define this if you have <vfork.h>. */
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#define HAVE_VFORK_H 1
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/* Define this if you don't have <stdlib.h> */
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/* #define STDLIB_H_MISSING 1 */
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/* Define this if you don't have <stddef.h> */
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/* #define STDDEF_H_MISSING 1 */
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/* Define this if you don't have <limits.h> */
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/* #define LIMITS_H_MISSING 1 */
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/* Define this if you don't have remove(); unlink() will be used instead. */
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#define REMOVE_MISSING 1
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/* Define this if you don't have raise(); kill() will be used instead. */
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#define RAISE_MISSING 1
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/* Define this if you don't have fsetpos() and fgetpos(). */
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#define FPOS_MISSING 1
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/* Universal pointer type. */
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/* If your compiler doesn't fully support void *, change `void' to `char'. */
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typedef void *UNIV;
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/* If your compiler doesn't support void as a function return type,
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change `void' to `int'. */
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typedef void VOID;
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/* If you don't have an ANSI C conformant <limits.h>, define
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CHAR_SIGNED as 1 or 0 according to whether the `char' type is signed.
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The <limits.h> on some versions of System Release V 3.2 is not ANSI C
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conformant: the value of CHAR_MIN is 0 even though the `char' type is
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signed. */
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/* #define CHAR_SIGNED 1 */
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/* #define CHAR_SIGNED 0 */
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#ifndef CHAR_SIGNED
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#include <limits.h>
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#if CHAR_MIN < 0
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#define CHAR_SIGNED 1
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#else
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#define CHAR_SIGNED 0
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#endif
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#endif /* not CHAR_SIGNED */
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/* Assume the system character set is ISO Latin-1. */
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#include "latin1.h"
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