From 5dc595a6d90762de8e2290a7dbf6ef997304f18f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?Fr=C3=A9d=C3=A9ric=20Delanoy?= Date: Wed, 17 Jul 2013 16:45:19 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] winebuild: Fix manpage formatting. --- tools/winebuild/winebuild.man.in | 34 ++++++++++++++++---------------- 1 file changed, 17 insertions(+), 17 deletions(-) diff --git a/tools/winebuild/winebuild.man.in b/tools/winebuild/winebuild.man.in index c7294993393..b0b2784c597 100644 --- a/tools/winebuild/winebuild.man.in +++ b/tools/winebuild/winebuild.man.in @@ -1,9 +1,9 @@ -.\" -*- nroff -*- .TH WINEBUILD 1 "October 2005" "@PACKAGE_STRING@" "Wine Developers Manual" .SH NAME winebuild \- Wine dll builder .SH SYNOPSIS -.BI winebuild\ [options]\ [input\ files] +.B winebuild +.RI [ options ]\ [ inputfile ...] .SH DESCRIPTION .B winebuild generates the assembly files that are necessary to build a Wine dll, @@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ what you want winebuild to generate. .BI \--dll Build an assembly file from a .spec file (see \fBSPEC FILE SYNTAX\fR for details), or from a standard Windows .def file. The .spec/.def -file is specified via the -E option. The resulting file must be +file is specified via the \fB-E\fR option. The resulting file must be assembled and linked to the other object files to build a working Wine dll. In this mode, the .I input files @@ -33,22 +33,22 @@ other dlls. .TP .BI \--exe Build an assembly file for an executable. This is basically the same as -the --dll mode except that it doesn't require a .spec/.def file as input, +the \fB--dll\fR mode except that it doesn't require a .spec/.def file as input, since an executable need not export functions. Some executables however do export functions, and for those a .spec/.def file can be specified via -the -E option. The executable is named from the .spec/.def file name if -present, or explicitly through the -F option. The resulting file must be +the \fB-E\fR option. The executable is named from the .spec/.def file name if +present, or explicitly through the \fB-F\fR option. The resulting file must be assembled and linked to the other object files to build a working Wine executable, and all the other object files must be listed as .I input files. .TP .BI \--def Build a .def file from a spec file. The .spec file is specified via the --E option. This is used when building dlls with a PE (Win32) compiler. +\fB-E\fR option. This is used when building dlls with a PE (Win32) compiler. .TP .BI \--implib Build a PE import library from a spec file. The .spec file is -specified via the -E option. +specified via the \fB-E\fR option. .TP .B \--resources Generate a .o file containing all the input resources. This is useful @@ -62,7 +62,7 @@ so there's no need for an intermediate .o file. Specify the command to use to compile assembly files; the default is \fBas\fR. .TP -.BI \-b,\ --target= cpu-manufacturer[-kernel]-os +.BI \-b,\ --target= cpu-manufacturer\fR[\fB-\fIkernel\fR]\fB-\fIos Specify the target CPU and platform on which the generated code will be built. The target specification is in the standard autoconf format as returned by config.sub. @@ -154,7 +154,7 @@ Import the specified library, looking for a corresponding option. .TP .B \-m16, -m32, -m64 -Generate 16-bit, 32-bit, respectively 64-bit code. +Generate respectively 16-bit, 32-bit or 64-bit code. .TP .BI \-M,\ --main-module= module When building a 16-bit dll, set the name of its 32-bit counterpart to @@ -171,20 +171,20 @@ KRNL386.EXE. It shouldn't be needed otherwise. Specify the command to use to get the list of undefined symbols; the default is \fBnm\fR. .TP -.BI --nxcompat= yes|no +.BI --nxcompat= yes\fR|\fIno Specify whether the module is compatible with no-exec support. The default is yes. .TP .BI \-o,\ --output= file Set the name of the output file (default is standard output). If the -output file name end in \fB.o\fR, the text output is sent to a +output file name ends in .o, the text output is sent to a temporary file that is then assembled to produce the specified .o file. .TP .BI \-r,\ --res= rsrc.res Load resources from the specified binary resource file. The \fIrsrc.res\fR file can be produced from a source resource file with -.BR wrc(1) +.BR wrc (1) (or with a Windows resource compiler). .br This option is only necessary for Win16 resource files, the Win32 ones @@ -197,7 +197,7 @@ option will also work for Win32 files). .B --save-temps Do not delete the various temporary files that \fBwinebuild\fR generates. .TP -.BI --subsystem= subsystem[:major[.minor]] +.BI --subsystem= subsystem\fR[\fB:\fImajor\fR[\fB.\fIminor\fR]] Set the subsystem of the executable, which can be one of the following: .br .B console @@ -227,7 +227,7 @@ library to be included when resolving imports. .TP .B \-v, --verbose Display the various subcommands being invoked by -.B winebuild. +.BR winebuild . .TP .B \--version Display the program version and exit. @@ -296,10 +296,10 @@ accessed through GetProcAddress. The entry point will be imported by ordinal instead of by name. The name is still exported. .TP -.BI -arch= cpu[,cpu] +.BI -arch= cpu\fR[\fB,\fIcpu\fR] The entry point is only available on the specified CPU architecture(s). The names \fBwin32\fR and \fBwin64\fR match all -32-bit, respectively 64-bit, CPU architectures. In 16-bit dlls, +32-bit or 64-bit CPU architectures respectively. In 16-bit dlls, specifying \fB-arch=win32\fR causes the entry point to be exported from the 32-bit wrapper module. .SS "Function ordinals"