Manual pages (often shortened to "man pages") are a means of providing documentation on the command line. Most manual pages describe low-level programming interfaces, command-line tools, and file formats.
This manual page is intended to help you learn about manual pages, their purpose, their style, and their overall layout so that you can better take advantage of the content that they provide.
Because manual pages are written by software engineers from many different companies and organizations around the world, the format of these manual pages varies somewhat from page to page, as does the style.
In general, however, manual pages are written to be as concise as possible. While this makes them a somewhat difficult place to start as a new programmer, this is intentional. They are not intended to replace conceptual documentation such as books on programming. They are intended primarily to provide a quick reference for people who are already somewhat familiar with the subject.
Some manual pages provide links to outside websites. You can often find more thorough conceptual documentation, sample code, and other useful information at these websites.
Manual pages also link to other manual pages. When they do, these links are in the form name(section). For example, the manual page ls(1) describes the ls command, and appears in section 1 of the manual. The manual sections are described below.
The manual is divided into sections. Each section covers a particular subject area. The major manual page sections are:
(*) Excludes library routines that merely wrap system calls. Those routines are covered in section 2.
The majority of commonly used commands appear in sections 1
and 8 of the manual. To learn more about these commands,
read the individual pages or read Shell Scripting Primer at
Most programming information is found in sections 2 and 3.
These subject areas may be further subdivided. For example, manual section 3 was originally intended to hold documentation in the standard C library but has been expanded to include functions in other C language libraries, such as section 3ssl (OpenSSL functions).
Section 3 has even been expanded to include other programming languages. For example, section 3pm contains documentation for Perl modules).
It is common to have multiple manual pages with the same name but different section numbers. This usually occurs when a command shares a name with a C function or system call that does something very similar. To avoid any confusion, manual pages are commonly referred to in the form name(number), in which the number is the section number.
You can read manual pages in a number of ways. The most common way
to read manual pages is with the
If there are multiple manual pages with the same name but different section numbers (for example, open(1) and open(2)), you can specify a section number when requesting the page. For example, the command "man 2 open" displays the manual page for the "open" system call from section 2 of the manual.
You can also read manual pages from within Xcode by choosing the
"Open man page..." option in the Help menu, or within your choice of
web browsers by going to
In addition to searching for manual pages on the web, the manual page architecture also provides two useful command-line tools for searching the manual pages: whatis and apropos.
The
The
NOTE: Both apropos and whatis depend on a database to provide information. This database is updated periodically. On fresh installations, however, it may not be present. If apropos and whatis are not working correctly, you should run the following command as an admin user:
sudo /usr/libexec/makewhatis
This will rebuild the database. Enter your admin password when prompted.
Manual pages do not have a fixed structure. However, most manual pages do follow certain conventions.
Manual pages typically begin with a NAME section, which contains the name of a command or function and a short abstract.
Next, manual pages typically include a SYNOPSIS section, which describes how to use the command or function. For functions, the syntax generally contains the necessary include directives, followed by the function declarations themselves. For commands, the syntax is explained in MANUAL PAGE SYNTAX.
After the SYNOPSIS section, you will generally find a DESCRIPTION section, followed by an OPTIONS section (which explains the flags from the SYNOPSIS section.
You may find sections such as ENVIRONMENT HISTORY, BUGS, CONFORMING TO, AUTHOR, and COPYRIGHT.
Finally, most manual pages end with a section called SEE ALSO, which includes the names and section numbers of related manual pages.
In manual page syntax, anything in a normal text font is required text. Anything in a boldface font is a flag or a subcommand. Anything underlined is a user-specified argument such as a filename.
Any argument surrounded by brackets is considered to be optional. For example, [filename] would indicate an optional filename argument.
Flags, arguments, or subcommands separated by a vertical separator (|) are mutually exclusive. For example, if -a turns on an option and -b turns off the option, the syntax for this command might be -a | -b.
In some cases, you may even see entire groups of arguments wrapped with brackets and separated by a vertical separator. This is one way of showing that a command has more than one valid syntax. In other manual pages, this is expressed by having multiple lines in the synopsis, each of which begins with the command name. The separated format is more common (and more readable), but is not always possible for commands with particularly complex syntax.
Finally, the most important notational convention is the use of the ellipsis (...). This indicates that additional arguments may be added at this point. Depending on the author, you may see this written in one of two ways:
argument [argument...]
argument...
For more information on manual pages, see