shithub: riscv

ref: e2d6d402f1a4a063b3549cb2e988a6e978858579
dir: /sys/man/1/src/

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.TH SRC 1 
.SH NAME
src, Bfn  \- find source code for executable
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B src
[
.B -n
]
[
.B -s
.I symbol
]
.I file
.B ...
.PP
.B Bfn
.I fn
.SH DESCRIPTION
.I Src
examines the named
.I files
to find the corresponding source code, which is then sent to the editor using
.B B
(see
.IR sam (1)).
If
.I file
is an
.IR rc (1)
script, the source is the file itself.
If
.I file
is an executable, the source is defined to be the single file containing the
definition of
.B main
and
.I src
will point the editor at the line that begins the definition.
.I Src
uses
.IR db (1)
to extract the symbol table information that identifies the source.
.PP
.I Src
looks for each
.I file
in the current directory, in
.BR /bin ,
and in the subdirectories of
.BR /bin ,
in that order.
.PP
The
.B -n
flag causes
.B src
to print the file name but not send it to the editor.
The
.B -s
flag identifies a
.I symbol
other than
.B main
to locate.
.PP
.I Bfn
finds the definition of all C functions named
.I fn
by searching the
.B .c
files in the current directory.
It prints the file name and line number of each match found and submits the match to the
.IR plumber (4)
if it is unique.
.I Fn
can be a
.IR regexp (6).
.SH EXAMPLES
Find the source to the
.B main
routine in
.BR /bin/ed :
.IP
.EX
src ed
.EE
.PP
Find the source for
.BR strcmp :
.IP
.EX
src -s strcmp rc
.EE
.SH SOURCE
.B /rc/bin/src
.SH "SEE ALSO"
.IR db (1),
.IR plumb (1),
.IR sam (1).
.SH BUGS
.I Bfn
requires the source code to follow
.IR style (6).