indxbib(1)
NAME
indxbib - make inverted index for bibliographic databases
SYNOPSIS
indxbib [ -vw ] [ -cfile ] [ -ddir ] [ -ffile ] [ -hn ] [ -istring ]
[ -kn ] [ -ln ] [ -nn ] [ -ofile ] [ -tn ] [ filename... ]
It is possible to have whitespace between a command line option and its
parameter.
DESCRIPTION
indxbib makes an inverted index for the bibliographic databases in
filename... for use with refer(1), lookbib(1), and lkbib(1). The
index will be named filename.i; the index is written to a temporary
file which is then renamed to this. If no filenames are given on the
command line because the -f option has been used, and no -o option is
given, the index will be named Ind.i.
Bibliographic databases are divided into records by blank lines.
Within a record, each fields starts with a % character at the beginning
of a line. Fields have a one letter name which follows the % charac-
ter.
The values set by the -c, -n, -l and -t options are stored in the
index; when the index is searched, keys will be discarded and truncated
in a manner appropriate to these options; the original keys will be
used for verifying that any record found using the index actually con-
tains the keys. This means that a user of an index need not know
whether these options were used in the creation of the index, provided
that not all the keys to be searched for would have been discarded dur-
ing indexing and that the user supplies at least the part of each key
that would have remained after being truncated during indexing. The
value set by the -i option is also stored in the index and will be used
in verifying records found using the index.
OPTIONS
-v Print the version number.
-w Index whole files. Each file is a separate record.
-cfile Read the list of common words from file instead of
/usr/gnu/share/groff/1.19.2/eign.
-ddir Use dir as the pathname of the current working directory to
store in the index, instead of the path printed by pwd(1). Usu-
ally dir will be a symbolic link that points to the directory
printed by pwd(1).
-ffile Read the files to be indexed from file. If file is -, files
will be read from the standard input. The -f option can be
given at most once.
-istring
Don't index the contents of fields whose names are in string.
Initially string is XYZ.
-hn Use the first prime greater than or equal to n for the size of
the hash table. Larger values of n will usually make searching
faster, but will make the index larger and indxbib use more mem-
ory. Initially n is 997.
-kn Use at most n keys per input record. Initially n is 100.
-ln Discard keys that are shorter than n. Initially n is 3.
-nn Discard the n most common words. Initially n is 100.
-obasename
The index should be named basename.i.
-tn Truncate keys to n. Initially n is 6.
FILES
filename.i Index.
Ind.i Default index name.
/usr/gnu/share/groff/1.19.2/eign
List of common words.
indxbibXXXXXX Temporary file.
SEE ALSO
refer(1), lkbib(1), lookbib(1)
Groff Version 1.19.2 27 October 2005 INDXBIB(1)
Man(1) output converted with
man2html