1.\" 2.\" This file and its contents are supplied under the terms of the 3.\" Common Development and Distribution License ("CDDL"), version 1.0. 4.\" You may only use this file in accordance with the terms of version 5.\" 1.0 of the CDDL. 6.\" 7.\" A full copy of the text of the CDDL should have accompanied this 8.\" source. A copy of the CDDL is also available via the Internet at 9.\" http://www.illumos.org/license/CDDL. 10.\" 11.\" 12.\" Copyright 2020 <contributor> 13.\" 14.Dd Month Day, Year 15.Dt COMMAND 1 16.\" Here and in other places "COMMAND" and "command" are place holders 17.\" that should be replaced with the name of the actual command that 18.\" this is documenting. 19.Os 20.Sh NAME 21.Nm command 22.Nd short description 23.Sh SYNOPSIS 24.Nm 25.\" Each of the following lines should use the Fl and Ar options to 26.\" indicate the set of supported options and flags. There should be one 27.\" option and argument per line. If there are independent ways of 28.\" invoking the command or independent sub-commands ala zfs(1M) or 29.\" dladm(1M), there should be a fresh '.Nm' to indicate that and the 30.\" sub-command should use .Cm. 31.Sh DESCRIPTION 32.\" Describe the purpose of the utility, what it does and how it 33.\" operates. If there are certain privileges or other considerations 34.\" for using this, indicate that here. 35.Sh OPTIONS 36The following options are supported: 37.Bl -tag -width Ar 38.It Fl flag1 39Description of the above flag1 40.It Fl flag2 41Description of the above flag2 42.El 43.Sh OPERANDS 44.\" This should be a list of non-flag arguments that are supported 45.\" and what they do in the following form. 46The following operands are supported: 47.Bl -tag -width Ar 48.It Ar oper1 49Description of what oper1 is. 50.It Ar oper2 51Description of what oper2 is. 52.El 53.Sh EXIT STATUS 54.\" This section should indicate the set of exit codes one can expect. 55.\" In general, do not use the '.Ex' macro and instead call out the 56.\" different error values. One would expect at least a difference 57.\" between an error during execution and an error in the usage. 58.Sh EXAMPLES 59.\" There should be multiple examples present that describe how to use 60.\" different parts of the command. This section should not be skipped 61.\" and it's good to have a number of them. 62.\" .Sh ENVIRONMENT 63.\" If the program reacts to environment variables, most often locale 64.\" related ones, document those here. If they are just the standard 65.\" locale ones, use the following text, adjusting it for the exact set 66.\" of locale specific values that impact it: 67.\" See 68.\" .Xr environ 5 69.\" for descriptions of the following environment variables 70.\" that affect the execution of 71.\" .Nm : 72.\" .Ev LANG , 73.\" .Ev LC_ALL , 74.\" .Ev LC_MESSAGES , 75.\" .Ev LC_NUMERIC , 76.\" and 77.\" .Ev NLSPATH . 78.\" .Sh CODE SET INDEPENDENCE 79.\" If there are issues around the code set, indicate so here. See 80.\" attributes(5). 81.Sh INTERFACE STABILITY 82.\" When documenting the stability of commands it's useful to 83.\" distinguish between the stability of the options and the command's 84.\" actual output. For most commands, output stability should only be 85.\" guaranteed if there's an explicit parseable option that controls the 86.\" type of data. You can use the following template: 87.\" The command line interface of 88.\" .Nm 89.\" is 90.\" .Sy Committed . 91.\" .Sy Evolving . 92.\" .Sy Volatile . 93.\" .Sy Private . 94.\" The output of 95.\" .Nm 96.\" is 97.\" .Sy Not-An-Interface 98.\" and may change at any time. 99.Sh SEE ALSO 100.\" List other commands that are related to this. For programs that are 101.\" are primarily wrappers around libc functionality or a particular 102.\" library, it's helpful to mention those here so the reader has an 103.\" idea of what is used to implement this. For example, the sleep 104.\" command would mention nanosleep(3C). 105