* B5 paper size
* chapters always start on recto
* the current chapter in indicated by the verso header and the current
section by the recto header
* render page numbers at the outer side of the foooter
* sections are automatically labelled
* bibliography entries are enumerated
* captions of figures and equations are rendered after
* captions of examples, tables and procedures are rendered before
* admonitions are highlighted with an icon and a border
* tables have a grey header with bold labels
* programlistings and screen elements are rendered with a grey background
* guibutton is also rendered with a grey background
* manpage references are real links and it is indicated with the blue color
element but into a deeper paragraph, optimally right after the
referenced word without spaces even [1] but somehow the schema allows
badly nested indexterms. Correct such entires in the whole documentation
set.
- Add constraints to check for invalid indexterm entries.
See also: http://www.sagehill.net/docbookxsl/GenerateIndex.html#Indexterms [1]
The primary purposes are to clean up duplicated author definitions in
both share/xml/authors.ent and share/xml/developers.ent, and as a added
bonus simplify writing up author names/email addresses in web pages.
Apart from merging developers.ent into authors.ent, removing the former,
and updating the Committers Guide there should be little user-visible changes:
- a.portmgr renamed to a.portmgr.members
- a.doceng renamed to a.doceng.members
- team.re renamed to a.re.members.email and moved from
share/xml/freebsd.ent to share/xml/authors.ent
- a.core updated and moved from share/xml/mailing-lists.ent to
share/xml/teams.ent
- share/pgpkeys/{addkey.sh|README} updated
Translations are untouched except for build fixes.
Approved by: doceng (gjb)
Approved by: gjb (mentor)
service for events that has since been turned down and was never used
much by this community in the first place so the links were not that
useful even when Upcoming was available and popular (it is now long
since completely turned down and the links all jus go to yahoo.com).
Meetup.com is the most popular service for upcoming technology meetups
in the bay area at least, and is used by the local BAFUG, but the
links are probably best added manually for events instead of optimistically
adding a link that tries to search on meetup.com for something
matching the event.