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tic(1)
NAME SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION
-0 restricts the output to a single line -1 restricts the output to a single column -a tells tic to retain commented-out capabilities rather than discarding them. Capabili‐ -C Force source translation to termcap format. Note: this differs from the -C option of -c tells tic to only check file for errors, including syntax problems and bad use-links. -D tells tic to print the database locations that it knows about, and exit. The first -e names -f Display complex terminfo strings which contain if/then/else/endif expressions indented -G Display constant literals in decimal form rather than their character equivalents. -g Display constant character literals in quoted form rather than their decimal equiva‐ -I Force source translation to terminfo format. -K Suppress some longstanding ncurses extensions to termcap format, e.g., "\s" for space. -L Force source translation to terminfo format using the long C variable names listed in -N Disable smart defaults. Normally, when translating from termcap to terminfo, the com‐ -odir Write compiled entries to given database location. Overrides the TERMINFO environment -Qn Rather than show source in terminfo (text) format, print the compiled (binary) format -q Suppress comments and blank lines when showing translated source. -Rsubset -r Force entry resolution (so there are no remaining tc capabilities) even when doing -s Summarize the compile by showing the database location into which entries are written, -T eliminates size-restrictions on the generated text. This is mainly useful for testing -t tells tic to discard commented-out capabilities. Normally when translating from ter‐ -U tells tic to not post-process the data after parsing the source file. Normally, it in‐ -V reports the version of ncurses which was used in this program, and exits. -vn specifies that (verbose) output be written to standard error trace information showing -W By itself, the -w option will not force long strings to be wrapped. Use the -W option -wn specifies the width of the output. The parameter is optional. If it is omitted, it de‐ -x Treat unknown capabilities as user-defined (see user_caps(5)). That is, if you supply a
HISTORY PORTABILITY FILES SEE ALSO AUTHOR
tic(1)                                 General Commands Manual                                tic(1)



NAME
       tic - the terminfo entry-description compiler

SYNOPSIS
       tic [-01CDGIKLNTUVWacfgqrstx] [-e names] [-o dir] [-Q[n]] [-R subset] [-v[n]] [-w[n]] file

DESCRIPTION
       The tic command translates a terminfo file from source format into compiled format.  The com‐
       piled format is necessary for use with the library routines in ncurses(3NCURSES).

       As described in term(5), the database may be either a directory tree (one file  per  terminal
       entry)  or a hashed database (one record per entry).  The tic command writes only one type of
       entry, depending on how it was built:

       •   For directory trees, the top-level directory, e.g.,  /usr/share/terminfo,  specifies  the
           location of the database.

       •   For hashed databases, a filename is needed.  If the given file is not found by that name,
           but can be found by adding the suffix ".db", then that is used.

           The default name for the hashed database is the same as the default directory name  (only
           adding a ".db" suffix).

       In  either  case (directory or hashed database), tic will create the container if it does not
       exist.  For a directory, this would be the “terminfo” leaf, versus a "terminfo.db" file.

       The results are normally placed in the system terminfo database /etc/terminfo.  The  compiled
       terminal  description  can be placed in a different terminfo database.  There are two ways to
       achieve this:

       •   First, you may override the system default either by using the -o option, or  by  setting
           the variable TERMINFO in your shell environment to a valid database location.

       •   Secondly,  if tic cannot write in /etc/terminfo or the location specified using your TER‐
           MINFO  variable,  it  looks  for  the  directory  $HOME/.terminfo  (or  hashed   database
           $HOME/.terminfo.db); if that location exists, the entry is placed there.

       Libraries that read terminfo entries are expected to check in succession

       •   a location specified with the TERMINFO environment variable,

       •   $HOME/.terminfo,

       •   directories listed in the TERMINFO_DIRS environment variable,

       •   a compiled-in list of directories (no default value), and

       •   the system terminfo database (/etc/terminfo).

   ALIASES
       This  is  the same program as infotocap and captoinfo; usually those are linked to, or copied
       from this program:

       •   When invoked as infotocap, tic sets the -I option.

       •   When invoked as captoinfo, tic sets the -C option.

   OPTIONS
       -0     restricts the output to a single line

       -1     restricts the output to a single column

       -a     tells tic to retain commented-out capabilities rather than discarding them.  Capabili‐
              ties  are commented by prefixing them with a period.  This sets the -x option, because
              it treats the commented-out entries as user-defined names.  If the source is  termcap,
              accept the 2-character names required by version 6.  Otherwise these are ignored.

       -C     Force  source translation to termcap format.  Note: this differs from the -C option of
              infocmp(1) in that it does not merely translate capability names, but also  translates
              terminfo  strings  to termcap format.  Capabilities that are not translatable are left
              in the entry under their terminfo names but commented out  with  two  preceding  dots.
              The actual format used incorporates some improvements for escaped characters from ter‐
              minfo format.  For a stricter BSD-compatible translation, add the -K option.

              If this is combined with -c, tic makes additional checks to  report  cases  where  the
              terminfo values do not have an exact equivalent in termcap form.  For example:

              •   sgr  usually will not convert, because termcap lacks the ability to work with more
                  than two parameters, and because termcap lacks many of the arithmetic/logical  op‐
                  erators used in terminfo.

              •   capabilities  with more than one delay or with delays before the end of the string
                  will not convert completely.

       -c     tells tic to only check file for errors, including syntax problems and bad  use-links.
              If  you  specify  -C (-I) with this option, the code will print warnings about entries
              which, after use resolution, are more than 1023 (4096) bytes long.   Due  to  a  fixed
              buffer  length  in  older  termcap libraries, as well as buggy checking for the buffer
              length (and a documented limit in terminfo), these entries may cause core  dumps  with
              other implementations.

              tic  checks string capabilities to ensure that those with parameters will be valid ex‐
              pressions.  It does this check only for  the  predefined  string  capabilities;  those
              which are defined with the -x option are ignored.

       -D     tells  tic  to  print the database locations that it knows about, and exit.  The first
              location shown is the one to which it would write compiled terminal descriptions.   If
              tic is not able to find a writable database location according to the rules summarized
              above, it will print a diagnostic and exit with an error rather than printing  a  list
              of database locations.

       -e names
              Limit  writes and translations to the following comma-separated list of terminals.  If
              any name or alias of a terminal matches one of the names in the list, the  entry  will
              be  written  or  translated  as normal.  Otherwise no output will be generated for it.
              The option value is interpreted as a file containing the list if it  contains  a  '/'.
              (Note: depending on how tic was compiled, this option may require -I or -C.)

       -f     Display complex terminfo strings which contain if/then/else/endif expressions indented
              for readability.

       -G     Display constant literals in decimal form rather than their character equivalents.

       -g     Display constant character literals in quoted form rather than their  decimal  equiva‐
              lents.

       -I     Force source translation to terminfo format.

       -K     Suppress some longstanding ncurses extensions to termcap format, e.g., "\s" for space.

       -L     Force  source translation to terminfo format using the long C variable names listed in
              <term.h>

       -N     Disable smart defaults.  Normally, when translating from termcap to terminfo, the com‐
              piler  makes  a  number  of  assumptions about the defaults of string capabilities re‐‐
              set1_string, carriage_return, cursor_left, cursor_down, scroll_forward, tab,  newline,
              key_backspace, key_left, and key_down, then attempts to use obsolete termcap capabili‐
              ties to deduce correct values.  It also normally suppresses output of obsolete termcap
              capabilities such as bs.  This option forces a more literal translation that also pre‐
              serves the obsolete capabilities.

       -odir  Write compiled entries to given database location.  Overrides the TERMINFO environment
              variable.

       -Qn    Rather  than show source in terminfo (text) format, print the compiled (binary) format
              in hexadecimal or base64 form, depending on the option's value:

               1  hexadecimal

               2  base64

               3  hexadecimal and base64

       -q     Suppress comments and blank lines when showing translated source.

       -Rsubset
              Restrict output to a given subset.  This option is for use with  archaic  versions  of
              terminfo  like  those  on  SVr1,  Ultrix, or HP-UX that do not support the full set of
              SVR4/XSI Curses terminfo; and outright broken ports like AIX 3.x that have  their  own
              extensions  incompatible with SVr4/XSI.  Available subsets are “SVr1”, “Ultrix”, “HP”,
              “BSD” and “AIX”; see terminfo(5) for details.

       -r     Force entry resolution (so there are no remaining tc  capabilities)  even  when  doing
              translation to termcap format.  This may be needed if you are preparing a termcap file
              for a termcap library (such as GNU termcap through version 1.3 or BSD termcap  through
              4.3BSD) that does not handle multiple tc capabilities per entry.

       -s     Summarize the compile by showing the database location into which entries are written,
              and the number of entries which are compiled.

       -T     eliminates size-restrictions on the generated text.  This is mainly useful for testing
              and  analysis,  since  the  compiled descriptions are limited (e.g., 1023 for termcap,
              4096 for terminfo).

       -t     tells tic to discard commented-out capabilities.  Normally when translating from  ter‐
              minfo to termcap, untranslatable capabilities are commented-out.

       -U   tells  tic to not post-process the data after parsing the source file.  Normally, it in‐
            fers data which is commonly missing in older terminfo data, or in termcaps.

       -V   reports the version of ncurses which was used in this program, and exits.

       -vn  specifies that (verbose) output be written to standard error trace  information  showing
            tic's progress.

            The  optional  parameter  n  is a number from 1 to 10, inclusive, indicating the desired
            level of detail of information.  If ncurses is built without tracing  support,  the  op‐
            tional  parameter  is ignored.  If n is omitted, the default level is 1.  If n is speci‐
            fied and greater than 1, the level of detail is increased.

            The debug flag levels are as follows:

            1      Names of files created and linked

            2      Information related to the “use” facility

            3      Statistics from the hashing algorithm

            5      String-table memory allocations

            7      Entries into the string-table

            8      List of tokens encountered by scanner

            9      All values computed in construction of the hash table

            If the debug level n is not given, it is taken to be one.

       -W   By itself, the -w option will not force long strings to be wrapped.  Use the  -W  option
            to do this.

            If  you  specify both -f and -W options, the latter is ignored when -f has already split
            the line.

       -wn  specifies the width of the output.  The parameter is optional.  If it is omitted, it de‐
            faults to 60.

       -x   Treat unknown capabilities as user-defined (see user_caps(5)).  That is, if you supply a
            capability name which tic does not recognize, it will infer its type (boolean, number or
            string)  from  the syntax and make an extended table entry for that.  User-defined capa‐
            bility strings whose name begins with “k” are treated as function keys.

   PARAMETERS
       file   contains one or more  terminfo  terminal  descriptions  in  source  format  [see  ter‐‐
              minfo(5)].   Each  description  in the file describes the capabilities of a particular
              terminal.

              If file is “-”, then the data is read from the standard input.  The file parameter may
              also be the path of a character-device.

   PROCESSING
       All  but one of the capabilities recognized by tic are documented in terminfo(5).  The excep‐
       tion is the use capability.

       When a use=entry-name field is discovered in a terminal entry currently being  compiled,  tic
       reads  in  the  binary  from /etc/terminfo to complete the entry.  (Entries created from file
       will be used first.  tic duplicates the capabilities in entry-name  for  the  current  entry,
       with the exception of those capabilities that explicitly are defined in the current entry.

       When  an entry, e.g., entry_name_1, contains a use=entry_name_2 field, any canceled capabili‐
       ties in entry_name_2 must also appear in entry_name_1 before use= for these  capabilities  to
       be canceled in entry_name_1.

       Total  compiled  entries  cannot  exceed 4096 bytes.  The name field cannot exceed 512 bytes.
       Terminal names exceeding the maximum alias length (32 characters on systems with  long  file‐
       names,  14  characters otherwise) will be truncated to the maximum alias length and a warning
       message will be printed.

HISTORY
       System V Release 2 provided a tic utility.  It accepted a single option: -v (optionally  fol‐
       lowed  by  a  number).  According to Ross Ridge's comment in mytinfo, this version of tic was
       unable to represent cancelled capabilities.

       System V Release 3 provided a different tic utility, written  by  Pavel  Curtis,  (originally
       named  “compile” in pcurses).  This added an option -c to check the file for errors, with the
       caveat that errors in “use=” links would not be reported.  System V Release  3  documented  a
       few  warning  messages which did not appear in pcurses.  While the program itself was changed
       little as development continued with System V Release 4, the table of capabilities grew  from
       180 (pcurses) to 464 (Solaris).

       In  early development of ncurses (1993), Zeyd Ben-Halim used the table from mytinfo to extend
       the pcurses table to 469 capabilities (456 matched SVr4, 8 were only in SVr4, 13 were not  in
       SVr4).   Of  those  13,  11  were  ultimately discarded (perhaps to match the draft of X/Open
       Curses).  The exceptions were memory_lock_above and memory_unlock (see user_caps(5)).

       Eric Raymond incorporated parts of mytinfo into ncurses to implement the  termcap-to-terminfo
       source  conversion,  and extended that to begin development of the corresponding terminfo-to-
       termcap source conversion, Thomas Dickey completed that development over the course  of  sev‐
       eral years.

       In 1999, Thomas Dickey added the -x option to support user-defined capabilities.

       In  2010, Roy Marples provided a tic program and terminfo library for NetBSD.  That implemen‐
       tation adapts several features from ncurses, including tic's -x option.

       The -c option tells tic to check for problems in the terminfo source file.  Continued  devel‐
       opment provides additional checks:

       •   pcurses had 8 warnings

       •   ncurses in 1996 had 16 warnings

       •   Solaris (SVr4) curses has 28 warnings

       •   NetBSD tic in 2019 has 19 warnings.

       •   ncurses in 2019 has 96 warnings

       The  checking  done in ncurses' tic helps with the conversion to termcap, as well as pointing
       out errors and inconsistencies.  It is also used to ensure consistency with the  user-defined
       capabilities.   There  are  527  distinct  capabilities in ncurses' terminal database; 128 of
       those are user-defined.

PORTABILITY
       X/Open Curses, Issue 7 (2009) provides a brief description of tic.  It lists one option:  -c.
       The  omission of -v is unexpected.  The change history states that the description is derived
       from True64 UNIX.  According to its manual pages, that system also supported the -v option.

       Shortly after Issue 7 was released, Tru64 was discontinued.  As of 2019, the surviving imple‐
       mentations of tic are SVr4 (AIX, HP-UX and Solaris), ncurses and NetBSD curses.  The SVr4 tic
       programs all support the -v option.  The NetBSD tic program follows  X/Open's  documentation,
       omitting the -v option.

       The  X/Open rationale states that some implementations of tic read terminal descriptions from
       the standard input if the file parameter is omitted.  None of these implementations do  that.
       Further,  it comments that some may choose to read from ”./terminfo.src” but that is obsoles‐
       cent behavior from SVr2, and is not (for example) a documented feature of SVr3.

   COMPATIBILITY
       There is some evidence that historic tic implementations treated description fields  with  no
       whitespace  in  them as additional aliases or short names.  This tic does not do that, but it
       does warn when description fields may be treated that way and check them for dangerous  char‐
       acters.

   EXTENSIONS
       Unlike  the  SVr4  tic command, this implementation can actually compile termcap sources.  In
       fact, entries in terminfo and termcap syntax can be mixed in a single source file.  See  ter‐‐
       minfo(5) for the list of termcap names taken to be equivalent to terminfo names.

       The  SVr4  manual pages are not clear on the resolution rules for use capabilities.  This im‐
       plementation of tic will find use targets anywhere in the source file,  or  anywhere  in  the
       file tree rooted at TERMINFO (if TERMINFO is defined), or in the user's $HOME/.terminfo data‐
       base (if it exists), or (finally) anywhere in the system's file tree of compiled entries.

       The error messages from this tic have the same format as GNU C error  messages,  and  can  be
       parsed by GNU Emacs's compile facility.

       Aside from -c and -v, options are not portable:

       •   Most of tic's options are not supported by SVr4 tic:

           -0 -1 -C -G -I -N -R -T -V -a -e -f -g -o -r -s -t -x

       •   The NetBSD tic  supports a few of the ncurses options

           -a -o -x

           and adds -S (a feature which does the same thing as infocmp's -e and -E options).

       The SVr4 -c mode does not report bad “use=” links.

       System  V  does not compile entries to or read entries from your $HOME/.terminfo database un‐
       less TERMINFO is explicitly set to it.

FILES
       /etc/terminfo/?/*
            Compiled terminal description database.

SEE ALSO
       captoinfo(1), infocmp(1), infotocap(1),  toe(1),  ncurses(3NCURSES),  term(5).   terminfo(5).
       user_caps(5).

       This describes ncurses version 6.3 (patch 20211021).

AUTHOR
       Eric S. Raymond <esr AT snark.com> and
       Thomas E. Dickey <dickey AT invisible-island.net>



                                                                                              tic(1)

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