| 1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647484950515253545556575859606162636465666768697071727374757677787980818283848586878889 | <refentry xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"          xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"          xmlns:src="http://nwalsh.com/xmlns/litprog/fragment"          xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"          version="5.0" xml:id="refentry.source.name.profile"><refmeta><refentrytitle>refentry.source.name.profile</refentrytitle><refmiscinfo class="other" otherclass="datatype">string</refmiscinfo></refmeta><refnamediv><refname>refentry.source.name.profile</refname><refpurpose>Specifies profile for refentry "source name" data</refpurpose></refnamediv><refsynopsisdiv><src:fragment xml:id="refentry.source.name.profile.frag"><xsl:param name="refentry.source.name.profile">  (($info[//productname])[last()]/productname)[1]|  (($info[//corpname])[last()]/corpname)[1]|  (($info[//corpcredit])[last()]/corpcredit)[1]|  (($info[//corpauthor])[last()]/corpauthor)[1]|  (($info[//orgname])[last()]/orgname)[1]|  (($info[//publishername])[last()]/publishername)[1]</xsl:param></src:fragment></refsynopsisdiv><refsection><info><title>Description</title></info><para>The value of <parameter>refentry.source.name.profile</parameter>is a string representing an XPath expression. It is evaluated atrun-time and used only if<parameter>refentry.source.name.profile.enabled</parameter> isnon-zero. Otherwise, the <tag>refentry</tag> metadata-gathering logic"hard coded" into the stylesheets is used.</para><para>A "source name" is one part of a (potentially) two-part<replaceable>Name</replaceable> <replaceable>Version</replaceable>"source" field. In man pages, it is usually displayed in the leftfooter of the page. It typically indicates the software system orproduct that the item documented in the man page belongs to. The<literal>man(7)</literal> man page describes it as "the source ofthe command", and provides the following examples:<itemizedlist>  <listitem>    <para>For binaries, use something like: GNU, NET-2, SLS    Distribution, MCC Distribution.</para>  </listitem>  <listitem>    <para>For system calls, use the version of the kernel that you    are currently looking at: Linux 0.99.11.</para>  </listitem>  <listitem>    <para>For library calls, use the source of the function: GNU, BSD    4.3, Linux DLL 4.4.1.</para>  </listitem></itemizedlist></para><para>In practice, there are many pages that simply have a Versionnumber in the "source" field. So, it looks like what we have is atwo-part field,<replaceable>Name</replaceable> <replaceable>Version</replaceable>,where:<variablelist>  <varlistentry>    <term>Name</term>    <listitem>      <para>product name (e.g., BSD) or org. name (e.g., GNU)</para>    </listitem>  </varlistentry>  <varlistentry>    <term>Version</term>    <listitem>      <para>version number</para>    </listitem>  </varlistentry></variablelist>Each part is optional. If the <replaceable>Name</replaceable> is aproduct name, then the <replaceable>Version</replaceable> is probablythe version of the product. Or there may be no<replaceable>Name</replaceable>, in which case, if there is a<replaceable>Version</replaceable>, it is probably the versionof the item itself, not the product it is part of. Or, if the<replaceable>Name</replaceable> is an organization name, then thereprobably will be no <replaceable>Version</replaceable>.</para></refsection></refentry>
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