652

For example: man(1), find(3), updatedb(2)?

What do the numbers in parentheses (Brit. "brackets") mean?

Ajay
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duckyflip
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    man pages will give some introduction, use (man 1 intro) (man 2 intro) – tsenapathy Aug 23 '12 at 11:22
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    Cross duplicate in [Super User](https://superuser.com/questions/297702/what-do-the-parentheses-and-number-after-a-unix-command-or-c-function-mean) and [Unix and Linux](https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/3586/what-do-the-numbers-in-a-man-page-mean). – Franklin Yu Apr 28 '17 at 21:17

7 Answers7

623

It's the section that the man page for the command is assigned to.

These are split as

  1. General commands
  2. System calls
  3. C library functions
  4. Special files (usually devices, those found in /dev) and drivers
  5. File formats and conventions
  6. Games and screensavers
  7. Miscellanea
  8. System administration commands and daemons

Original descriptions of each section can be seen in the Unix Programmer's Manual (page ii).

In order to access a man page given as "foo(5)", run:

man 5 foo
vvvvv
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Ian G
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    `man foo.5` also works in some (most, all?) systems and is easier to add the number later when you have to specify the number after the last command gave the wrong page. – 12431234123412341234123 Sep 15 '21 at 11:11
99

The section the command is documented in the manual. The list of sections is documented on man's manual. For example:

man 1 man
man 3 find

This is useful for when similar or exactly equal commands exist on different sections

Vinko Vrsalovic
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    And in the "olden days" the section numbers corresponded to the binder that the hardcopy version of the man page was in. – Darron Sep 29 '08 at 01:43
66

The reason why the section numbers are significant is that many years ago when disk space was more of an issue than it is now the sections could be installed individually.

Many systems only had 1 and 8 installed for instance. These days people tend to look the commands up on google instead.

LepardUK
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As @Ian G says, they are the man page sections. Let's take this one step further though:

1. See the man page for the man command with man man, and it shows the 9 sections as follows:

DESCRIPTION
       man  is  the system's manual pager. Each page argument given
       to man is normally the name of a program, utility  or  func‐
       tion.   The  manual page associated with each of these argu‐
       ments is then found and displayed. A section,  if  provided,
       will  direct man to look only in that section of the manual.
       The default action is to search in all of the available sec‐
       tions following a pre-defined order ("1 n l 8 3 2 3posix 3pm
       3perl 5 4 9 6 7" by default, unless overridden by  the  SEC‐
       TION directive in /etc/manpath.config), and to show only the
       first page found, even if page exists in several sections.

       The table below shows the section numbers of the manual fol‐
       lowed by the types of pages they contain.

       1   Executable programs or shell commands
       2   System calls (functions provided by the kernel)
       3   Library calls (functions within program libraries)
       4   Special files (usually found in /dev)
       5   File formats and conventions eg /etc/passwd
       6   Games
       7   Miscellaneous  (including  macro  packages  and  conven‐
           tions), e.g. man(7), groff(7)
       8   System administration commands (usually only for root)
       9   Kernel routines [Non standard]

       A manual page consists of several sections.


2. man <section_num> <cmd>

Let's imagine you are Googling around for Linux commands. You find the OPEN(2) pg online: open(2) — Linux manual page.

To see this in the man pages on your pc, simply type in man 2 open.

For FOPEN(3) use man 3 fopen, etc.

3. man <section_num> intro

To read the intro pages to a section, type in man <section_num> intro, such as man 1 intro, man 2 intro, man 7 intro, etc.

To view all man page intros in succession, one-after-the-other, do man -a intro. The intro page for Section 1 will open. Press q to quit, then press Enter to view the intro for Section 8. Press q to quit, then press Enter to view the intro for Section 3. Continue this process until done. Each time after hitting q, it'll take you back to the main terminal screen but you'll still be in an interactive prompt, and you'll see this line:

--Man-- next: intro(8) [ view (return) | skip (Ctrl-D) | quit (Ctrl-C) ]

Note that the Section order that man -a intro will take you through is:

  1. Section 1
  2. Section 8
  3. Section 3
  4. Section 2
  5. Section 5
  6. Section 4
  7. Section 6
  8. Section 7

This search order is intentional, as the man man page explains:

The default action is to search in all of the available sections follow‐
ing a pre-defined order ("1 n l 8 3 2 3posix 3pm 3perl 5 4 9 6 7" by default, unless overrid‐
den  by the SECTION directive in /etc/manpath.config)

Why did they choose this order? I don't know (please answer in the comments if you know), but just realize this order is correct and intentional.

Related:

  1. Google search for "linux what does the number mean in parenthesis after a function?"
  2. SuperUser: What do the parentheses and number after a Unix command or C function mean?
  3. Unix & Linux: What do the numbers in a man page mean?
Gabriel Staples
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11

Note also that on other unixes, the method of specifying the section differs. On solaris, for example, it is:

man -s 1 man
TREE
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It indicates the section of the man pages the command is found in. The -s switch on the man command can be used to limit a search to certain sections.

When you view a man page, the top left gives the name of the section, e.g.:

User Commands printf(1)
Standard C Library Functions printf(3C)

So if you are trying to look up C functions and don't want to accidentally see a page for a user command that shares the same name, you would do 'man -s 3C ...'

Dave Costa
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Wikipedia details about Manual Sections:

  1. General commands
  2. System calls
  3. Library functions, covering in particular the C standard library
  4. Special files (usually devices, those found in /dev) and drivers
  5. File formats and conventions
  6. Games and screensavers
  7. Miscellanea
  8. System administration commands and daemons
A.L
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Bob Setterbo
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    This answer has become useless; the link which wasn't also in the earlier accepted answer broke and was edited out, now there is nothing added by this answer at all. – Ben Voigt Jun 03 '15 at 19:03