Installation of Man There are three patches for Man. The first patch comments out one of the lines in the man.conf file (MANPATH /usr/man) to prevent redundant results when using programs such as whatis: patch -Np1 -i ../man-&man-manpath-patch-version;-manpath.patch The second patch adds the -R option to the PAGER variable so that escape sequences are handled properly: patch -Np1 -i ../man-&man-pager-patch-version;-pager.patch The last patch prevents problem when man pages not formatted with more than 80 columns are used in conjunction with recent releases of groff: patch -Np1 -i ../man-&man-80cols-patch-version;-80cols.patch The paths to some programs are written into man's files. Unfortunately, the configure script picks the last location in PATH rather than the first place a program is found. By appending /usr/bin:/bin to PATH for the ./configure command, we ensure that man doesn't use the programs in the /static directory. Prepare Man to be compiled: PATH=$PATH:/usr/bin:/bin \     ./configure -default -confdir=/etc Continue with compiling the package: make And finish off installing the package: make install If you wish to disable SGR escape sequences, you should edit the man.conf file and add the -c argument to nroff. You may want to take a look at the man hint at , which deals with formatting and compression issues for man pages.