From 89486c50eaeb8b1cc5a6ff388cb47e859f8565d1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Richard Jones Date: Thu, 22 Apr 2010 10:46:34 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] fish docs: Be consistent about using I<-..> for options. --- fish/guestfish.pod | 8 ++++---- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/fish/guestfish.pod b/fish/guestfish.pod index decbf29..a0c3975 100644 --- a/fish/guestfish.pod +++ b/fish/guestfish.pod @@ -178,7 +178,7 @@ If the mountpoint is omitted, it defaults to C. You have to mount something on C before most commands will work. -If any C<-m> or C<--mount> options are given, the guest is +If any I<-m> or I<--mount> options are given, the guest is automatically launched. If you don't know what filesystems a disk image contains, you @@ -198,7 +198,7 @@ L below. =item B<-r> | B<--ro> -This changes the C<-a> and C<-m> options so that disks are added and +This changes the I<-a> and I<-m> options so that disks are added and mounts are done read-only (see L). The option must always be used if the disk image or virtual machine @@ -272,7 +272,7 @@ any other commands C is a synonym for C. You must C (or C) your guest before mounting or performing any other commands. -The only exception is that if the C<-m> or C<--mount> option was +The only exception is that if the I<-m> or I<--mount> option was given, the guest is automatically run for you (simply because guestfish can't mount the disks you asked for without doing this). @@ -467,7 +467,7 @@ L. =head2 CONTROLLING MULTIPLE GUESTFISH PROCESSES The C statement sets the environment variable C<$GUESTFISH_PID>, -which is how the C<--remote> option knows where to send the commands. +which is how the I<--remote> option knows where to send the commands. You can have several guestfish listener processes running using: eval `guestfish --listen` -- 1.8.3.1