summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorBeniamino Galvani <bgalvani@redhat.com>2016-03-26 10:19:25 +0100
committerLubomir Rintel <lkundrak@v3.sk>2016-03-26 11:28:19 +0100
commitf67bf52046c249117040c530c837b5da2c027437 (patch)
tree381ebea7102e94b671dad8ee4f172ff76909b913
parent5ce4c9fd84df9c0d8c31f20b8d6771019360c2ef (diff)
downloadNetworkManager-lr/developer-gnome.tar.gz
man: use replace <programlisting> with <synopsis>lr/developer-gnome
It makes more sense and actually looks good in rendered HTML. [lkundrak@v3.sk: wrote the commit message]
-rw-r--r--man/nmcli-examples.xml34
1 files changed, 17 insertions, 17 deletions
diff --git a/man/nmcli-examples.xml b/man/nmcli-examples.xml
index 4f5f22f60f..0ce7dc72c6 100644
--- a/man/nmcli-examples.xml
+++ b/man/nmcli-examples.xml
@@ -143,9 +143,9 @@ org.freedesktop.NetworkManager.settings.modify.hostname auth
by a system administrator and are not meant to be changed by users. The usual
place for the polkit configuration is /usr/share/polkit-1/actions/org.freedesktop.NetworkManager.policy.
<emphasis>pkaction</emphasis> command can display description for polkit actions.
- <programlisting><command>
- pkaction --action-id org.freedesktop.NetworkManager.network-control --verbose
- </command></programlisting>
+ <synopsis><command>
+pkaction --action-id org.freedesktop.NetworkManager.network-control --verbose
+ </command></synopsis>
More information about polkit can be found at http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/polkit.
</para>
@@ -176,11 +176,11 @@ $ nmcli g log level INFO domains DEFAULT
</para>
<example><title>Adding a bonding master and two slave connection profiles</title>
- <programlisting><emphasis role="bold">
+ <synopsis><emphasis role="bold">
$ nmcli con add type bond ifname mybond0 mode active-backup
$ nmcli con add type ethernet ifname eth1 master mybond0
$ nmcli con add type ethernet ifname eth2 master mybond0
- </emphasis></programlisting>
+ </emphasis></synopsis>
</example>
<para>
This example demonstrates adding a bond master connection and two slaves. The
@@ -192,11 +192,11 @@ $ nmcli con add type ethernet ifname eth2 master mybond0
</para>
<example><title>Adding a team master and two slave connection profiles</title>
- <programlisting><emphasis role="bold">
+ <synopsis><emphasis role="bold">
$ nmcli con add type team con-name Team1 ifname Team1 config team1-master-json.conf
$ nmcli con add type ethernet con-name Team1-slave1 ifname em1 master Team1
$ nmcli con add type ethernet con-name Team1-slave2 ifname em2 master Team1
- </emphasis></programlisting>
+ </emphasis></synopsis>
</example>
<para>
This example demonstrates adding a team master connection profile and two slaves. It is
@@ -210,22 +210,22 @@ $ nmcli con add type ethernet con-name Team1-slave2 ifname em2 master Team1
<emphasis>em2</emphasis>. The slaves don't specify <emphasis>config</emphasis> and thus
<emphasis>teamd</emphasis> will use its default configuration. You will activate the whole setup
by activating both slaves:
- <programlisting><emphasis role="bold">
+ <synopsis><emphasis role="bold">
$ nmcli con up Team1-slave1
$ nmcli con up Team1-slave2
- </emphasis></programlisting>
+ </emphasis></synopsis>
By default, the created profiles are marked for auto-activation. But if another
connection has been activated on the device, the new profile won't activate
automatically and you need to activate it manually.
</para>
<example><title>Adding a bridge and two slave profiles</title>
- <programlisting><emphasis role="bold">
+ <synopsis><emphasis role="bold">
$ nmcli con add type bridge con-name TowerBridge ifname TowerBridge
$ nmcli con add type ethernet con-name br-slave-1 ifname ens3 master TowerBridge
$ nmcli con add type ethernet con-name br-slave-2 ifname ens4 master TowerBridge
$ nmcli con modify TowerBridge bridge.stp no
- </emphasis></programlisting>
+ </emphasis></synopsis>
</example>
<para>
This example demonstrates adding a bridge master connection and two slaves. The
@@ -239,7 +239,7 @@ $ nmcli con modify TowerBridge bridge.stp no
</para>
<example><title>Adding an ethernet connection profile with manual IP configuration</title>
- <programlisting>
+ <synopsis>
<emphasis role="bold">
$ nmcli con add con-name my-con-em1 ifname em1 type ethernet ip4 192.168.100.100/24 gw4 192.168.100.1 ip4 1.2.3.4 ip6 abbe::cafe
$ nmcli con mod my-con-em1 ipv4.dns "8.8.8.8 8.8.4.4"
@@ -247,7 +247,7 @@ $ nmcli con mod my-con-em1 +ipv4.dns 1.2.3.4
$ nmcli con mod my-con-em1 ipv6.dns "2001:4860:4860::8888 2001:4860:4860::8844"
$ nmcli -p con show my-con-em1
</emphasis>
- </programlisting>
+ </synopsis>
</example>
<para>
The first command adds an Ethernet connection profile named <emphasis>my-con-em1</emphasis>
@@ -263,11 +263,11 @@ $ nmcli -p con show my-con-em1
</para>
<example><title>Escaping colon characters in tabular mode</title>
- <programlisting>
+ <synopsis>
<emphasis role="bold">
$ nmcli -t -f general -e yes -m tab dev show eth0
</emphasis>
- </programlisting>
+ </synopsis>
<screen>
GENERAL:eth0:ethernet:Intel Corporation:82567LM Gigabit Network Connection:e1000e:2.1.4-k:1.8-3:00\:22\:68\:15\:29\:21:1500:100 (connected):0 (No reason given):/sys/devices/pci0000\:00/0000\:00\:19.0/net/eth0:eth0:yes:yes:no:ethernet-13:89cbcbc6-dc85-456c-9c8b-bd828fee3917:/org/freedesktop/NetworkManager/ActiveConnection/9
</screen>
@@ -316,11 +316,11 @@ fi
<para><emphasis role="bold">Example sessions of interactive connection editor</emphasis></para>
<example><title>Adding an ethernet connection profile in interactive editor (a)</title>
- <programlisting>
+ <synopsis>
<emphasis role="bold">
$ nmcli connection edit type ethernet
</emphasis>
- </programlisting>
+ </synopsis>
<screen>
===| nmcli interactive connection editor |===