iproute2: Fix various manpage formatting nits

Signed-off-by: Andreas Schwab <schwab@linux-m68k.org>
This commit is contained in:
Andreas Schwab 2012-09-06 03:09:58 +00:00 committed by Stephen Hemminger
parent c2f7d6c7c4
commit 1b3c149b41
6 changed files with 24 additions and 26 deletions

View File

@ -202,11 +202,10 @@ error.
are considered to be dummy (or external) addresses which require translation
to real (or internal) ones before forwarding. The addresses to translate to
are selected with the attribute
.BR "via" .
.B Warning:
Route NAT is no longer supported in Linux 2.6.
.BR "via" .
.sp
.B anycast
.RI "- " "not implemented"
@ -306,7 +305,7 @@ If this parameter is omitted,
assumes the
.B main
table, with the exception of
.BR local " , " broadcast " and " nat
.BR local ", " broadcast " and " nat
routes, which are put into the
.B local
table by default.
@ -560,13 +559,14 @@ i.e. it lists the entire table.
.TP
.BI tos " TOS"
.TP
.BI dsfield " TOS"
only select routes with the given TOS.
.TP
.BI table " TABLEID"
show the routes from this table(s). The default setting is to show
.BR table main "."
show the routes from this table(s). The default setting is to show table
.BR main "."
.I TABLEID
may either be the ID of a real table or one of the special values:
.sp

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@ -85,11 +85,11 @@ shortcut for
.BR "\-o" , " \-oneline"
output each record on a single line, replacing line feeds
with the
.B '\e\'
.B '\e'
character. This is convenient when you want to count records
with
.BR wc (1)
or to
or to
.BR grep (1)
the output.

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@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ It can display more TCP and state informations than other tools.
.SH OPTIONS
When no option is used ss displays a list of
open non-listening TCP sockets that have established connection.
.TP
.P
These programs follow the usual GNU command line syntax, with long
options starting with two dashes (`-').
A summary of options is included below.

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@ -30,11 +30,11 @@ queue. If both the to-be-queued and the drawn packet belong to the same flow,
both packets are dropped. Otherwise, if the queue length is still below the maximum length,
the new packet has a configurable chance of being marked (which may mean dropped).
If the queue length exceeds
.B max
, the new packet will always be marked (or dropped).
.BR max ,
the new packet will always be marked (or dropped).
If the queue length exceeds
.B limit
, the new packet is always dropped.
.BR limit ,
the new packet is always dropped.
The marking probability computation is the same as used by the RED qdisc.

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@ -45,6 +45,7 @@ To attach to device eth0, using the interface MTU as its quantum:
Adding two classes:
.P
# tc class add dev eth0 parent 1: classid 1:1 drr
.br
# tc class add dev eth0 parent 1: classid 1:2 drr
.P
You also need to add at least one filter to classify packets.

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@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ ematch \- extended matches for use with "basic" or "flow" filters
]
.ti -8
.IR TERM " := [ " not " ] { " MATCH " | '(' " EXPR " ')' } "
.IR TERM " := [ " \fBnot " ] { " MATCH " | '(' " EXPR " ')' } "
.ti -8
.IR MATCH " := " module " '(' " ARGS " ')' "
@ -34,30 +34,27 @@ ematch \- extended matches for use with "basic" or "flow" filters
.SS cmp
Simple comparison ematch: arithmetic compare of packet data to a given value.
.ti
.IR cmp "( " ALIGN " at " OFFSET " [ " ATTRS " ] { " eq " | " lt " | " gt " } " VALUE " )
.IR cmp "( " ALIGN " at " OFFSET " [ " ATTRS " ] { " eq " | " lt " | " gt " } " VALUE " )
.ti
.IR ALIGN " := { " u8 " | " u16 " | " u32 " } "
.ti
.IR ATTRS " := [ layer " LAYER " ] [ mask " MASK " ] [ " trans " ] "
.IR ATTRS " := [ layer " LAYER " ] [ mask " MASK " ] [ trans ]
.ti
.IR ALIGN " := { " u8 " | " u16 " | " u32 } "
.ti
.IR LAYER " := { " link " | " network " | " transport " | " 0..%d " }
.IR LAYER " := { " link " | " network " | " transport " | " 0..2 " }
.SS meta
Metadata ematch
.ti
.IR meta "( " OBJECT " { " eq " | " lt " |" gt " } " OBJECT " )
.IR meta "( " OBJECT " { " eq " | " lt " |" gt " } " OBJECT " )
.ti
.IR OBJECT " := { " META_ID " | " VALUE " }
.ti
.IR META_ID " := id " [ shift " SHIFT " ] [ mask " MASK " ]
.IR META_ID " := " id " [ shift " SHIFT " ] [ mask " MASK " ]
.TP
meta attributes:
@ -91,26 +88,26 @@ match packet data byte sequence
.IR OFFSET " := " int
.ti
.IR LAYER " := { " link " | " network " | " transport " | " 0..%d " }
.IR LAYER " := { " link " | " network " | " transport " | " 0..2 " }
.SS u32
u32 ematch
.ti
.IR u32 "( " ALIGN VALUE MASK " at " [ nexthdr+ ] " OFFSET " )
.IR u32 "( " ALIGN " " VALUE " " MASK " at [ nexthdr+ ] " OFFSET " )
.ti
.IR ALIGN " := " { " u8 " | " u16 " | " u32 " }
.IR ALIGN " := { " u8 " | " u16 " | " u32 " }
.SS ipset
test packet agains ipset membership
.ti
.IR ipset "( " SETNAME FLAGS )
.IR ipset "( " SETNAME " " FLAGS " )
.ti
.IR SETNAME " := " string
.ti
.IR FLAGS " := " { " FLAG " [, " FLAGS "] }
.IR FLAGS " := { " FLAG " [, " FLAGS "] }
The flag options are the same as those used by the iptables "set" match.