Gitweb: http://git.fedorahosted.org/git/?p=lvm2.git;a=commitdiff;h=f845afe7cfc98ac1c... Commit: f845afe7cfc98ac1cde86e25d60c6eeeb530eebe Parent: 4db71422a243ac915ec835a46031f8458f0a8648 Author: Zdenek Kabelac zkabelac@redhat.com AuthorDate: Wed Jun 11 10:52:16 2014 +0200 Committer: Zdenek Kabelac zkabelac@redhat.com CommitterDate: Wed Jun 11 11:11:10 2014 +0200
man: dmsetup manglename
More updates to manglename option. Add reference to LVM2 resource page, since for a long time, this is the right places for sources for libdevmapper.... --- man/dmsetup.8.in | 25 +++++++++++++++---------- 1 files changed, 15 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)
diff --git a/man/dmsetup.8.in b/man/dmsetup.8.in index b257c89..10c63ab 100644 --- a/man/dmsetup.8.in +++ b/man/dmsetup.8.in @@ -192,13 +192,16 @@ When returning any table information from the kernel report on the inactive table instead of the live table. Requires kernel driver version 4.16.0 or above. .TP -.IR \fB--manglename \ < mangling_mode > +.IR \fB--manglename \ { none | hex | auto } Mangle any character not on a whitelist using mangling_mode when processing device-mapper device names and UUIDs. The names and UUIDs -are mangled on input and unmangled on output where the mangling_mode -is one of: none (no mangling), hex (always do the mangling) and auto -(only do the mangling if not mangled yet, do nothing if already -mangled, error on mixed; this is used by default). +are mangled on input and unmangled on output where the mangling mode +is one of: +\fInone\fP (no mangling), +\fIhex\fP (always do the mangling) and +\fIauto\fP (only do the mangling if not mangled yet, do nothing +if already mangled, error on mixed) +Default mode is \fI#DEFAULT_MANGLING#\fP. Character whitelist: 0-9, A-Z, a-z, #+-.:=@_. This whitelist is also supported by udev. Any character not on a whitelist is replaced with its hex value (two digits) prefixed by \x. @@ -386,7 +389,7 @@ If neither is supplied, reads a table from standard input. .br Wait for any I/O in-flight through the device to complete, then replace the table with a new table that fails any new I/O -sent to the device. If successful, this should release any devices +sent to the device. If successful, this should release any devices held open by the device's table(s). .br .HP @@ -612,7 +615,7 @@ Each line of the table specifies a single target and is of the form: .B target_type .RI < target_args > .P -Simple target types and <target_args> include: +Simple target types and <target_args> include: .HP .B linear .I destination_device start_sector @@ -683,8 +686,8 @@ Supports snapshots of devices. .P To find out more about the various targets and their table formats and status lines, please read the files in the Documentation/device-mapper directory in -the kernel source tree. -(Your distribution might include a copy of this information in the +the kernel source tree. +(Your distribution might include a copy of this information in the documentation directory for the device-mapper package.)
.SH EXAMPLES @@ -718,11 +721,13 @@ A cookie to use for all relevant commands to synchronize with udev processing. It is an alternative to using \fB--udevcookie\fP option. .TP .B DM_DEFAULT_NAME_MANGLING_MODE -A default mangling mode. Defaults to "#DEFAULT_MANGLING#" +A default mangling mode. Defaults to "\fI#DEFAULT_MANGLING#\fP" and it is an alternative to using \fB--manglename\fP option.
.SH AUTHORS Original version: Joe Thornber (thornber@redhat.com)
.SH SEE ALSO +LVM2 resource page https://www.sourceware.org/lvm2/ +.br Device-mapper resource page: http://sources.redhat.com/dm/
lvm2-commits@lists.fedorahosted.org