Single tick around a command should be converted to a double tick for RST files (excluding ticks in a code snippet section). Use double ticks instead of single tick. Signed-off-by: Tobin C. Harding <me@xxxxxxxx> --- Documentation/networking/filter.rst | 10 +++++----- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/Documentation/networking/filter.rst b/Documentation/networking/filter.rst index f9ec58144ed3..dda1afdb5f26 100644 --- a/Documentation/networking/filter.rst +++ b/Documentation/networking/filter.rst @@ -38,9 +38,9 @@ setup a socket, attach a filter, lock it then drop privileges and be assured that the filter will be kept until the socket is closed. The biggest user of this construct might be libpcap. Issuing a high-level -filter command like `tcpdump -i em1 port 22` passes through the libpcap +filter command like ``tcpdump -i em1 port 22`` passes through the libpcap internal compiler that generates a structure that can eventually be loaded -via SO_ATTACH_FILTER to the kernel. `tcpdump -i em1 port 22 -ddd` +via SO_ATTACH_FILTER to the kernel. ``tcpdump -i em1 port 22 -ddd`` displays what is being placed into this structure. Although we were only speaking about sockets here, BPF in Linux is used @@ -375,7 +375,7 @@ Starting bpf_dbg is trivial and just requires issuing:: In case input and output do not equal stdin/stdout, bpf_dbg takes an alternative stdin source as a first argument, and an alternative stdout -sink as a second one, e.g. `./bpf_dbg test_in.txt test_out.txt`. +sink as a second one, e.g. ``./bpf_dbg test_in.txt test_out.txt``. Other than that, a particular libreadline configuration can be set via file "~/.bpf_dbg_init" and the command history is stored in the file @@ -388,7 +388,7 @@ The usual workflow would be to ... > load bpf 6,40 0 0 12,21 0 3 2048,48 0 0 23,21 0 1 1,6 0 0 65535,6 0 0 0 Loads a BPF filter from standard output of bpf_asm, or transformed via - e.g. `tcpdump -iem1 -ddd port 22 | tr '\n' ','`. Note that for JIT + e.g. tcpdump -iem1 -ddd port 22 | tr '\n' ','`. Note that for JIT debugging (next section), this command creates a temporary socket and loads the BPF code into the kernel. Thus, this will also be useful for JIT developers. @@ -523,7 +523,7 @@ generating disassembly out of the kernel log's hexdump:: 44: leaveq 45: retq -Issuing option `-o` will "annotate" opcodes to resulting assembler +Issuing option ``-o`` will "annotate" opcodes to resulting assembler instructions, which can be very useful for JIT developers:: # ./bpf_jit_disasm -o -- 2.17.1 -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-doc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html