Remove quotes around a space-free argument for the single-font macros. Fix a font issue in "bootparam.7", line 241. Signed-off-by: Bjarni Ingi Gislason <bjarniig@xxxxxxxxx> --- man7/bootparam.7 | 32 ++++++++++++++++---------------- man7/cgroups.7 | 4 ++-- man7/math_error.7 | 4 ++-- 3 files changed, 20 insertions(+), 20 deletions(-) diff --git a/man7/bootparam.7 b/man7/bootparam.7 index 888e47c8d..ae519f48a 100644 --- a/man7/bootparam.7 +++ b/man7/bootparam.7 @@ -100,7 +100,7 @@ installed on your system to see what arguments it accepts. .SS General non-device-specific boot arguments .TP -.B "'init=...'" +.B 'init=...' This sets the initial command to be executed by the kernel. If this is not set, or cannot be found, the kernel will try .IR /sbin/init , @@ -112,18 +112,18 @@ then .I /bin/sh and panic if all of this fails. .TP -.B "'nfsaddrs=...'" +.B 'nfsaddrs=...' This sets the NFS boot address to the given string. This boot address is used in case of a net boot. .TP -.B "'nfsroot=...'" +.B 'nfsroot=...' This sets the NFS root name to the given string. If this string does not begin with '/' or ',' or a digit, then it is prefixed by \&'/tftpboot/'. This root name is used in case of a net boot. .TP -.B "'root=...'" +.B 'root=...' This argument tells the kernel what device is to be used as the root filesystem while booting. The default of this setting is determined @@ -183,7 +183,7 @@ as read/write capable, for example, by 'mount \-w \-n \-o remount /'. The 'rw' option tells the kernel to mount the root filesystem read/write. This is the default. .TP -.B "'resume=...'" +.B 'resume=...' This tells the kernel the location of the suspend-to-disk data that you want the machine to resume from after hibernation. Usually, it is the same as your swap partition or file. Example: @@ -194,7 +194,7 @@ resume=/dev/hda2 .EE .in .TP -.B "'reserve=...'" +.B 'reserve=...' This is used to protect I/O port regions from probes. The form of the command is: .IP @@ -227,7 +227,7 @@ reserve=0x300,32 blah=0x300 keeps all device drivers except the driver for 'blah' from probing 0x300\-0x31f. .TP -.B "'panic=N'" +.B 'panic=N' By default, the kernel will not reboot after a panic, but this option will cause a kernel reboot after N seconds (if N is greater than zero). This panic timeout can also be set by @@ -238,7 +238,7 @@ echo N > /proc/sys/kernel/panic .EE .in .TP -.B "'reboot=[warm|cold][,[bios|hard]]'" +.BR 'reboot= [ warm | cold ][ , [ bios | hard ]] ' Since Linux 2.0.22, a reboot is by default a cold reboot. One asks for the old default with 'reboot=warm'. (A cold reboot may be required to reset certain hardware, @@ -257,7 +257,7 @@ activation entirely; an option 'maxcpus=N' limits the maximum number of CPUs activated in SMP mode to N. .SS Boot arguments for use by kernel developers .TP -.B "'debug'" +.B 'debug' Kernel messages are handed off to a daemon (e.g., .BR klogd (8) or similar) so that they may be logged to disk. @@ -283,7 +283,7 @@ the operation, or .BR dmesg (8). .TP -.B "'profile=N'" +.B 'profile=N' It is possible to enable a kernel profiling function, if one wishes to find out where the kernel is spending its CPU cycles. Profiling is enabled by setting the variable @@ -338,12 +338,12 @@ in older kernels). .IP There are four parameters, two boolean and two integral. .TP -.B "'load_ramdisk=N'" +.B 'load_ramdisk=N' If N=1, do load a ramdisk. If N=0, do not load a ramdisk. (This is the default.) .TP -.B "'prompt_ramdisk=N'" +.B 'prompt_ramdisk=N' If N=1, do prompt for insertion of the floppy. (This is the default.) If N=0, do not prompt. @@ -353,12 +353,12 @@ If N=0, do not prompt. Set the maximal size of the ramdisk(s) to N kB. The default is 4096 (4\ MB). .TP -.B "'ramdisk_start=N'" +.B 'ramdisk_start=N' Sets the starting block number (the offset on the floppy where the ramdisk starts) to N. This is needed in case the ramdisk follows a kernel image. .TP -.B "'noinitrd'" +.B 'noinitrd' (Only if the kernel was compiled with .B CONFIG_BLK_DEV_RAM and @@ -423,7 +423,7 @@ and a zero disables parity checking. Again, not all adapters will support selection of parity behavior as a boot argument. .TP -.B "'max_scsi_luns=...'" +.B 'max_scsi_luns=...' A SCSI device can have a number of 'subdevices' contained within itself. The most common example is one of the new SCSI CD-ROMs that @@ -646,7 +646,7 @@ Using a boot argument of \&'sound=0' will disable the sound driver entirely. .SS The line printer driver .TP -.B "'lp='" +.B 'lp=' .br Syntax: .IP diff --git a/man7/cgroups.7 b/man7/cgroups.7 index deed09d44..6831fe80e 100644 --- a/man7/cgroups.7 +++ b/man7/cgroups.7 @@ -1323,7 +1323,7 @@ that exposes, and in some circumstances can be used to change, the "type" of a cgroup. This file contains one of the following type values: .TP -.I "domain" +.I domain This is a normal v2 cgroup that provides process-granularity control. If a process is a member of this cgroup, then all threads of the process are (by definition) in the same cgroup. @@ -1331,7 +1331,7 @@ This is the default cgroup type, and provides the same behavior that was provided for cgroups in the initial cgroups v2 implementation. .TP -.I "threaded" +.I threaded This cgroup is a member of a threaded subtree. Threads can be added to this cgroup, and controllers can be enabled for the cgroup. diff --git a/man7/math_error.7 b/man7/math_error.7 index 187c0b1cc..b1d6b02b0 100644 --- a/man7/math_error.7 +++ b/man7/math_error.7 @@ -240,7 +240,7 @@ and POSIX.1. .PP The .BR gcc (1) -.I "\-fno-math-errno" +.I \-fno-math-errno option causes the executable to employ implementations of some mathematical functions that are faster than the standard implementations, but do not set @@ -248,7 +248,7 @@ implementations, but do not set on error. (The .BR gcc (1) -.I "\-ffast-math" +.I \-ffast-math option also enables .IR "\-fno-math-errno" .) An error can still be tested for using -- 2.27.0