`fixfiles -R -a` is much less useful than it was made to sound, because -R now works recursively. Therefore `fixfiles -R -a` relabels every file on the system, multiple times. On my system it took over 5 times as long as plain `fixfiles` (which takes about a minute). --- policycoreutils/scripts/fixfiles.8 | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/policycoreutils/scripts/fixfiles.8 b/policycoreutils/scripts/fixfiles.8 index 0ec18a8..7a00bc3 100644 --- a/policycoreutils/scripts/fixfiles.8 +++ b/policycoreutils/scripts/fixfiles.8 @@ -55,7 +55,7 @@ Clear /tmp directory with out prompt for removal. .TP .B \-R rpmpackagename[,rpmpackagename...] -Use the rpm database to discover all files within the specified packages and restore the file contexts. (\-a will get all files in the RPM database). +Use the rpm database to discover all files within the specified packages and restore the file contexts. .TP .B \-C PREVIOUS_FILECONTEXT Run a diff on the PREVIOUS_FILECONTEXT file to the currently installed one, and restore the context of all affected files. -- 2.9.3