Remove a second paragraph macro (.TP, .PP) as it does not change the output (.SS/.PP) or it adds an extra empty line (.TP/.TP) Warning from "mandoc -Tlint": mandoc: ./sys-utils/hwclock.8.in:299:2: WARNING: line scope broken: TP breaks TP mandoc: ./sys-utils/hwclock.8.in:459:2: WARNING: skipping paragraph macro: PP after SS mandoc: ./sys-utils/hwclock.8.in:543:2: WARNING: skipping paragraph macro: PP after SS mandoc: ./sys-utils/hwclock.8.in:574:2: WARNING: skipping paragraph macro: PP after SS mandoc: ./sys-utils/hwclock.8.in:673:2: WARNING: skipping paragraph macro: PP after SS mandoc: ./sys-utils/hwclock.8.in:721:2: WARNING: skipping paragraph macro: PP after SS Signed-off-by: Bjarni Ingi Gislason <bjarniig@xxxxxxxxx> --- sys-utils/hwclock.8.in | 6 ------ 1 file changed, 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/sys-utils/hwclock.8.in b/sys-utils/hwclock.8.in index e62b4ad09..84fe4d84f 100644 --- a/sys-utils/hwclock.8.in +++ b/sys-utils/hwclock.8.in @@ -297,7 +297,6 @@ another delay is required. .RE . .TP -.TP .BR \-D ", " \-\-debug .RB Use\ \-\-verbose . .RB The\ \%\-\-debug\ option @@ -456,7 +455,6 @@ is doing internally. .SH NOTES . .SS Clocks in a Linux System -.PP There are two types of date-time clocks: .PP .B The Hardware Clock: @@ -540,7 +538,6 @@ See also .BR \%settimeofday (2). . .SS Hardware Clock Access Methods -.PP .B \%hwclock uses many different ways to get and set Hardware Clock values. The most normal way is to do I/O to the rtc device special file, which is @@ -571,7 +568,6 @@ provides it for testing, troubleshooting, and because it may be the only method available on ISA systems which do not have a working rtc device driver. .SS The Adjust Function -.PP The Hardware Clock is usually not very accurate. However, much of its inaccuracy is completely predictable - it gains or loses the same amount of time every day. This is called systematic drift. @@ -670,7 +666,6 @@ You can use an adjtime file that was previously used with the .BR \%clock "(8) program with " \%hwclock . . .SS Automatic Hardware Clock Synchronization by the Kernel -.PP You should be aware of another way that the Hardware Clock is kept synchronized in some systems. The Linux kernel has a mode wherein it copies the System Time to the Hardware Clock every 11 minutes. This mode @@ -718,7 +713,6 @@ notify the kernel. should not be used with NTP \%'11\ minute\ mode'. . .SS ISA Hardware Clock Century value -.PP There is some sort of standard that defines CMOS memory Byte 50 on an ISA machine as an indicator of what century it is. .B \%hwclock -- 2.27.0