Blob Blame History Raw
From 8a520d8343ab1567f0f3df39e4fc45dbaf9c6f77 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Eric Garver <eric@garver.life>
Date: Thu, 24 Sep 2020 15:24:41 -0400
Subject: [PATCH 60/62] docs(firewall-cmd): clarify lockdown whitelist command
 paths

Reported-by: D. Hugh Redelmeier <hugh@mimosa.com>
(cherry picked from commit a7b12b8eb87dd3bd2bb342cf5d74bf089cf3b9a6)
(cherry picked from commit 7e9b1a02cc7aa12f9c499b2acad584dbabf9a518)
---
 doc/xml/firewall-cmd.xml.in | 2 +-
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/doc/xml/firewall-cmd.xml.in b/doc/xml/firewall-cmd.xml.in
index 8bc389acae6c..702c549ab9d9 100644
--- a/doc/xml/firewall-cmd.xml.in
+++ b/doc/xml/firewall-cmd.xml.in
@@ -2104,7 +2104,7 @@ For interfaces that are not under control of NetworkManager, firewalld tries to
 	If a command entry on the whitelist ends with an asterisk '*', then all command lines starting with the command will match. If the '*' is not there the absolute command inclusive arguments must match.
       </para>
       <para>
-	Commands for user root and others is not always the same. Example: As root <command>/bin/firewall-cmd</command> is used, as a normal user <command>/usr/bin/firewall-cmd</command> is be used on Fedora. 
+	Command paths for users are not always the same and depends on the users PATH. Some distributions symlink <command>/bin</command> to <command>/usr/bin</command> in which case it depends on the order they appear in the PATH environment variable.
       </para>
       <para>
 	The context is the security (SELinux) context of a running application or service. To get the context of a running application use <command>ps -e --context</command>.
-- 
2.28.0