From 944864e679b37423b0e159d0a6cfc4267e609541 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Peter Jones <pjones@redhat.com>
Date: Tue, 28 Jun 2016 16:50:37 -0400
Subject: [PATCH 59/60] More edits for grubby.8 (#1232168)
- Don't switch between the passive and active voice between the option
descriptions
- keep the same point of view between options ("[it] removes all
entries" vs "remove all entries")
- line wrap everywhere except the example envocations at <80 columns,
not 100.
- consistent use of i386 vs ia32
Signed-off-by: Peter Jones <pjones@redhat.com>
Related: rhbz#1232168
---
grubby.8 | 82 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-----------------------------
1 file changed, 45 insertions(+), 37 deletions(-)
diff --git a/grubby.8 b/grubby.8
index 5e1b521..1197109 100644
--- a/grubby.8
+++ b/grubby.8
@@ -2,11 +2,12 @@
.SH NAME
-grubby \- command line tool used to configure bootloader menu entries across multiple architectures
+grubby \- command line tool used to configure bootloader menu entries across
+multiple architectures
.SH SYNOPSIS
-\fBgrubby\fR [\fIOPTIONS...\fR]
+\fBgrubby\fR [\fIOPTIONS\fR]
.SH DESCRIPTION
@@ -37,13 +38,13 @@ are deprecated in favor of previously mentioned bootloaders. The
.SS Default Behavior
-The default architecture is chosen at compile time. The grubby executable
-has a series of built in assumptions about what bootloader is being used and
-where its configuration file lives. If no output format option is specified
-on the command line then grubby will use these default settings to first
-search for an existing configuration and, if it is not found, assume that
-it should be placed in the standard location. These default assumptions are
-listed in the table below.
+The default bootloader target is primarily determined by the architecture
+for which grubby has been built. Each architecture has a preferred
+bootloader, and each bootloader has its own configuration file. If no
+bootloader is selected on the command line, grubby will use these default
+settings to search for an existing configuration. If no bootloader
+configuration file is found, grubby will use the default value for that
+architecture. These defaults are listed in the table below.
.TS
allbox;
@@ -81,19 +82,18 @@ Add a new boot entry for the kernel located at \fIkernel-path\fR. A title for
the boot entry must be set using \fB-\-title\fR. Most invocations should also
include \fB-\-initrd\fR with memtest86 as a notable exception.
-The \fB-\-update-kernel\fR
-option may not be used in the same invocation.
+The \fB-\-update-kernel\fR option may not be used in the same invocation.
.TP
\fB-\-remove-kernel\fR=\fIkernel-path\fR
-Removes all boot entries which match \fIkernel-path\fR. This may be used
-along with \fB-\-add-kernel\fR, in which case the new kernel being added will
-never be removed.
+Remove all boot entries which match \fIkernel-path\fR. This may be used
+along with \fB-\-add-kernel\fR, in which case the new entry being added will
+not be removed.
.TP
\fB-\-update-kernel\fR=\fIkernel-path\fR
-The entries for kernels matching \fRkernel-path\fR are updated. Currently
-the only items that can be updated is the kernel argument list, which is
+Update the entries for kernels matching \fRkernel-path\fR. Currently
+the only item that can be updated is the kernel argument list, which is
modified via the \fB-\-args\fR and \fB-\-remove-args\fR options.
.TP
@@ -135,7 +135,7 @@ being added.
.TP
\fB-\-efi\fR
-Use linuxefi and initrdefi when constructing bootloader stanzas instead of linux and initrd.
+Use appropriate bootloader commands for EFI on this architecture.
.TP
\fB-\-set-default\fR=\fIkernel-path\fR
@@ -188,16 +188,18 @@ Display information on all boot entries which match \fIkernel-path\fR. I
.TP
\fB-\-bootloader-probe\fR
+Attempt to probe for installed bootloaders. If this option is specified,
\fBgrubby\fR tries to determine if \fBgrub\fR or \fBlilo\fR is currently
-installed. When one of those bootloaders is found the name of that bootloader
-is displayed on stdout. Both could be installed (on different devices), and
-grubby will print out the names of both bootloaders, one per line. The probe
-for \fBgrub\fR requires a commented out boot directive \fBgrub.conf\fR
-identical to the standard directive in the lilo configuration file. If this
-is not present \fBgrubby\fR will assume grub is not installed (note
-that \fBanaconda\fR places this directive in \fBgrub.conf\fR files it creates).
+installed. When one of those bootloaders is found the name of that
+bootloader is displayed on stdout. Both could be installed (on different
+devices), and grubby will print out the names of both bootloaders, one per
+line. The probe for \fBgrub\fR requires a commented out boot directive
+\fBgrub.conf\fR identical to the standard directive in the lilo
+configuration file. If this is not present \fBgrubby\fR will assume grub is
+not installed (note that \fBanaconda\fR places this directive in
+\fBgrub.conf\fR files it creates).
-\fIThis option is only available on i386 platforms.\fR
+\fIThis option is only available on x86 BIOS platforms.\fR
.TP
\fB-v\fR, \fB-\-version\fR
@@ -213,7 +215,8 @@ alternative bootloader.
.TP
\fB-\-elilo\fR
-Use an \fBelilo\fR style configuration file. This is the default on ia64 platforms. This format is deprecated.
+Use an \fBelilo\fR style configuration file. This is the default on ia64
+platforms. This format is deprecated.
.TP
\fB-\-extlinux\fR
@@ -221,13 +224,14 @@ Use an \fBextlinux\fR style configuration file. This format is deprecated.
.TP
\fB-\-grub\fR
-Use a \fBgrub\fR style configuration file. This is the default on ia32 platforms.
+Use a \fBgrub\fR style configuration file. This is the default on the i386
+architecture.
.TP
\fB-\-grub2\fR
-Use a \fBgrub2\fR style configuration file. This is the default on \fBx86_64\fR
-architecture as well as the \fBppc64\fR and \fBppc64le\fR architectures
-running on Power8 or later hardware.
+Use a \fBgrub2\fR style configuration file. This is the default on
+\fBx86_64\fR architecture as well as the \fBppc64\fR and \fBppc64le\fR
+architectures running on Power8 or later hardware.
.TP
\fB-\-lilo\fR
@@ -235,7 +239,8 @@ Use a \fBlilo\fR style configuration file.
.TP
\fB-\-silo\fR
-Use a \fBsilo\fR style configuration file. This is the default on SPARC systems. This format is legacy, deprecated, and unsupported.
+Use a \fBsilo\fR style configuration file. This is the default on SPARC
+systems. This format is legacy, deprecated, and unsupported.
.TP
\fB-\-yaboot\fR
@@ -330,12 +335,13 @@ kernel_args Set of arguments for the kernel
menu_index Index number of a menu entry
.TE
-The examples below quote strings that may have spaces or other whitespace in them. It is also
-perfectly valid to backslash escape these strings if that is more convenient.
+The examples below quote strings that may have spaces or other whitespace in
+them. It is also perfectly valid to backslash escape these strings if that
+is more convenient.
.PP
-Add a new kernel entry and copy all options from the current default kernel. This is the behavior
-that most users will want.
+Add a new kernel entry and copy all options from the current default kernel.
+This is the behavior that most users will want.
.IP
\fBgrubby\fR --add-kernel=\fInew_kernel\fR --title="\fIentry_title\fR" --initrd="\fInew_initrd\fR" --copy-default
.PP
@@ -347,13 +353,15 @@ Remove \fBall menu entries\fR for a specified kernel.
.IP
\fBgrubby\fR --remove-kernel=\fIold_kernel\fR
.PP
-Target a single menu entry to remove without targetting other entries with the same kernel.
+Target a single menu entry to remove without targetting other entries with
+the same kernel.
.IP
\fBgrubby\fR --info=\fIold_kernel\fR
\fBgrubby\fR --remove-kernel=\fImenu_index\fR
.PP
-Update the arguments for all entries of a specific kernel. New arguments get added while existing arguments get updated values.
+Update the arguments for all entries of a specific kernel. New arguments get
+added while existing arguments get updated values.
.IP
\fBgrubby\fR --update-kernel=\fIcurrent_kernel\fR --args="\fIkernel_args\fR"
.PP
--
2.5.5