From 93d7644e4bfae7e6818dac4a399ad6aafdae8c5e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: cgd Date: Thu, 8 Apr 1993 02:46:10 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] fixed var vs. usr in man page, and made it say "elvispreserve" --- libexec/elvispreserve/elvispreserve.8 | 34 +++++++++++++-------------- 1 file changed, 17 insertions(+), 17 deletions(-) diff --git a/libexec/elvispreserve/elvispreserve.8 b/libexec/elvispreserve/elvispreserve.8 index 065fb2b12093..ae4cdfbe5b30 100644 --- a/libexec/elvispreserve/elvispreserve.8 +++ b/libexec/elvispreserve/elvispreserve.8 @@ -1,15 +1,15 @@ -.TH ELVPRSV 1 +.TH ELVISPRESERVE 8 .SH NAME -elvprsv - Preserve the the modified version of a file after a crash. +elvispreserve - Preserve the the modified version of a file after a crash. .SH SYNOPSIS .nf -\fB\fBelvprsv\fP ["-\fIwhy elvis died\fP"] /tmp/\fIfilename\fP... -\fB\fBelvprsv\fP -R /tmp/\fIfilename\fP... +\fB\fBelvispreserve\fP ["-\fIwhy elvis died\fP"] /tmp/\fIfilename\fP... +\fB\fBelvispreserve\fP -R /tmp/\fIfilename\fP... .fi .SH DESCRIPTION .PP -\fIelvprsv\fP preserves your edited text after \fIelvis\fP dies. -The text can be recovered later, via the \fIelvprsv\fP program. +\fIelvispreserve\fP preserves your edited text after \fIelvis\fP dies. +The text can be recovered later, via the \fIelvispreserve\fP program. .PP For UNIX-like systems, you should never need to run this program from the command line. @@ -17,35 +17,35 @@ It is run automatically when \fIelvis\fP is about to die, and it should be run (via /etc/rc) when the computer is booted. THAT'S ALL! .PP -For non-UNIX systems such as MS-DOS, you can either use \fIelvprsv\fP +For non-UNIX systems such as MS-DOS, you can either use \fIelvispreserve\fP the same way as under UNIX systems (by running it from your AUTOEXEC.BAT file), or you can run it separately with the "-R" flag to recover the files in one step. .PP If you're editing a file when \fIelvis\fP dies (due to a bug, system crash, power failure, etc.) -then \fIelvprsv\fP will preserve the most recent version of your text. +then \fIelvispreserve\fP will preserve the most recent version of your text. The preserved text is stored in a special directory; it does NOT overwrite your text file automatically. .PP -\fIelvprsv\fP will send mail to any user whose work it preserves, +\fIelvispreserve\fP will send mail to any user whose work it preserves, if your operating system normally supports mail. .SH FILES .IP /tmp/elv* The temporary file that \fIelvis\fP was using when it died. -.IP /usr/preserve/p* -The text that is preserved by \fIelvprsv\fP. -.IP /usr/preserve/Index +.IP /var/preserve/p* +The text that is preserved by \fIelvispreserve\fP. +.IP /var/preserve/Index A text file which lists the names of all preserved files, and the names -of the /usr/preserve/p* files which contain their preserved text. +of the /var/preserve/p* files which contain their preserved text. .SH BUGS .PP -Due to the permissions on the /usr/preserve directory, on UNIX systems -\fIelvprsv\fP must be run as superuser. -This is accomplished by making the \fIelvprsv\fP executable be owned by "root" +Due to the permissions on the /var/preserve directory, on UNIX systems +\fIelvispreserve\fP must be run as superuser. +This is accomplished by making the \fIelvispreserve\fP executable be owned by "root" and turning on its "set user id" bit. .PP -If you're editing a nameless buffer when \fIelvis\fP dies, then \fIelvprsv\fP will pretend +If you're editing a nameless buffer when \fIelvis\fP dies, then \fIelvispreserve\fP will pretend that the file was named "foo". .SH AUTHOR .nf