Hello,
I have received a bunch of patches regarding manpage formatting from
Bjarni Ingi Gislason. Some of these were for perlpod-generated manpages.
I have extracted the changes that actually change formatting (not the
lintish stuff which might be different for perlpod).
cu Andreas
--
`What a good friend you are to him, Dr. Maturin. His other friends are
so grateful to you.'
`I sew his ears on from time to time, sure'
Description: Fix some issues in pod-generated manpages.
Author: Andreas Metzler <ametzler@???>,
Bjarni Ingi Gislason
Bug-Debian:
https://bugs.debian.org/1087172
Bug-Debian:
https://bugs.debian.org/1087206
Bug-Debian:
https://bugs.debian.org/1087222
Origin: vendor
Last-Update: 2024-11-17
--- exim4-4.98.orig/src/exim_msgdate.src
+++ exim4-4.98/src/exim_msgdate.src
@@ -605,7 +605,7 @@ The value is an integer between 0 and 16
means there is no localhost_number.
Do not confuse this with the L<--local|/l---local> option, which displays times
- in the local timezone.
+in the local timezone.
=item B<--C> B<full path to exim configuration file>
@@ -614,7 +614,7 @@ We set C<localhost_number> from the exim
=item B<-dexim_path>
-The test test harness passes the full path of the C<exim> binary,
+The test harness passes the full path of the C<exim> binary,
or here the C<exim_msgdate> being tested. Not currently used.
=back
--- exim4-4.98.orig/src/eximstats.src
+++ exim4-4.98/src/eximstats.src
@@ -395,7 +395,7 @@ Show the delivery times (B<DT>)for all t
Exim must have been configured to use the +deliver_time logging option
for this option to work.
-I<list> is an optional list of times. Eg -show_dt1,2,4,8 will show
+I<list> is an optional list of times. E.g. -show_dt1,2,4,8 will show
the number of messages with delivery times under 1 second, 2 seconds, 4 seconds,
8 seconds, and over 8 seconds.
@@ -408,7 +408,7 @@ These figures will be skewed by pipeline
Exim must have been configured to use the +queue_time_overall logging option
for this option to work.
-I<list> is an optional list of times. Eg -show_rt1,2,4,8 will show
+I<list> is an optional list of times. E.g. -show_rt1,2,4,8 will show
the number of messages with receipt times under 1 second, 2 seconds, 4 seconds,
8 seconds, and over 8 seconds.
@@ -436,14 +436,14 @@ May be combined with B<-byhost> and/or B
=item B<-pattern> I<Description> I</Pattern/>
Look for the specified pattern and count the number of lines in which it appears.
-This option can be specified multiple times. Eg:
+This option can be specified multiple times. E.g.:
-pattern 'Refused connections' '/refused connection/'
=item B<-merge>
-This option allows eximstats to merge old eximstat reports together. Eg:
+This option allows eximstats to merge old eximstat reports together. E.g.:
eximstats mainlog.sun > report.sun.txt
eximstats mainlog.mon > report.mon.txt
@@ -524,8 +524,8 @@ we will output an error message if we do
=item B<-d>
Debug flag. This outputs the eval()'d parser onto STDOUT which makes it
-easier to trap errors in the eval section. Remember to add 1 to the line numbers to allow for the
-title!
+easier to trap errors in the eval section.
+Remember to add 1 to the line numbers to allow for the title!
=back
@@ -534,7 +534,8 @@ title!
Eximstats parses exim mainlog and syslog files to output a statistical
analysis of the messages processed. By default, a text
analysis is generated, but you can request other output formats
-using flags. See the help (B<-help>) to learn
+using flags.
+See the help (B<-help>) to learn
about how to create charts from the tables.
=head1 AUTHOR
@@ -731,7 +732,7 @@ sub get_filehandle {
# Given a data size in bytes, round it to KB, MB, or GB
# as appropriate.
#
-# Eg 12000 => 12KB, 15000000 => 14GB, etc.
+# E.g. 12000 => 12KB, 15000000 => 14GB, etc.
#
# Note: I've experimented with Math::BigInt and it results in a 33%
# performance degredation as opposed to storing numbers split into
@@ -854,7 +855,7 @@ sub add_volume {
# Given a time in seconds, break it down into
# weeks, days, hours, minutes, and seconds.
#
-# Eg 12005 => 3h20m5s
+# E.g. 12005 => 3h20m5s
#######################################################################
sub format_time {
my($t) = pop @_;
@@ -883,7 +884,7 @@ $p;
#
# Given a time in weeks, days, hours, minutes, or seconds, convert it to seconds.
#
-# Eg 3h20m5s => 12005
+# E.g. 3h20m5s => 12005
#######################################################################
sub unformat_time {
my($formatted_time) = pop @_;
@@ -1067,8 +1068,8 @@ sub calculate_localtime_offset {
#
# Print a table showing how long a particular step took for
# the messages. The parameters are:
-# $title Eg "Time spent on the queue"
-# $message_type Eg "Remote"
+# $title E.g. "Time spent on the queue"
+# $message_type E.g. "Remote"
# \@times The maximum time a message took for it to increment
# the corresponding @values counter.
# \@values An array of message counters.
@@ -1800,7 +1801,7 @@ Valid options are:
-show_rt<list> Show the receipt times for all the messages.
-show_dt<list> Show the delivery times for all the messages.
<list> is an optional list of times in seconds.
- Eg -show_rt1,2,4,8.
+ E.g. -show_rt1,2,4,8.
-include_original_destination show both the final and original
destinations in the results rather than just the final ones.
@@ -1814,7 +1815,7 @@ Valid options are:
-pattern "Description" /pattern/
Count lines matching specified patterns and show them in
- the results. It can be specified multiple times. Eg:
+ the results. It can be specified multiple times. E.g.:
-pattern 'Refused connections' '/refused connection/'
-merge merge previously generated reports into a new report
--- exim4-4.98.orig/src/exipick.src
+++ exim4-4.98/src/exipick.src
@@ -1533,7 +1533,7 @@ There are many ways to negate tests, eac
With a few exceptions the available variables match Exim's internal expansion variables in both name and exact contents. There are a few notable additions and format deviations which are noted below. Although a brief explanation is offered below, Exim's spec.txt should be consulted for full details. It is important to remember that not every variable will be defined for every message. For example, $sender_host_port is not defined for messages not received from a remote host.
-Internally, all variables are represented as strings, meaning any operator will work on any variable. This means that C<< $sender_host_name > 4 >> is a legal criterion, even if it does not produce meaningful results. Variables in the list below are marked with a 'type' to help in choosing which types of operators make sense to use.
+Internally, all variables are represented as strings, meaning any operator will work on any variable. This means that C<< $sender_host_name > 4 >> is a valid criterion, even if it does not produce meaningful results. Variables in the list below are marked with a 'type' to help in choosing which types of operators make sense to use.
Identifiers
B - Boolean variables
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