Source-Changes-HG archive
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index][Old Index]
[src/trunk]: src/share/man/man4 Use more markup.
details: https://anonhg.NetBSD.org/src/rev/9ca6b2059c93
branches: trunk
changeset: 342855:9ca6b2059c93
user: wiz <wiz%NetBSD.org@localhost>
date: Mon Jan 11 06:21:23 2016 +0000
description:
Use more markup.
diffstat:
share/man/man4/filemon.4 | 16 +++++++++-------
1 files changed, 9 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-)
diffs (44 lines):
diff -r cb4bb98f9169 -r 9ca6b2059c93 share/man/man4/filemon.4
--- a/share/man/man4/filemon.4 Mon Jan 11 01:57:12 2016 +0000
+++ b/share/man/man4/filemon.4 Mon Jan 11 06:21:23 2016 +0000
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-.\" $NetBSD: filemon.4,v 1.18 2016/01/11 01:45:27 pgoyette Exp $
+.\" $NetBSD: filemon.4,v 1.19 2016/01/11 06:21:23 wiz Exp $
.\"
.\" Copyright (c) 2011, Juniper Networks, Inc.
.\"
@@ -154,7 +154,7 @@
A
.Nm
instance is created by opening
-.Dv /dev/filemon .
+.Pa /dev/filemon .
Then use
.Fn ioctl filemon_fd FILEMON_SET_PID &pid
to identify the target process to monitor, and
@@ -219,9 +219,10 @@
.Nm
was contributed by Juniper Networks.
.Sh SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
-If the monitored process exits, and its pid gets reused, filemon will
-continue to report events for the new process (and its descendants)
-without any authorization checks.
+If the monitored process exits, and its pid gets reused,
+.Nm
+will continue to report events for the new process (and its
+descendants) without any authorization checks.
.Pp
Monitoring of a process enables the target process to write to the
tracking process's file descriptor.
@@ -238,8 +239,9 @@
If two processes are monitored, and one is a descendant of the other, events
related to the descendant process and its further descendants are delivered
only to the descendant process's monitor.
-If a process is being monitored by two instances of filemon, events will be
-delivered only to the first instance created (when
+If a process is being monitored by two instances of
+.Nm ,
+events will be delivered only to the first instance created (when
.Pa /dev/filemon
was opened), regardless of the order in which the monitoring processes
called
Home |
Main Index |
Thread Index |
Old Index