openbsd-ports/www/apache-httpd/patches/patch-docs_man_logresolve_8
deanna 27566592b4 Append a 2 to every mention of anything that exists in both the base
httpd and this port.  Hopefully we got them all.

Requested by robert@, ok dlg@.
2007-01-16 01:12:26 +00:00

37 lines
2.0 KiB
Plaintext

$OpenBSD: patch-docs_man_logresolve_8,v 1.1 2007/01/16 01:12:26 deanna Exp $
--- docs/man/logresolve.8.orig Sun Jan 14 19:01:44 2007
+++ docs/man/logresolve.8 Sun Jan 14 19:07:06 2007
@@ -19,21 +19,21 @@
.el .ne 3
.IP "\\$1" \\$2
..
-.TH "LOGRESOLVE" 8 "2005-06-29" "Apache HTTP Server" "logresolve"
+.TH "LOGRESOLVE2" 8 "2005-06-29" "Apache HTTP Server" "logresolve2"
.SH NAME
-logresolve \- Resolve IP-addresses to hostnames in Apache log files
+logresolve2 \- Resolve IP-addresses to hostnames in Apache log files
.SH "SYNOPSIS"
.PP
-\fBlogresolve\fR [ -\fBs\fR \fIfilename\fR ] [ -\fBc\fR ] < \fIaccess_log\fR > \fIaccess_log\&.new\fR
+\fBlogresolve2\fR [ -\fBs\fR \fIfilename\fR ] [ -\fBc\fR ] < \fIaccess_log\fR > \fIaccess_log\&.new\fR
.SH "SUMMARY"
.PP
-logresolve is a post-processing program to resolve IP-addresses in Apache's access logfiles\&. To minimize impact on your nameserver, logresolve has its very own internal hash-table cache\&. This means that each IP number will only be looked up the first time it is found in the log file\&.
+logresolve2 is a post-processing program to resolve IP-addresses in Apache's access logfiles\&. To minimize impact on your nameserver, logresolve2 has its very own internal hash-table cache\&. This means that each IP number will only be looked up the first time it is found in the log file\&.
.PP
Takes an Apache log file on standard input\&. The IP addresses must be the first thing on each line and must be separated from the remainder of the line by a space\&.
@@ -47,5 +47,5 @@ Takes an Apache log file on standard inp
Specifies a filename to record statistics\&.
.TP
-c
-This causes logresolve to apply some DNS checks: after finding the hostname from the IP address, it looks up the IP addresses for the hostname and checks that one of these matches the original address\&.
+This causes logresolve2 to apply some DNS checks: after finding the hostname from the IP address, it looks up the IP addresses for the hostname and checks that one of these matches the original address\&.