grub2/0138-Clean-up-grub-setpassword-documentation-1290799.patch
Peter Jones 448fa56b6a Various bugfixes
- Make the release be 37 since 36 is the last one we actually built
- Squash down the changelog for that as well
- Fix some TPM errors on 32-bit (hdegoede)
- More fixups to avoid compiler changes (pjones)
- Put lsmmap into the EFI builds (pjones)
  Related: rhbz#1572126

Signed-off-by: Peter Jones <pjones@redhat.com>
2018-06-19 10:39:51 -04:00

58 lines
2 KiB
Diff

From 92af2b24adb7371d8234c0b32ae716adf0b80d42 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Robert Marshall <rmarshall@redhat.com>
Date: Tue, 26 Jan 2016 10:28:35 -0500
Subject: [PATCH 138/246] Clean up grub-setpassword documentation (#1290799)
The output for --help had some errors. Corrected those and polished the
text to be a little easier to follow. Carried verbage over to man page
to maintain internal consistency.
Resolves: rhbz#1290799
---
util/grub-setpassword.8 | 2 +-
util/grub-setpassword.in | 15 +++++++--------
2 files changed, 8 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-)
diff --git a/util/grub-setpassword.8 b/util/grub-setpassword.8
index 49200a848b7..dc91dd6697b 100644
--- a/util/grub-setpassword.8
+++ b/util/grub-setpassword.8
@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ Display program usage and exit.
-v, --version
Display the current version.
.TP
--o, --output[=\fIDIRECTORY PATH\fR]
+-o, --output=<\fIDIRECTORY\fR>
Choose the file path to which user.cfg will be written.
.SH SEE ALSO
diff --git a/util/grub-setpassword.in b/util/grub-setpassword.in
index fb9d3a3b6f9..c8c0fa4199d 100644
--- a/util/grub-setpassword.in
+++ b/util/grub-setpassword.in
@@ -16,15 +16,14 @@ grub_mkpasswd="${bindir}/@grub_mkpasswd_pbkdf2@"
# Print the usage.
usage () {
cat <<EOF
-Usage: $0 [OPTION] [SOURCE]
-Run GRUB script in a Qemu instance.
-
- -h, --help print this message and exit
- -v, --version print the version information and exit
- -o, --output_path choose a custom output path for user.cfg
-
+Usage: $0 [OPTION]
$0 prompts the user to set a password on the grub bootloader. The password
-is written to a file named user.cfg.
+is written to a file named user.cfg which lives in the GRUB directory
+located by default at ${grubdir}.
+
+ -h, --help print this message and exit
+ -v, --version print the version information and exit
+ -o, --output_path <DIRECTORY> put user.cfg in a user-selected directory
Report bugs at https://bugzilla.redhat.com.
EOF
--
2.17.1