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6282 ONBLD man pages not pbchk clean
Reviewed by: Yuri Pankov <yuri.pankov@nexenta.com>
Reviewed by: Josef Sipek <jeffpc@josefsipek.net>
@@ -17,23 +17,20 @@
.\" fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying
.\" information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner]
.\"
.\" CDDL HEADER END
.\"
-.TH find_elf 1ONBLD "25 March 2010"
+.TH FIND_ELF 1ONBLD "Mar 25, 2010"
.SH NAME
find_elf \- Locate ELF shared objects and executables
.SH SYNOPSIS
\fBfind_elf [-afrs] path\fP
-.LP
.SH DESCRIPTION
-.IX "OS-Net build tools" "find_elf" "" "\fBfind_elf\fP"
The
.I find_elf
command descends a directory hierarchy and produces one line
of output on stdout for each ELF executable or shared object found.
-.LP
.SH OPTIONS
.LP
The following options are supported:
.TP 4
.B \-a
@@ -54,11 +51,10 @@
Report file names as relative paths, relative to the given file or directory,
instead of fully qualified.
.TP 4
.B \-s
Only report shared objects.
-.LP
.SH OUTPUT
.LP
.I find_elf
produces a series of PREFIX, OBJECT, and ALIAS lines, which collectively
describe the ELF objects located. Whitespace is used within each
@@ -121,11 +117,10 @@
.sp
The \fB-a\fP option alters the handling of aliased names. When \fB-a\fP is
specified, each file results in a separate OBJECT line, as if they were
independent files rather than the same file with different names.
.sp
-.PP
.SH EXAMPLES
Assume the following hierarchy of files exist under /usr/lib/foo:
.sp
.in +4
.nf
@@ -149,11 +144,11 @@
.fi
.in -4
.sp
This hierarchy contains compilation symlinks (libfoo.so) and
path alias symlinks (32, 64), as discussed in OUTPUT.
-.p
+.P
.I find_elf
produces the following output for the above hierarchy:
.sp
.in +4
.nf
@@ -219,7 +214,6 @@
.BR interface_cmp (1ONBLD),
.BR ld (1),
.BR ldd (1),
.BR elfdump (1),
.BR pvs (1).
-.LP
-.TZ LLM
+