Updated patch for manpages, thanks to Jay

This commit is contained in:
ssorce 2007-02-19 23:44:12 +00:00
parent e282f99a96
commit 8875eee065
1 changed files with 83 additions and 0 deletions

83
samba-3.0.23d-man.patch Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,83 @@
--- samba-3.0.23d/docs/manpages/ntlm_auth.1.man 2006-11-14 05:01:51.000000000 -0500
+++ samba-3.0.23d/docs/manpages/ntlm_auth.1 2006-11-15 15:59:59.000000000 -0500
@@ -105,17 +105,17 @@
The username, expected to be in Samba's
unix charset.
.sp
-\fBExample 1. \fRUsername: bob
+\fBExample 1.\fR Username: bob
.sp
-\fBExample 2. \fRUsername:: Ym9i
+\fBExample 2.\fR Username:: Ym9i
.TP 3n
Username
The user's domain, expected to be in Samba's
unix charset.
.sp
-\fBExample 3. \fRDomain: WORKGROUP
+\fBExample 3.\fR Domain: WORKGROUP
.sp
-\fBExample 4. \fRDomain:: V09SS0dST1VQ
+\fBExample 4.\fR Domain:: V09SS0dST1VQ
.TP 3n
Full-Username
The fully qualified username, expected to be in Samba's
@@ -123,16 +123,16 @@
and qualified with the
winbind separator.
.sp
-\fBExample 5. \fRFull-Username: WORKGROUP\bob
+\fBExample 5.\fR Full-Username: WORKGROUP\bob
.sp
-\fBExample 6. \fRFull-Username:: V09SS0dST1VQYm9i
+\fBExample 6.\fR Full-Username:: V09SS0dST1VQYm9i
.TP 3n
LANMAN-Challenge
The 8 byte
\fBLANMAN Challenge\fR
value, generated randomly by the server, or (in cases such as MSCHAPv2) generated in some way by both the server and the client.
.sp
-\fBExample 7. \fRLANMAN-Challege: 0102030405060708
+\fBExample 7.\fR LANMAN-Challege: 0102030405060708
.TP 3n
LANMAN-Response
The 24 byte
@@ -140,7 +140,7 @@
value, calculated from the user's password and the supplied
\fBLANMAN Challenge\fR. Typically, this is provided over the network by a client wishing to authenticate.
.sp
-\fBExample 8. \fRLANMAN-Response: 0102030405060708090A0B0C0D0E0F101112131415161718
+\fBExample 8.\fR LANMAN-Response: 0102030405060708090A0B0C0D0E0F101112131415161718
.TP 3n
NT-Response
The >= 24 byte
@@ -148,24 +148,24 @@
calculated from the user's password and the supplied
\fBLANMAN Challenge\fR. Typically, this is provided over the network by a client wishing to authenticate.
.sp
-\fBExample 9. \fRNT-Response: 0102030405060708090A0B0C0D0E0F101112131415161718
+\fBExample 9.\fR NT-Response: 0102030405060708090A0B0C0D0E0F101112131415161718
.TP 3n
Password
The user's password. This would be provided by a network client, if the helper is being used in a legacy situation that exposes plaintext passwords in this way.
.sp
-\fBExample 10. \fRPassword: samba2
+\fBExample 10.\fR Password: samba2
.sp
-\fBExample 11. \fRPassword:: c2FtYmEy
+\fBExample 11.\fR Password:: c2FtYmEy
.TP 3n
Request-User-Session-Key
Apon sucessful authenticaiton, return the user session key associated with the login.
.sp
-\fBExample 12. \fRRequest-User-Session-Key: Yes
+\fBExample 12.\fR Request-User-Session-Key: Yes
.TP 3n
Request-LanMan-Session-Key
Apon sucessful authenticaiton, return the LANMAN session key associated with the login.
.sp
-\fBExample 13. \fRRequest-LanMan-Session-Key: Yes
+\fBExample 13.\fR Request-LanMan-Session-Key: Yes
.sp
.it 1 an-trap
.nr an-no-space-flag 1