Manual pages: various: reword "allow(s) to"
The wording "allow(s) to" is not grammatical English. Reword various pages to use a more correct form such "can be use to" or "allows the [noun] of". Aklong the way, fix a few nearby wording errors in some pages. Signed-off-by: Michael Kerrisk (man-pages) <mtk.manpages@gmail.com>
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@ -296,7 +296,6 @@ disk label (see the \fBEMPTY DISK LABEL\fR section below).
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.BR \-Y , " \-\-label\-nested " \fItype
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Force editing of a nested disk label. The primary disk label has to exist already.
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This option allows editing for example a hybrid/protective MBR on devices with GPT.
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.TP
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.BR \-w , " \-\-wipe "\fIwhen
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Wipe filesystem, RAID and partition-table signatures from the device, in order
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@ -24,7 +24,8 @@ filesystem labels/volume names, unique identifiers/serial numbers.
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A common use is to allow use of LABEL= and UUID= tags instead of hard-coding
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specific block device names into configuration files.
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.P
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The low-level part of the library also allows to extract information about
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The low-level part of the library also allows the extraction
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of information about
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partitions and block device topology.
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.P
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The high-level part of the library keeps information about block devices in a
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@ -133,9 +133,9 @@ to tell
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that printing the hostname should be suppressed in the login: prompt.
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See also
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.B LOGIN_PLAIN_PROMPT
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below if your server does not allow to configure
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below if your server does not allow the
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.B login
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command line.
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command line to be configured.
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.TP
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\fB\-\-help\fR
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Display help text and exit.
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@ -193,9 +193,9 @@ to stop display content specified by
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.B MOTD_FILE
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after the first accessible item in the list.
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Note that a directory is one item in this case.
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This option allows to configure
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This option allows
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.B login
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semantic to be more compatible with pam_motd.
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semantics to be configured to be more compatible with pam_motd.
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.RE
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.PP
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.B LOGIN_PLAIN_PROMPT
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@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ su \- run a command with substitute user and group ID
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.RI [ user " [" argument ...]]
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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.B su
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allows to run commands with a substitute user and group ID.
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allows commands to be with a substitute user and group ID.
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.PP
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When called with no
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.I user
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@ -122,7 +122,7 @@ This option is ignored if the option \fB\-\-login\fR is specified.
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.BR \-P , " \-\-pty"
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Create pseudo-terminal for the session. The independent terminal provides
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better security as user does not share terminal with the original
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session. This allow to avoid TIOCSTI ioctl terminal injection and other
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session. This can be used to avoid TIOCSTI ioctl terminal injection and other
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security attacks against terminal file descriptors. The all session is also
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possible to move to background (e.g., "su \-\-pty \- username \-c
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application &"). If the pseudo-terminal is enabled then su command works
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@ -280,7 +280,7 @@ global logindef config file
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For security reasons
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.B su
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always logs failed log-in attempts to the btmp file, but it does not write to
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the lastlog file at all. This solution allows to control
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the lastlog file at all. This solution can be used to control
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.B su
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behavior by PAM configuration. If you want to use the pam_lastlog module to
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print warning message about failed log-in attempts then the pam_lastlog has to
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@ -281,7 +281,8 @@ parameters should be observed.
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.
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.TP
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.BI \%\-\-delay= seconds
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This option allows to overwrite internally used delay when set clock time. The
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This option can be used to overwrite the internally used delay
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when setting the clock time. The
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default is 0.5 (500ms) for rtc_cmos, for another RTC types the delay is 0. If
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RTC type is impossible to determine (from sysfs) then it defaults also to 0.5
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to be backwardly compatible.
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@ -584,7 +584,7 @@ with a single
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.BR mount (2)
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system call, and the flags cannot be mixed with other mount options and operations.
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Since util-linux 2.23 the \fBmount\fR command allows to do more propagation
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Since util-linux 2.23 the \fBmount\fR command can be used to do more propagation
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(topology) changes by one mount(8) call and do it also together with other
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mount operations. This feature is EXPERIMENTAL. The propagation flags are applied
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by additional \fBmount\fR(2) system calls when the preceding mount operations
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@ -891,9 +891,9 @@ explicitly define that the argument is the mount target.
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.TP
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.BI \-\-target\-prefix " directory"
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Prepend the specified directory to all mount targets.
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This option allows to follow
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This option can be used to follow
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.IR fstab ,
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but mount operations is done on another place, for example:
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but mount operations are done in another place, for example:
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.RS
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.RS
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.sp
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@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ modifies execution domains and process personality flags.
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The execution domains currently only affects the output of \fBuname \-m\fR.
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For example, on an AMD64 system, running \fBsetarch i386 \fIprogram\fR
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will cause \fIprogram\fR to see i686 instead of x86_64 as the machine type.
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It also allows to set various personality options.
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It can also be used to set various personality options.
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The default \fIprogram\fR is \fB/bin/sh\fR.
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.PP
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Since version 2.33 the
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@ -215,13 +215,15 @@ option on a line, anybody can umount the corresponding filesystem. For more det
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.BR mount (8)
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man page.
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.PP
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Since version 2.34 \fBumount\fR command allows to perform umount operation also
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Since version 2.34 the \fBumount\fR command can be used to
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perform umount operation also
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for fuse filesystems if kernel mount table contains user's ID. In this case fstab
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user= mount option is not required.
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.PP
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Since version 2.35 \fBumount\fR command does not exit when user permissions are
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inadequate by internal libmount security rules. It drops suid permissions
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and continue as regular non-root user. It allows to support use-cases where
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and continue as regular non-root user.
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This can be used to support use-cases where
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root permissions are not necessary (e.g., fuse filesystems, user namespaces,
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etc).
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.SH LOOP DEVICE
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@ -241,7 +241,8 @@ Call vhangup() to do a virtual hangup of the specified terminal.
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Try to keep the existing baud rate. The baud rates from the command line are
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used when agetty receives a BREAK character. If another baud rates specified
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then the original baud rate is also saved to the end of the wanted baud rates
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list. It allows to return to the original baud rate after unexpected BREAKs.
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list.
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This can be used to return to the original baud rate after unexpected BREAKs.
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.TP
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\-t, \-\-timeout \fItimeout\fP
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Terminate if no user name could be read within \fItimeout\fP seconds.
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@ -357,7 +358,7 @@ checks for \fI/etc/issue.d\fP directory. The directory is optional extension to
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the default issue file and content of the directory is printed after
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\fI/etc/issue\fP content. If the \fI/etc/issue\fP does not exist than the
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directory is ignored. All files \fBwith .issue extension\fP from the directory are
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printed in version-sort order. The directory allow to maintain 3rd-party
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printed in version-sort order. The directory can be used to maintain 3rd-party
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messages independently on the primary system \fI/etc/issue\fP file.
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Since version 2.35 additional locations for issue file and directory are
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@ -413,7 +414,7 @@ S or S{VARIABLE}
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Insert the VARIABLE data from \fI/etc/os-release\fP. If this file does not exist
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then fall back to \fI/usr/lib/os-release\fP. If the VARIABLE argument is not
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specified, then use PRETTY_NAME from the file or the system name (see \\s).
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This escape code allows to keep \fI/etc/issue\fP distribution and release
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This escape code can be used to keep \fI/etc/issue\fP distribution and release
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independent. Note that \\S{ANSI_COLOR} is converted to the real terminal
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escape sequence.
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.TP
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@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ and to store additional information about the session.
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.PP
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Since version 2.35
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.B script
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supports multiple streams and allows to log input and output to separate
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supports multiple streams and allows the logging of input and output to separate
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files or all the one file. This version also supports new timing file
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which records additional information. The command
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.B scriptreplay \-\-summary
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@ -67,7 +67,9 @@ Output is formatted to a width specified as number of characters. The original
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name of this option is \-\-columns; this name is deprecated since v2.30. Note that input
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longer than \fIwidth\fP is not truncated by default.
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.IP "\fB\-d, \-\-table\-noheadings\fP"
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Do not print header. This option allows to use logical column names on command line, but keep the header hidden when print the table.
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Do not print header.
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This option allows the use of logical column names on the command line,
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but keeps the header hidden when printing the table.
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.IP "\fB\-o, \-\-output\-separator\fP \fIstring\fP"
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Specify the columns delimiter for table output (default is two spaces).
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.IP "\fB\-s, \-\-separator\fP \fIseparators\fP"
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.IP "\fB\-R, \-\-table-right\fP \fIcolumns\fP"
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Right align text in the specified columns.
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.IP "\fB\-T, \-\-table-truncate\fP \fIcolumns\fP"
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Specify columns where is allowed to truncate text when necessary, otherwise
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Specify columns where text can be truncated when necessary, otherwise
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very long table entries may be printed on multiple lines.
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.IP "\fB\-E, \-\-table-noextreme\fP \fIcolumns\fP"
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Specify columns where is possible to ignore unusually long (longer than
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