From 32606939002426d04f45956a81c6248161896c15 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eric Bollengier Date: Thu, 21 Jan 2010 15:22:16 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] tweak spaces --- docs/manuals/en/main/restore.tex | 38 ++++++++++++++------------------ 1 file changed, 16 insertions(+), 22 deletions(-) diff --git a/docs/manuals/en/main/restore.tex b/docs/manuals/en/main/restore.tex index 4f2083c3..d1725bf9 100644 --- a/docs/manuals/en/main/restore.tex +++ b/docs/manuals/en/main/restore.tex @@ -783,8 +783,7 @@ encounter, and for same machine restores, how to avoid them. be restored if you want the directory entries properly restored. \item The {\bf bextract} program does not restore access control lists - (ACLs), nor will it restore non-portable Win32 data (default) to Unix - machines. + (ACLs) to Unix machines. \end{itemize} \label{Windows} @@ -981,33 +980,28 @@ mark} command. The available commands are: \begin{description} \item [cd] - The {\bf cd} command changes the current directory to the argument - specified. - It operates much like the Unix {\bf cd} command. Wildcard specifications are - not permitted. + The {\bf cd} command changes the current directory to the argument specified. + It operates much like the Unix {\bf cd} command. Wildcard specifications are + not permitted. - Note, on Windows systems, the various drives (c:, d:, ...) are treated like - a - directory within the file tree while in the file selection mode. As a - consequence, you must do a {\bf cd c:} or possibly in some cases a {\bf cd - C:} (note upper case) to get down to the first directory. + Note, on Windows systems, the various drives (c:, d:, ...) are treated like a + directory within the file tree while in the file selection mode. As a + consequence, you must do a {\bf cd c:} or possibly in some cases a {\bf cd + C:} (note upper case) to get down to the first directory. \item [dir] \index[dir]{dir } - The {\bf dir} command is similar to the {\bf ls} command, except that it - prints it in long format (all details). This command can be a bit slower - than - the {\bf ls} command because it must access the catalog database for the - detailed information for each file. + The {\bf dir} command is similar to the {\bf ls} command, except that it + prints it in long format (all details). This command can be a bit slower + than the {\bf ls} command because it must access the catalog database for + the detailed information for each file. \item [estimate] \index[dir]{estimate } - The {\bf estimate} command prints a summary of the total files in the tree, - how many are marked to be restored, and an estimate of the number of bytes - to - be restored. This can be useful if you are short on disk space on the - machine - where the files will be restored. + The {\bf estimate} command prints a summary of the total files in the tree, + how many are marked to be restored, and an estimate of the number of bytes + to be restored. This can be useful if you are short on disk space on the + machine where the files will be restored. \item [find] \index[dir]{find} -- 2.39.5