From: jacob Date: Wed, 16 Jul 2003 08:28:31 +0000 (+0000) Subject: Clarify that '-m' takes a _local_ file. X-Git-Url: https://git.distorted.org.uk/u/mdw/putty/commitdiff_plain/fd66175e28ee5fd0ff15fa4b3439278e97a22712 Clarify that '-m' takes a _local_ file. ref. git-svn-id: svn://svn.tartarus.org/sgt/putty@3368 cda61777-01e9-0310-a592-d414129be87e --- diff --git a/doc/using.but b/doc/using.but index 51752153..8a0392e2 100644 --- a/doc/using.but +++ b/doc/using.but @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -\versionid $Id: using.but,v 1.14 2003/04/05 11:52:42 simon Exp $ +\versionid $Id: using.but,v 1.15 2003/07/16 08:28:31 jacob Exp $ \C{using} Using PuTTY @@ -499,7 +499,7 @@ file The \c{-m} option performs a similar function to the \q{Remote command} box in the SSH panel of the PuTTY configuration box (see \k{config-command}). However, the \c{-m} option expects to be given -a file name, and it will read a command from that file. On most Unix +a local file name, and it will read a command from that file. On most Unix systems, you can even put multiple lines in this file and execute more than one command in sequence, or a whole shell script.