packages/catacomb2: Support assembler code on Android.
[termux-packages] / packages / tsocks / 02_hyphenfix.patch
CommitLineData
0301524b
OS
1#! /bin/sh /usr/share/dpatch/dpatch-run
2## 02_hyphenfix.dpatch by Nico Golde <nion@debian.org>
3##
4## All lines beginning with `## DP:' are a description of the patch.
5## DP: No description.
6
7--- a/tsocks.8
8+++ b/tsocks.8
9@@ -13,11 +13,11 @@ Set LD_PRELOAD to load the library then
10 The syntax to force preload of the library for different shells is
11 specified below:
12
13-Bash, Ksh and Bourne shell -
14+Bash, Ksh and Bourne shell \-
15
16 export LD_PRELOAD=/lib/libtsocks.so
17
18-C Shell -
19+C Shell \-
20
21 setenv LD_PRELOAD=/lib/libtsocks.so
22
23@@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ the SOCKSified TCP/IP stacks seen on oth
24 Most arguments to
25 .BR tsocks
26 are provided in the configuration file (the location of which is defined
27-at configure time by the --with-conf=<file> argument but defaults to
28+at configure time by the \-\-with\-conf=<file> argument but defaults to
29 /etc/tsocks.conf). The structure of this file is documented in tsocks.conf(8)
30
31 Some configuration options can be specified at run time using environment
32@@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ variables as follows:
33 This environment variable overrides the default location of the tsocks
34 configuration file. This variable is not honored if the program tsocks
35 is embedded in is setuid. In addition this environment variable can
36-be compiled out of tsocks with the --disable-envconf argument to
37+be compiled out of tsocks with the \-\-disable\-envconf argument to
38 configure at build time
39
40 .TP
41@@ -73,10 +73,10 @@ generated by tsocks (debug output is gen
42 standard error). If this variable is not present by default the logging
43 level is set to 0 which indicates that only error messages should be output.
44 Setting it to higher values will cause tsocks to generate more messages
45-describing what it is doing. If set to -1 tsocks will output absolutely no
46+describing what it is doing. If set to \-1 tsocks will output absolutely no
47 error or debugging messages. This is only needed if tsocks output interferes
48 with a program it is embedded in. Message output can be permanently compiled
49-out of tsocks by specifying the --disable-debug option to configure at
50+out of tsocks by specifying the \-\-disable\-debug option to configure at
51 build time
52
53 .TP
54@@ -85,7 +85,7 @@ This option can be used to redirect the
55 be sent to standard error) to a file. This variable is not honored if the
56 program tsocks is embedded in is setuid. For programs where tsocks output
57 interferes with normal operation this option is generally better than
58-disabling messages (with TSOCKS_DEBUG = -1)
59+disabling messages (with TSOCKS_DEBUG = \-1)
60
61 .TP
62 .I TSOCKS_USERNAME
63@@ -115,8 +115,8 @@ consult the INSTALL file for more inform
64 .BR tsocks
65 will generate error messages and print them to stderr when there are
66 problems with the configuration file or the SOCKS negotiation with the
67-server if the TSOCKS_DEBUG environment variable is not set to -1 or and
68---disable-debug was not specified at compile time. This output may cause
69+server if the TSOCKS_DEBUG environment variable is not set to \-1 or and
70+\-\-disable\-debug was not specified at compile time. This output may cause
71 some problems with programs that redirect standard error.
72
73 .SS CAVEATS
74@@ -157,12 +157,12 @@ not. This introduces overhead and should
75 .BR tsocks
76 uses ELF dynamic loader features to intercept dynamic function calls from
77 programs in which it is embedded. As a result, it cannot trace the
78-actions of statically linked executables, non-ELF executables, or
79+actions of statically linked executables, non\-ELF executables, or
80 executables that make system calls directly with the system call trap or
81 through the syscall() routine.
82
83 .SH FILES
84-/etc/tsocks.conf - default tsocks configuration file
85+/etc/tsocks.conf \- default tsocks configuration file
86
87 .SH SEE ALSO
88 tsocks.conf(5)
89--- a/tsocks.conf.5
90+++ b/tsocks.conf.5
91@@ -66,7 +66,7 @@ The following directives are used in the
92 .I server
93 The IP address of the SOCKS server (e.g "server = 10.1.4.253"). Only one
94 server may be specified per path block, or one outside a path
95-block (to define the default server). Unless --disable-hostnames was
96+block (to define the default server). Unless \-\-disable\-hostnames was
97 specified to configure at compile time the server can be specified as
98 a hostname (e.g "server = socks.nec.com")
99
100@@ -118,13 +118,13 @@ local, otherwise tsocks would need a SOC
101 .TP
102 .I reaches
103 This directive is only valid inside a path block. Its parameter is formed
104-as IP[:startport[-endport]]/Subnet and it specifies a network (and a range
105+as IP[:startport[\-endport]]/Subnet and it specifies a network (and a range
106 of ports on that network) that can be accessed by the SOCKS server specified
107 in this path block. For example, in a path block "reaches =
108-150.0.0.0:80-1024/255.0.0.0" indicates to tsocks that the SOCKS server
109+150.0.0.0:80\-1024/255.0.0.0" indicates to tsocks that the SOCKS server
110 specified in the current path block should be used to access any IPs in the
111 range 150.0.0.0 to 150.255.255.255 when the connection request is for ports
112-80-1024.
113+80\-1024.
114
115 .TP
116 .I fallback
117@@ -155,12 +155,12 @@ the configuration to the screen in a for
118 extremely useful in debugging problems.
119
120 validateconf can read a configuration file from a location other than the
121-location specified at compile time with the -f <filename> command line
122+location specified at compile time with the \-f <filename> command line
123 option.
124
125 Normally validateconf simply dumps the configuration read to the screen (in
126 a nicely readable format), however it also has a useful 'test' mode. When
127-passed a hostname/ip on the command line like -t <hostname/ip>, validateconf
128+passed a hostname/ip on the command line like \-t <hostname/ip>, validateconf
129 determines which of the SOCKS servers specified in the configuration file
130 would be used by tsocks to access the specified host.
131