From a156cae9011301624bd87640a985ad20d7e17192 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Simon Kelley Date: Fri, 2 Mar 2012 21:10:39 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Typos in man page. --- man/dnsmasq.8 | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/man/dnsmasq.8 b/man/dnsmasq.8 index 1ce21f3..81f5fd9 100644 --- a/man/dnsmasq.8 +++ b/man/dnsmasq.8 @@ -595,7 +595,7 @@ A single .B dhcp-host may contain an IPv4 address or an IPv6 address, or both. IPv6 addresses must be bracketed by square brackets thus: .B --dhcp-host=laptop,[1234::56] -Note that in IPv6 DHCP, the hardware address is not normally available, so a client must be identified by client-id (called client DUID) in IPv6-land) or hostname. +Note that in IPv6 DHCP, the hardware address is not normally available, so a client must be identified by client-id (called client DUID in IPv6-land) or hostname. The special option id:* means "ignore any client-id and use MAC addresses only." This is useful when a client presents a client-id sometimes @@ -1257,7 +1257,7 @@ dnsmasq will advertise a prefix for each dhcp-range, with default router and recursive DNS server as the relevant link-local address on the machine running dnsmasq. The "managed address" bits are set, except for a dhcp-range which is marked as "ra-only", in which case RA -is provided by no DHCPv6 service and the managed address bits are +is provided but no DHCPv6 service and the managed address bits are cleared. .B enable-ra enables router advertisement for prefixes where dnsmasq is doing