From a84c7455ae11ffeef3fc35f2774bad634837a7b6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Karolin Seeger Date: Fri, 16 May 2008 09:27:20 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] man pages: Remove man page for 'mangled map'. 'mangled map' has been removed with dee8beba7a92b8a3f68bbcc59fd0a827f68c7736. Karolin (cherry picked from commit d9b4e500675a378daba50d12cd638a245aa78b72) (This used to be commit 48bf0b42a7d3829d476a50b4f6f80022279b4e49) --- docs-xml/smbdotconf/filename/mangledmap.xml | 33 --------------------- 1 file changed, 33 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 docs-xml/smbdotconf/filename/mangledmap.xml diff --git a/docs-xml/smbdotconf/filename/mangledmap.xml b/docs-xml/smbdotconf/filename/mangledmap.xml deleted file mode 100644 index b4be3a80d26..00000000000 --- a/docs-xml/smbdotconf/filename/mangledmap.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,33 +0,0 @@ - - - - This is for those who want to directly map UNIX file names which cannot be represented on - Windows/DOS. The mangling of names is not always what is needed. In particular you may have - documents with file extensions that differ between DOS and UNIX. - For example, under UNIX it is common to use .html - for HTML files, whereas under Windows/DOS .htm - is more commonly used. - - - - So to map html to htm - you would use: - - - - (*.html *.htm). - - - - One very useful case is to remove the annoying ;1 off - the ends of filenames on some CDROMs (only visible under some UNIXes). To do this use a map of - (*;1 *;). - - - -no mangled map -(*;1 *;) - -- 2.34.1