diff dbclient.1 @ 784:0e5ea6812bb7

Use % rather than # for port delimiter
author Matt Johnston <matt@ucc.asn.au>
date Wed, 17 Apr 2013 23:17:27 +0800
parents 34e69908b3f7
children f8b28a3de6cb
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/dbclient.1	Wed Apr 17 22:48:43 2013 +0800
+++ b/dbclient.1	Wed Apr 17 23:17:27 2013 +0800
@@ -15,7 +15,7 @@
 .B dbclient
 [
 .I args ]
-.I [user1]@host1[#port1],[user2]@host2[#port2],...
+.I [user1]@host1[%port1],[user2]@host2[%port2],...
 
 .SH DESCRIPTION
 .B dbclient
@@ -26,7 +26,7 @@
 .B \-p \fIport
 Connect to 
 .I port
-on the remote host. Alternatively a port can be specified as hostname#port.
+on the remote host. Alternatively a port can be specified as hostname%port.
 Default is 22.
 .TP
 .B \-i \fIidfile
@@ -126,7 +126,7 @@
 this case a connection will be made to the first host, then a TCP forwarded 
 connection will be made through that to the second host, and so on. Hosts other than
 the final destination will not see anything other than the encrypted SSH stream. 
-A port for a host can be specified with a hash (eg matt@martello#44 ).
+A port for a host can be specified with a hash (eg matt@martello%44 ).
 This syntax can also be used with scp or rsync (specifying dbclient as the 
 ssh/rsh command). A file can be "bounced" through multiple SSH hops, eg