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From 610158048a03f25be88a36cb7c81d11177a2c559 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: =?UTF-8?q?Zbigniew=20J=C4=99drzejewski-Szmek?= <zbyszek@in.waw.pl>
Date: Fri, 3 Oct 2014 17:44:23 -0400
Subject: [PATCH] man: use more markup in daemon(7)

---
 man/daemon.xml | 9 +++++----
 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)

diff --git a/man/daemon.xml b/man/daemon.xml
index a23a04794b..99c75a7a18 100644
--- a/man/daemon.xml
+++ b/man/daemon.xml
@@ -85,13 +85,14 @@
                                 with a fallback of iterating from file
                                 descriptor 3 to the value returned by
                                 <function>getrlimit()</function> for
-                                RLIMIT_NOFILE.</para></listitem>
+                                <constant>RLIMIT_NOFILE</constant>.
+                                </para></listitem>
 
                                 <listitem><para>Reset all signal
                                 handlers to their default. This is
                                 best done by iterating through the
                                 available signals up to the limit of
-                                _NSIG and resetting them to
+                                <constant>_NSIG</constant> and resetting them to
                                 <constant>SIG_DFL</constant>.</para></listitem>
 
                                 <listitem><para>Reset the signal mask
@@ -330,7 +331,7 @@
                                 init system. If log priorities are
                                 necessary, these can be encoded by
                                 prefixing individual log lines with
-                                strings like "&lt;4&gt;" (for log
+                                strings like <literal>&lt;4&gt;</literal> (for log
                                 priority 4 "WARNING" in the syslog
                                 priority scheme), following a similar
                                 style as the Linux kernel's
@@ -610,7 +611,7 @@
                         on a network interface, because network
                         sockets shall be bound to the
                         address. However, an alternative to implement
-                        this is by utilizing the Linux IP_FREEBIND
+                        this is by utilizing the Linux <constant>IP_FREEBIND</constant>
                         socket option, as accessible via
                         <varname>FreeBind=yes</varname> in systemd
                         socket files (see