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authorSilvio Rhatto <rhatto@riseup.net>2013-04-04 13:12:46 -0300
committerSilvio Rhatto <rhatto@riseup.net>2013-04-04 13:12:46 -0300
commit6e7fdfee72fc9574af8e8aca1a69c4af3f039fc9 (patch)
tree6d69cde58fbcbd3cb93a07ba882a7103489d6248
parent01f71b2a5a554a3d034c2c2fc082bcc56fc78298 (diff)
downloadkeyringer-6e7fdfee72fc9574af8e8aca1a69c4af3f039fc9.tar.gz
keyringer-6e7fdfee72fc9574af8e8aca1a69c4af3f039fc9.tar.bz2
More tidying
-rw-r--r--index.mdwn12
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/index.mdwn b/index.mdwn
index 3b8e5c3..a91d9cf 100644
--- a/index.mdwn
+++ b/index.mdwn
@@ -45,14 +45,14 @@ run:
This will
- 1. Add an entry at $HOME/.keyringer/config aliasing 'keyring' to 'path'.
+ 1. Add an entry at `$HOME/.keyringer/config` aliasing 'keyring' to 'path'.
2. Initialize a git repository if needed.
For example,
keyringer friends init $HOME/keyrings/friends
-will create an alias "friends" pointing to $HOME/keyrings/friends. Call all
+will create an alias "friends" pointing to `$HOME/keyrings/friends`. Call all
other keyring actions using this alias.
If there is an existing remote keyring git repository and you just
@@ -137,13 +137,13 @@ Keyringer comes with a simple git wrapper to ease common management tasks:
Configuration files, preferences and options
--------------------------------------------
- 1. Main config file: $HOME/.keyringer/config: store the location of
+ 1. Main config file: `$HOME/.keyringer/config`: store the location of
each keyring.
- 2. User preferences per keyring: $HOME/.keyringer/<keyring>: managed by
+ 2. User preferences per keyring: `$HOME/.keyringer/<keyring>`: managed by
"keyringer <keyring> preferences".
- 3. Custom keyring options: $KEYRING_FOLDER/config/options: managed by
+ 3. Custom keyring options: `$KEYRING_FOLDER/config/options`: managed by
"keyringer <keyring> options".
Using a non-default OpenPGP key
@@ -161,7 +161,7 @@ Example:
Notes
-----
- 1. The <file> is any file inside the keys/ folder of your
+ 1. The `<file>` is any file inside the `keys/` folder of your
keyring directory.
2. Never decrypt a key and write it to the disk, except