From e1b9a34aa4e140d3fafea4d0883d0c29fcc204bb Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Richard W.M. Jones" Date: Fri, 11 Apr 2025 10:01:13 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] docs: Rearrange --root titles Makes the documentation easier to read instead of having a big block of text. (cherry picked from commit c1d8ed9bac616c3ba8a807da350f24c7fa54e56a) --- docs/virt-v2v.pod | 14 +++++++------- 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) diff --git a/docs/virt-v2v.pod b/docs/virt-v2v.pod index 57714022..1746afa7 100644 --- a/docs/virt-v2v.pod +++ b/docs/virt-v2v.pod @@ -774,12 +774,6 @@ This disables progress bars and other unnecessary output. =item B<--root single> -=item B<--root first> - -=item B<--root> /dev/sdX - -=item B<--root> /dev/VG/LV - Choose the root filesystem to be converted. In the case where the virtual machine is dual-boot or multi-boot, or @@ -798,11 +792,17 @@ VM is found to be multi-boot, then virt-v2v will stop and list the possible root filesystems and ask the user which to use. This requires that virt-v2v is run interactively. +=item B<--root first> + S> means to choose the first root device in the case of a multi-boot operating system. Since this is a heuristic, it may sometimes choose the wrong one. -You can also name a specific root device, eg. S> +=item B<--root> /dev/sdX + +=item B<--root> /dev/VG/LV + +Name a specific root device to convert, eg. S> would mean to use the second partition on the first hard drive. If the named root device does not exist or was not detected as a root device, then virt-v2v will fail.