From 18a59afeade6c2ce474671675b329f270cf2cc9a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Alex Kelly Date: Mon, 4 Oct 2021 14:17:40 -0400 Subject: [PATCH] docs: remove personal "you/I/me" --- docs/source/running.rst | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/docs/source/running.rst b/docs/source/running.rst index c4f7abd..3c32b27 100644 --- a/docs/source/running.rst +++ b/docs/source/running.rst @@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ This section assumes that checkcert is installed via pypi, and the ``certcheck`` Basic query ----------- -To do a simple validation, run something like ``checkcert www.example.com``. You should get output like: +To do a simple validation, run something like ``checkcert www.example.com``. This should yield output like: .. figure:: images/basic.png :alt: basic output example @@ -90,7 +90,7 @@ If it is desired to output that list to another command as commandline options ( .. note:: the documentation for certbot specifies multiple domains should be specified each with their own '-d' option. certbot in particular seems to work with a comma-separated list too, even though the docs don't specify that it works that way. -Notice that the " -d " is used as a **separator** and therefore the first entry does not have a -d before it. To make -d show up before every entry (as would be required in this case) you must also add --pre to "prefix" the entry with the separator; thus, running ``checkcert --san-only --sep " -d " --pre www.example.com`` will yield:: +Notice that the " -d " is used as a **separator** and therefore the first entry does not have a -d before it. To make -d show up before every entry (as would be required in this case) The ``--pre`` option must be added to "prefix" the entry with the separator; thus, running ``checkcert --san-only --sep " -d " --pre www.example.com`` will yield:: -d www.example.org -d example.com -d example.edu -d example.net -d example.org -d www.example.com -d www.example.edu -d www.example.net @@ -104,7 +104,7 @@ This output could be directly included into certbot as ``certbot $(checkcert --s Dumping the text version of a cert ---------------------------------- -``--dump`` will give you the textual version of the certificate presented. Running ``checkcert --dump www.example.com`` will return:: +``--dump`` will output the textual version of the certificate presented. Running ``checkcert --dump www.example.com`` will return:: Certificate: Data: