$OpenBSD: patch-rsnapshot_1,v 1.3 2008/09/27 11:54:11 ajacoutot Exp $
--- rsnapshot.1.orig	Fri Sep 19 11:02:40 2008
+++ rsnapshot.1	Fri Sep 19 11:05:44 2008
@@ -156,7 +156,7 @@ of cron jobs. It is possible, however, to run as any a
 with an alternate configuration file.
 .PP
 All important options are specified in a configuration file, which is
-located by default at \fB/etc/rsnapshot.conf\fR. An alternate file can be
+located by default at \fB${SYSCONFDIR}/rsnapshot.conf\fR. An alternate file can be
 specified on the command line. There are also additional options which
 can be passed on the command line.
 .PP
@@ -179,14 +179,10 @@ The command line options are as follows:
 .RE
 .SH "CONFIGURATION"
 .IX Header "CONFIGURATION"
-\&\fB/etc/rsnapshot.conf\fR is the default configuration file. All parameters
-in this file must be separated by tabs. \fB/etc/rsnapshot.conf.default\fR
+\&\fB${SYSCONFDIR}/rsnapshot.conf\fR is the default configuration file. All parameters
+in this file must be separated by tabs. \fB${SAMPLES_DIR}/rsnapshot.conf.default\fR
 can be used as a reference.
 .PP
-It is recommended that you copy \fB/etc/rsnapshot.conf.default\fR to
-\&\fB/etc/rsnapshot.conf\fR, and then modify \fB/etc/rsnapshot.conf\fR to suit
-your needs.
-.PP
 Long lines may be split over several lines.  \*(L"Continuation\*(R" lines
 \&\fBmust\fR begin with a space or a tab character.  Continuation lines will
 have all leading and trailing whitespace stripped off, and then be appended
@@ -807,7 +803,7 @@ also want to run it from the command line once or twic
 a feel for what it's doing.
 .Sp
 Here is an example crontab entry, assuming that backup levels \fBhourly\fR,
-\&\fBdaily\fR, \fBweekly\fR and \fBmonthly\fR have been defined in \fB/etc/rsnapshot.conf\fR
+\&\fBdaily\fR, \fBweekly\fR and \fBmonthly\fR have been defined in \fB${SYSCONFDIR}/rsnapshot.conf\fR
 .Sp
 .RS 4
 \&\fB0 */4 * * *         /usr/local/bin/rsnapshot hourly\fR
@@ -852,7 +848,7 @@ your hourly snapshot will fail sometimes because the d
 .Sp
 Remember that these are just the times that the program runs.
 To set the number of backups stored, set the \fBretain\fR numbers in
-\&\fB/etc/rsnapshot.conf\fR
+\&\fB${SYSCONFDIR}/rsnapshot.conf\fR
 .Sp
 To check the disk space used by rsnapshot, you can call it with the \*(L"du\*(R" argument.
 .Sp
@@ -963,7 +959,7 @@ run rsnapshot again, using example.com/etc as the opti
 .RS 4
 .SH "FILES"
 .IX Header "FILES"
-/etc/rsnapshot.conf
+${SYSCONFDIR}/rsnapshot.conf
 .SH "SEE ALSO"
 .IX Header "SEE ALSO"
 \&\fIrsync\fR\|(1), \fIssh\fR\|(1), \fIlogger\fR\|(1), \fIsshd\fR\|(1), \fIssh\-keygen\fR\|(1), \fIperl\fR\|(1), \fIcp\fR\|(1), \fIdu\fR\|(1), \fIcrontab\fR\|(1)
@@ -988,8 +984,8 @@ Please report bugs (and other comments) to the rsnapsh
 \&\fBhttp://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/rsnapshot\-discuss\fR
 .SH "NOTES"
 .IX Header "NOTES"
-Make sure your /etc/rsnapshot.conf file has all elements separated by tabs.
-See /etc/rsnapshot.conf.default for a working example file.
+Make sure your ${SYSCONFDIR}/rsnapshot.conf file has all elements separated by tabs.
+See ${SAMPLES_DIR}/rsnapshot.conf.default for a working example file.
 .Sp
 Make sure you put a trailing slash on the end of all directory references.
 If you don't, you may have extra directories created in your snapshots.
@@ -1005,7 +1001,7 @@ If you would like regular users to be able to restore 
 there are a number of ways this can be accomplished. One such scenario
 would be:
 .Sp
-Set \fBsnapshot_root\fR to \fB/.private/.snapshots\fR in \fB/etc/rsnapshot.conf\fR
+Set \fBsnapshot_root\fR to \fB/.private/.snapshots\fR in \fB${SYSCONFDIR}/rsnapshot.conf\fR
 .Sp
 Set the file permissions on these directories as follows:
 .Sp
