Index: man/watch.1
--- man/watch.1.orig
+++ man/watch.1
@@ -11,15 +11,16 @@
 .\" (at your option) any later version.
 .\"
 .\"
-.TH WATCH 1 2025-04-16 procps-ng
+.TH GNUWATCH 1 2025-04-16 procps-ng
 .SH NAME
-watch \- execute a program periodically, showing output fullscreen
+gnuwatch \- execute a program periodically, showing output fullscreen
 .SH SYNOPSIS
-.B watch
+.B gnuwatch
 .RI [ option " .\|.\|.\&]"
 .I command
 .SH DESCRIPTION
-.B watch
+.B gnuwatch
+(renamed from watch for the OpenBSD package)
 runs
 .I command
 repeatedly, displaying its output and errors (the first screenful). This
@@ -153,23 +154,23 @@ part of the command pipeline if you want to see them.
 .PP
 To watch the contents of a directory change, you could use
 .IP
-watch \-d ls \-l
+gnuwatch \-d ls \-l
 .PP
 If you have CPUs with a dynamic frequency and want to observe it change, try the
 following. The command is passed to the shell, which allows you to make the
 pipeline. The quotes are a feature of the shell too.
 .IP
-watch \-n1 'grep "^cpu MHz" /proc/cpuinfo | sort -nrk4'
+gnuwatch \-n1 'grep "^cpu MHz" /proc/cpuinfo | sort -nrk4'
 .PP
 To monitor the up status of your servers, saving a copy of the output of each
 run to a file, you may use this. The \fB\-p\fR makes the command execute every
 10 seconds regardless of how long it took to complete the previous run.
 .IP
-watch \-n10 \-p \-d '{ date; for i in 10.0.0.31 10.0.0.32 10.0.0.33; do R=OK; ping \-c2 \-W2 "$i" &>/dev/null || R=FAIL; echo "$i: $R"; done } | tee \-a ~/log'
+gnuwatch \-n10 \-p \-d '{ date; for i in 10.0.0.31 10.0.0.32 10.0.0.33; do R=OK; ping \-c2 \-W2 "$i" &>/dev/null || R=FAIL; echo "$i: $R"; done } | tee \-a ~/log'
 .PP
 You can watch for your administrator to install the latest kernel with
 .IP
-watch uname \-r
+gnuwatch uname \-r
 .SH BUGS
 When the terminal dimensions change, its contents changes are not registered on
 the next \fIcommand\fR run. \fB\-\-chgexit\fR will not trigger that turn and the
