diff --git a/docs/docs/commands/stats.md b/docs/docs/commands/stats.md index b683416..2ecb02f 100644 --- a/docs/docs/commands/stats.md +++ b/docs/docs/commands/stats.md @@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ little basic, but more features to come. You provide the starting point, and Atuin computes the stats for 24h from that point. Date parsing is provided by `interim`, which supports different formats for full or relative dates. Certain formats rely on the dialect option in your -[configuration](config.md#dialect) to differentiate day from month. +[configuration](/docs/config/config.md#dialect) to differentiate day from month. Refer to [the module's documentation](https://docs.rs/interim/0.1.0/interim/#supported-formats) for more details on the supported date formats. ``` diff --git a/docs/docs/commands/sync.md b/docs/docs/commands/sync.md index 7655ed1..d77a660 100644 --- a/docs/docs/commands/sync.md +++ b/docs/docs/commands/sync.md @@ -6,13 +6,13 @@ server operator can _never_ see your data! Anyone can host a server (try `atuin server start`, more docs to follow), but I host one at https://api.atuin.sh. This is the default server address, which can -be changed in the [config](config.md). Again, I _cannot_ see your data, and +be changed in the [config](/docs/config/config.md#sync_address). Again, I _cannot_ see your data, and do not want to. ## Sync frequency Syncing will happen automatically, unless configured otherwise. The sync -frequency is configurable in [config](config.md) +frequency is configurable in [config](/docs/config/config.md#sync_frequency) ## Sync diff --git a/docs/docs/config/config.md b/docs/docs/config/config.md index dd84001..88f14af 100644 --- a/docs/docs/config/config.md +++ b/docs/docs/config/config.md @@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ See [config.toml](../atuin-client/config.toml) for an example ### `dialect` -This configures how the [stats](stats.md) command parses dates. It has two +This configures how the [stats](/docs/commands/stats.md) command parses dates. It has two possible values ``` @@ -193,9 +193,9 @@ or `py`. ### history_filter -The history filter allows you to exclude commands from history tracking - maybe you want to keep ALL of your `curl` commands totally out of your shell history, or maybe just some matching a pattern. +The history filter allows you to exclude commands from history tracking - maybe you want to keep ALL of your `curl` commands totally out of your shell history, or maybe just some matching a pattern. -This supports regular expressions, so you can hide pretty much whatever you want! +This supports regular expressions, so you can hide pretty much whatever you want! ``` ## Note that these regular expressions are unanchored, i.e. if they don't start