Git commit e8d464ad842b97fc9b0e1a388d111719798ded46 by Alexander Reinholdt.
Committed on 11/02/2021 at 19:52.
Pushed by areinholdt into branch 'master'.

Updated handbook.

M  +207  -19   doc/index.docbook

https://invent.kde.org/network/smb4k/commit/e8d464ad842b97fc9b0e1a388d111719798ded46

diff --git a/doc/index.docbook b/doc/index.docbook
index 0997a20a..a3a359cf 100644
--- a/doc/index.docbook
+++ b/doc/index.docbook
@@ -2675,7 +2675,7 @@ ntlm auth = yes
           </varlistentry>
           <varlistentry>
             <term>
-                <menuchoice><guibutton>File mode</guibutton></menuchoice>
+              <menuchoice><guibutton>File mode</guibutton></menuchoice>
             </term>
             <listitem>
               <para>Sets the permissions that are applied to files. The value 
is given in octal and has to have 4 digits. To learn more about the file mode, 
you should read the <ulink 
url="man:/mount_smbfs"><citerefentry><refentrytitle>mount_smbfs</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry></ulink>
 and <ulink 
url="man:/umask"><citerefentry><refentrytitle>umask</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry></ulink>
 manual pages.</para>
@@ -2705,24 +2705,212 @@ ntlm auth = yes
             <listitem>
               <para>Use the specified local and server's character sets (see 
below).</para>
               <para>Default: not selected</para>
-            </listitem>
-          </varlistentry>
-          <varlistentry>
-            <term>
-              <menuchoice><guibutton>Client character 
set</guibutton></menuchoice>
-            </term>
-            <listitem>
-              <para>Use the specified local character set.</para>
-              <para>Default: <guilabel>default</guilabel></para>
-            </listitem>
-          </varlistentry>
-          <varlistentry>
-            <term>
-              <menuchoice><guibutton>Server character 
set</guibutton></menuchoice>
-            </term>
-            <listitem>
-              <para>Use the specified server's character set.</para>
-              <para>Default: <guilabel>default</guilabel></para>
+              <variablelist>
+                <varlistentry>
+                  <term>
+                    <menuchoice><guibutton>Client character 
set</guibutton></menuchoice>
+                  </term>
+                  <listitem>
+                    <para>Use the specified local character set. The following 
ones are available:</para>
+                    <variablelist>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>default</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>Default character set used by the client's 
kernel.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>iso8859-1</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>ISO/IEC 8859-1:1998. This character-encoding 
scheme is used throughout the Americas, Western Europe, Oceania, and much of 
Africa.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>iso8859-2</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>ISO/IEC 8859-2:1999.  It is informally 
referred to as "Latin-2". It is generally intended for Central or "Eastern 
European" languages that are written in the Latin script.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>iso8859-3</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>ISO/IEC 8859-3:1999. It is informally referred 
to as Latin-3 or South European. It was designed to cover Turkish, Maltese and 
Esperanto, though the introduction of ISO/IEC 8859-9 superseded it for 
Turkish.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>iso8859-4</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>ISO/IEC 8859-4:1998. It is informally referred 
to as Latin-4 or North European. It was designed to cover Estonian, Latvian, 
Lithuanian, Greenlandic, and Sami. It has been largely superseded by ISO/IEC 
8859-10 and Unicode.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>iso8859-5</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>ISO/IEC 8859-5:1999. It is informally referred 
to as Latin/Cyrillic. It was designed to cover languages using a Cyrillic 
alphabet such as Bulgarian, Belarusian, Russian, Serbian and Macedonian but was 
never widely used.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>iso8859-6</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>ISO/IEC 8859-6:1999. It is informally referred 
to as Latin/Arabic. It was designed to cover Arabic.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>iso8859-7</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>ISO/IEC 8859-7:2003. It is informally referred 
to as Latin/Greek. It was designed to cover the modern Greek language.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>iso8859-8</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>ISO/IEC 8859-8:1999. It is informally referred 
to as Latin/Hebrew. ISO/IEC 8859-8 covers all the Hebrew letters, but no Hebrew 
vowel signs.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>iso8859-9</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>ISO/IEC 8859-9:1999. It is informally referred 
to as Latin-5 or Turkish. It was designed to cover the Turkish language, 
designed as being of more use than the ISO/IEC 8859-3 encoding.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>iso8859-13</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>ISO/IEC 8859-13:1998. It is informally 
referred to as Latin-7 or Baltic Rim. It was designed to cover the Baltic 
languages, and added characters used in the Polish language missing from the 
earlier encodings ISO 8859-4 and ISO 8859-10. Unlike these two, it does not 
cover the Nordic languages.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>iso8859-14</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>ISO/IEC 8859-14:1998. It is informally 
referred to as Latin-8 or Celtic. It was designed to cover the Celtic 
languages, such as Irish, Manx, Scottish Gaelic, Welsh, Cornish, and 
Breton.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>iso8859-15</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>ISO/IEC 8859-15:1999. It is informally 
referred to as Latin-9 (and for a while Latin-0). It is similar to ISO 8859-1, 
and thus also intended for “Western European” languages, but replaces some less 
common symbols with the euro sign and some letters that were deemed 
necessary.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>utf8</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>Unicode (or Universal Coded Character Set) 
Transformation Format – 8-bit. UTF-8 is used by many &Linux; distributions as 
default character set, and is, in addition, by far the most common encoding for 
the World Wide Web.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>koi8-r</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>KOI8-R (RFC 1489) is an 8-bit character 
encoding, derived from the KOI-8 encoding by the programmer Andrei Chernov in 
1993 and designed to cover Russian, which uses a Cyrillic alphabet.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>koi8-u</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>KOI8-U (RFC 2319) is an 8-bit character 
encoding, designed to cover Ukrainian, which uses a Cyrillic alphabet.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>koi8-ru</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>KOI8-RU is an 8-bit character encoding, 
designed to cover Russian, Ukrainian, and Belarusian which use a Cyrillic 
alphabet.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>cp1251</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>Windows-1251 is an 8-bit character encoding, 
designed to cover languages that use the Cyrillic script such as Russian, 
Bulgarian, Serbian Cyrillic and other languages. In Linux, the encoding is 
known as cp1251.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>gb2312</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>GB/T 2312-1980 is a key official character set 
of the People's Republic of China, used for Simplified Chinese characters. 
GB2312 is the registered internet name for EUC-CN, which is its usual encoded 
form. GB/T 2312-1980 has been superseded by GBK and GB18030, which include 
additional characters, but GB/T 2312 remains in widespread use as a subset of 
those encodings. </para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>big5</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>Big-5 or Big5 is a Chinese character encoding 
method used in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Macau for traditional Chinese characters. 
The People's Republic of China (PRC), which uses simplified Chinese characters, 
uses the GB 18030 character set instead.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>euc-jp</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>EUC-JP is a variable-width encoding used to 
represent the elements of three Japanese character set standards, namely JIS X 
0208, JIS X 0212, and JIS X 0201.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>euc-kr</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>EUC-KR is a variable-width encoding to 
represent Korean text using two coded character sets, KS X 1001 (formerly KS C 
5601) and either ISO 646:KR (KS X 1003, formerly KS C 5636) or US-ASCII, 
depending on variant. KS X 2901 (formerly KS C 5861) stipulates the encoding 
and RFC 1557 dubbed it as EUC-KR.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                      <varlistentry>
+                        <term>
+                          
<menuchoice><guimenuitem>tis-620</guimenuitem></menuchoice>
+                        </term>
+                        <listitem>
+                          <para>Thai Industrial Standard 620-2533, commonly 
referred to as TIS-620, is the most common character set and character encoding 
for the Thai language.</para>
+                        </listitem>
+                      </varlistentry>
+                    </variablelist>
+                    <para>Default: <guilabel>default</guilabel></para>
+                  </listitem>
+                </varlistentry>
+                <varlistentry>
+                  <term>
+                    <menuchoice><guibutton>Server character 
set</guibutton></menuchoice>
+                  </term>
+                  <listitem>
+                    <para>Use the specified server's character set.</para>
+                    <para>Default: <guilabel>default</guilabel></para>
+                  </listitem>
+                </varlistentry>
+              </variablelist>
             </listitem>
           </varlistentry>
         </variablelist>

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