WMI is the bus inside kernel, so, we may access the GUID via
/sys/bus/wmi instead of doing this through /sys/devices path.

Signed-off-by: Andy Shevchenko <[email protected]>
---
 Documentation/admin-guide/thunderbolt.rst | 2 +-
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/Documentation/admin-guide/thunderbolt.rst 
b/Documentation/admin-guide/thunderbolt.rst
index de50a8561774..9b55952039a6 100644
--- a/Documentation/admin-guide/thunderbolt.rst
+++ b/Documentation/admin-guide/thunderbolt.rst
@@ -230,7 +230,7 @@ If supported by your machine this will be exposed by the 
WMI bus with
 a sysfs attribute called "force_power".
 
 For example the intel-wmi-thunderbolt driver exposes this attribute in:
-  
/sys/devices/platform/PNP0C14:00/wmi_bus/wmi_bus-PNP0C14:00/86CCFD48-205E-4A77-9C48-2021CBEDE341/force_power
+  /sys/bus/wmi/devices/86CCFD48-205E-4A77-9C48-2021CBEDE341/force_power
 
   To force the power to on, write 1 to this attribute file.
   To disable force power, write 0 to this attribute file.
-- 
2.14.2

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