docs: formatdomain: Remove 'elementsNICSTargetOverride' anchor

Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
This commit is contained in:
Peter Krempa 2022-05-13 10:31:34 +02:00
parent 4506e4057d
commit 99e01a44e4

View File

@ -4513,8 +4513,7 @@ can be determined by examining the virtual network config with
'default' setup out of the box which does NAT'ing to the default route and has
an IP range of ``192.168.122.0/255.255.255.0``. Each guest will have an
associated tun device created with a name of vnetN, which can also be overridden
with the <target> element (see `overriding the target
element <#elementsNICSTargetOverride>`__).
with the <target> element (see `Overriding the target element`_).
When the source of an interface is a network, a ``portgroup`` can be specified
along with the name of the network; one network may have multiple portgroups
@ -4580,8 +4579,8 @@ static wired networking configs.**
Provides a bridge from the VM directly to the LAN. This assumes there is a
bridge device on the host which has one or more of the hosts physical NICs
attached. The guest VM will have an associated tun device created with a name of
vnetN, which can also be overridden with the <target> element (see `overriding
the target element <#elementsNICSTargetOverride>`__). The tun device will be
vnetN, which can also be overridden with the <target> element (see
`Overriding the target element`_). The tun device will be
attached to the bridge. The IP range / network configuration is whatever is used
on the LAN. This provides the guest VM full incoming & outgoing net access just
like a physical machine.
@ -5331,7 +5330,6 @@ bridge interfaces. This does not work in session mode. :since:`Since 1.2.9`
For tap devices there is also ``sndbuf`` element which can adjust the size of
send buffer in the host. :since:`Since 0.8.8`
:anchor:`<a id="elementsNICSTargetOverride"/>`
Overriding the target element
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^