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These translations are shared with snapd trunk series template snappy.

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1.
[tab]- %s as %s
TRANSLATORS: the first %s is a snap command (e.g. "hello-world.echo"), the second is the alias
[tab] represents a tab character. Please write it exactly the same way, [tab], in your translation.
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(no translation yet)
Located in cmd/snap/cmd_alias.go:116
7.

The advise-snap command searches for and suggests the installation of snaps.

If --command is given, it suggests snaps that provide the given command.
Otherwise it suggests snaps with the given name.
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(no translation yet)
Located in cmd/snap/cmd_advise.go:57
9.

The aliases command lists all aliases available in the system and their status.

$ snap aliases <snap>

Lists only the aliases defined by the specified snap.

An alias noted as undefined means it was explicitly enabled or disabled but is
not defined in the current revision of the snap, possibly temporarily (e.g.
because of a revert). This can cleared with 'snap alias --reset'.
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(no translation yet)
Located in cmd/snap/cmd_aliases.go:41
10.

The auto-import command searches available mounted devices looking for
assertions that are signed by trusted authorities, and potentially
performs system changes based on them.

If one or more device paths are provided via --mount, these are temporarily
mounted to be inspected as well. Even in that case the command will still
consider all available mounted devices for inspection.

Assertions to be imported must be made available in the auto-import.assert file
in the root of the filesystem.
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(no translation yet)
Located in cmd/snap/cmd_auto_import.go:231
16.

The connections command lists connections between plugs and slots
in the system.

Unless <snap> is provided, the listing is for connected plugs and
slots for all snaps in the system. In this mode, pass --all to also
list unconnected plugs and slots.

$ snap connections <snap>

Lists connected and unconnected plugs and slots for the specified
snap.
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(no translation yet)
Located in cmd/snap/cmd_connections.go:42
18.

The create-cohort command creates a set of cohort keys for a given set of snaps.

A cohort is a view or snapshot of a snap's "channel map" at a given point in
time that fixes the set of revisions for the snap given other constraints
(e.g. channel or architecture). The cohort is then identified by an opaque
per-snap key that works across systems. Installations or refreshes of the snap
using a given cohort key would use a fixed revision for up to 90 days, after
which a new set of revisions would be fixed under that same cohort key and a
new 90 days window started.
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(no translation yet)
Located in cmd/snap/cmd_create_cohort.go:30
24.

The disconnect command disconnects a plug from a slot.
It may be called in the following ways:

$ snap disconnect <snap>:<plug> <snap>:<slot>

Disconnects the specific plug from the specific slot.

$ snap disconnect <snap>:<slot or plug>

Disconnects everything from the provided plug or slot.
The snap name may be omitted for the core snap.

When an automatic connection is manually disconnected, its disconnected state
is retained after a snap refresh. The --forget flag can be added to the
disconnect command to reset this behaviour, and consequently re-enable
an automatic reconnection after a snap refresh.
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(no translation yet)
Located in cmd/snap/cmd_disconnect.go:41
28.

The fde-setup-request command is used inside the fde-setup hook. It will
return information about what operation for full-disk encryption is
requested and auxiliary data to complete this operation.

The fde-setup hook should do what is requested and then call
"snapctl fde-setup-result" and pass the result data to stdin.

Here is an example for how the fde-setup hook is called initially:
$ snapctl fde-setup-request
{"op":"features"}
$ echo '[]' | snapctl fde-setup-result

Alternatively the hook could reply with:
$ echo '{"error":"hardware-unsupported"}' | snapctl fde-setup-result

And then it is called again with a request to do the initial key setup:
$ snapctl fde-setup-request
{"op":"initial-setup", "key": "key-to-seal", "key-name":"key-for-ubuntu-data"}
$ echo "$sealed_key" | snapctl fde-setup-result
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(no translation yet)
Located in overlord/hookstate/ctlcmd/fde_setup.go:36
29.

The fde-setup-result command sets the result data for a fde-setup hook
reading it from stdin.

For example:
When the fde-setup hook is called with "op":"features:
$ echo "[]" | snapctl fde-setup-result

When the fde-setup hook is called with "op":"initial-setup":
$ echo "sealed-key" | snapctl fde-setup-result
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(no translation yet)
Located in overlord/hookstate/ctlcmd/fde_setup.go:101
30.

The file-access command returns information about a snap's file system access.

This command is used by the xdg-document-portal service to identify
files that do not need to be proxied to provide access within
confinement.

File paths are interpreted as host file system paths. The tool may
return false negatives (e.g. report that a file path is unreadable,
despite being readable under a different path). It also does not
check if file system permissions would render a file unreadable.
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(no translation yet)
Located in cmd/snap/cmd_routine_file_access.go:43
110 of 226 results

This translation is managed by Ubuntu Korean Translators, assigned by Ubuntu Translators.

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Contributors to this translation: HYUNJUN SON, Hojun Kim, JeongsikAn, JungHee Lee, Junsang Mun, Junsu Kim, KIM DONGWON, KimEoJin, Kjwon15, Lee Jongyoung (MARU), Nicole Choi, Noa Himesaka, Peter J, Sangwon Hong, TAESEONG KIM, Yongmin Hong, Youngjae Yu, eunchong lee, jongwon.lee, khj, minwook shin, seo suchan.