=head1 NAME
aa-pivot - Pivot root directory
=head1 SYNOPSIS
B<aa-pivot> [B<-D>] [B<-O> I<FILE|FD>] I<NEWROOT> I<OLDROOT>
=head1 OPTIONS
=over
=item B<-D, --double-output>
Enable double-output mode. Instead of using stdout for regular output, and
stderr for warnings and errors, everything is sent both to stdout and stderr.
This is intended to redirect stderr to a log file, so full output can be both
shown on console and logged.
B<Deprecation warning:> Note that this option has been deprecated and will be
removed in the next version; You should use B<--log-file> instead.
=item B<-h, --help>
Show help screen and exit.
=item B<-O, --log-file> I<FILE|FD>
Will duplicate all output (everything written to stdout or stderr) to the given
file or file descriptor. I<FILE|FD> can either be a (previously opened for
writing) file descriptor (must be > 2), or a file which will then be opened in
append mode.
=item B<-V, --version>
Show version information and exit.
=back
=head1 DESCRIPTION
B<aa-pivot>(1) moves the root filesystem of the current process to I<OLDROOT>
and makes I<NEWROOT> the new root filesystem. Since it simply calls
B<pivot_root>(2), refer to that man page for further details.
Note that B<aa-pivot>(1) doesn't change directory nor chroots, so for proper
use, you should first chdir into I<NEWROOT>, call B<aa-pivot>(1) and then chroot
into the current directory, e.g. using B<aa-chroot>(1). For example:
cd NEWROOT
aa-pivot . OLDROOT
aa-chroot . COMMAND
=head1 RETURN CODES
Return codes are somewhat unified inside B<anopa>. Odd return codes represent
fatal errors, and are detailled in B<anopa-rc>(1)
B<aa-pivot>(1) does not have even return codes.