.IP
The second form specifies the packet's contents implicitly:
.RS
-.IP "\flow\fR"
+.IP "\fIflow\fR"
A flow in one of two forms: either the form printed by
\fBovs\-dpctl\fR(8)'s \fBdump\-flows\fR command, or in a format
similar to that accepted by \Bovs\-ofctl\fR(8)'s \fBadd\-flow\fR
command. This is not an OpenFlow flow: besides other differences, it
never contains wildcards. \fB\*(PN\fR generates an arbitrary packet
-that has the specified \flow\fR.
+that has the specified \fIflow\fR.
.RE
.IP
\fB\*(PN\fR will respond with extensive information on how the packet
.IP "\fIswitch\fR"
The switch on which the packet arrived (one of those listed by
\fBofproto/list\fR).
-.IP "\flow\fR"
+.IP "\fIflow\fR"
A flow in one of two forms: either the form printed by
\fBovs\-dpctl\fR(8)'s \fBdump\-flows\fR command, or in a format
similar to that accepted by \Bovs\-ofctl\fR(8)'s \fBadd\-flow\fR
.RE
.IP
\fB\*(PN\fR will respond with extensive information on how a packet
-in \flow\fR would be handled if it were received by
+in \fIflow\fR would be handled if it were received by
\fIswitch\fR. No packet will actually be sent. Some side effects may
occur, but MAC learning in particular will not.
.IP