From 22d25de23c438427b0bdcdc12109dc08520f956d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: James Cammarata <jimi@sngx.net>
Date: Thu, 17 Sep 2015 11:30:03 -0400
Subject: [PATCH] Fix syntax error in synchronize docstring

---
 files/synchronize.py | 2 +-
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/files/synchronize.py b/files/synchronize.py
index 449e9e6d528..73b0bb13364 100644
--- a/files/synchronize.py
+++ b/files/synchronize.py
@@ -167,7 +167,7 @@ options:
 notes:
    - rsync must be installed on both the local and remote host.
    - For the C(synchronize) module, the "local host" is the host `the synchronize task originates on`, and the "destination host" is the host `synchronize is connecting to`.
-   - The user and permissions for the synchronize `src` are those of the user running the Ansible task on the local host, or the `become_user` if `become: yes` is active. synchronize will attempt to escalate privileges to the become_user `on the local host`.
+   - "The user and permissions for the synchronize `src` are those of the user running the Ansible task on the local host, or the `become_user` if `become: yes` is active. synchronize will attempt to escalate privileges to the become_user `on the local host`."
    - The user and permissions for the synchronize `dest` are those of the `remote_user` on the destination host. If you require permissions `other` than those of the remote_user, you must specify this with a sudo command inside the C(rsync_path) option in the task; for example, `rsync_path="sudo rsync"`.
    - Expect that dest=~/x will be ~<remote_user>/x even if using sudo.
    - Inspect the verbose output to validate the destination user/host/path