-The available options for the \fBadd\fR command are:
-.TP 6
-\fB--verbose\fR
-Print the names of files as they are captured.
-.TP
-\fB--dereference\fR
-(UNIX only) Follow symbolic links and archive the files they point to, rather
-than archiving the links themselves.
-.TP
-\fB--unix-data\fR
-(UNIX only) Store the UNIX owner, group, and mode of all captured files. This
-is done by adding a special alternate data stream to each directory entry that
-contains this information. Please note that this flag is for convenience only,
-in case you want to use \fB@IMAGEX_PROGNAME@\fR to archive files on UNIX.
-Microsoft's software will not understand this special information.
-.TP
-\fB--no-acls\fR
-(Windows only) Do not capture files' security descriptors.
-.TP
-\fB--strict-acls\fR
-(Windows only) Fail immediately if the full security descriptor of any file
-cannot be read. The default behavior without this option is to first try
-omitting the SACL from the security descriptor, then to try omitting the
-security descriptor entirely. The purpose of this is to capture as much data as
-possible without always requiring Administrator privileges. However, if you
-desire that all security descriptors be captured exactly, you may wish to
-provide this option, although the Administrator should have permission to read
-everything anyway.
+The \fBadd\fR command supports a subset of the options accepted by
+\fB@IMAGEX_PROGNAME@-capture\fR; namely, \fB--verbose\fR, \fB--dereference\fR,
+\fB--unix-data\fR, \fB--no-acls\fR, and \fB--strict-acls\fR. See
+\fB@IMAGEX_PROGNAME@-capture\fR (1) for explanations of these options.