diff --git a/winsup/doc/pathnames.xml b/winsup/doc/pathnames.xml
index 00eb133e7..cdbf9fad6 100644
--- a/winsup/doc/pathnames.xml
+++ b/winsup/doc/pathnames.xml
@@ -81,9 +81,8 @@ see
The fourth field describes the mount options associated
with the filesystem. It is formatted as a comma separated list of
options. It contains at least the type of mount (binary or text) plus
-any additional options appropriate to the filesystem type. Recognized
-options are binary, text, nouser, user, exec, notexec, cygexec, nosuid,
-posix=[0|1]. The meaning of the options is as follows.
+any additional options appropriate to the filesystem type. The list of
+the options, including their meaning, follows.
acl - Cygwin uses the filesystem's access control lists (ACLs) to
@@ -136,14 +135,14 @@ executability, this is not possible on filesystems which don't support
permissions at all (like FAT/FAT32), or if ACLs are ignored on filesystems
supporting them (see the aforementioned acl mount option).
In these cases, the following heuristic is used to evaluate if a file is
-executable: Files ending in certain extensions (.exe, .com, .bat, .btm,
-.cmd) are assumed to be executable. Files whose first two characters begin
-with '#!' are also considered to be executable.
+executable: Files ending in certain extensions (.exe, .com, .lnk) are
+assumed to be executable. Files whose first two characters are "#!", "MZ",
+or ":\n" are also considered to be executable.
The exec option is used to instruct Cygwin that the
mounted file is "executable". If the exec option is used
with a directory then all files in the directory are executable.
This option allows other files to be marked as executable and avoids the
-overhead of opening each file to check for a '#!'. The
+overhead of opening each file to check for "magic" bytes. The
cygexec option is very similar to exec,
but also prevents Cygwin from setting up commands and environment variables
for a normal Windows program, adding another small performance gain. The