svn commit: r47142 - head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/faq
Bjoern Heidotting
bhd at FreeBSD.org
Sat Aug 1 15:47:46 UTC 2015
Author: bhd
Date: Sat Aug 1 15:47:45 2015
New Revision: 47142
URL: https://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/doc/47142
Log:
Fix typos and various other things found by igor.
Translators can ignore.
Approved by: bcr (mentor)
Modified:
head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/faq/book.xml
Modified: head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/faq/book.xml
==============================================================================
--- head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/faq/book.xml Sat Aug 1 09:28:08 2015 (r47141)
+++ head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/faq/book.xml Sat Aug 1 15:47:45 2015 (r47142)
@@ -20,8 +20,9 @@
<!ENTITY rel3.relengdate "August 2009">
]>
<book xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" version="5.0" xml:lang="en">
- <info><title>Frequently Asked Questions for &os;
- &rel3.relx;, &rel2.relx; and &rel.relx;</title>
+ <info>
+ <title>Frequently Asked Questions for &os;
+ &rel3.relx;, &rel2.relx; and &rel.relx;</title>
<author><orgname>The &os; Documentation Project</orgname></author>
@@ -72,11 +73,11 @@
<abstract>
<para>This is the Frequently Asked Questions
- <acronym>FAQ</acronym> for &os; versions &rel3.relx;, &rel2.relx;
- and &rel.relx;. Every effort has been made to make this <acronym>FAQ</acronym>
- as informative as possible; if you have any suggestions as to
- how it may be improved, send them to the
- &a.doc;.</para>
+ <acronym>FAQ</acronym> for &os; versions &rel3.relx;,
+ &rel2.relx; and &rel.relx;. Every effort has been made to
+ make this <acronym>FAQ</acronym> as informative as possible;
+ if you have any suggestions as to how it may be improved, send
+ them to the &a.doc;.</para>
<para>The latest version of this document is always available
from the <link
@@ -141,13 +142,12 @@
</question>
<answer>
- <para>Yes. Those restrictions do not control how
- the code is used, but how to treat the &os; Project itself.
+ <para>Yes. Those restrictions do not control how the code
+ is used, but how to treat the &os; Project itself.
The license itself is available at
<link
xlink:href="http://www.FreeBSD.org/copyright/freebsd-license.html">license</link>
- and can be summarized like
- this:</para>
+ and can be summarized like this:</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
@@ -211,15 +211,15 @@
xlink:href="http://www.FreeBSD.org/ports/">Ports
Collection</link>.</para>
- <para>If an application is only
- available on one operating system,
- that operating system cannot just be replaced. Chances are, there is a
- very similar application on &os;, however. As a
- solid office or Internet server or a reliable workstation,
- &os; will almost certainly do everything you need. Many
- computer users across the world, including both novices
- and experienced &unix; administrators, use &os; as their
- only desktop operating system.</para>
+ <para>If an application is only available on one operating
+ system, that operating system cannot just be replaced.
+ Chances are, there is a very similar application on &os;,
+ however. As a solid office or Internet server or a
+ reliable workstation, &os; will almost certainly do
+ everything you need. Many computer users across the
+ world, including both novices and experienced &unix;
+ administrators, use &os; as their only desktop operating
+ system.</para>
<para>Users migrating to &os; from another &unix;-like
environment will find &os; to be similar.
@@ -228,7 +228,8 @@
xlink:href="http://www.pcbsd.org/">PC-BSD</link>, a
&os;-based desktop distribution. Non-&unix; users should
expect to invest some additional time learning the
- &unix; way of doing things. This <acronym>FAQ</acronym> and the <link
+ &unix; way of doing things. This <acronym>FAQ</acronym>
+ and the <link
xlink:href="&url.books.handbook;/index.html">&os;
Handbook</link> are excellent places to start.</para>
</answer>
@@ -356,7 +357,8 @@
<emphasis>-CURRENT</emphasis> snapshot. Releases can come
from either branch, but <emphasis>-CURRENT</emphasis>
is meant for users who are prepared for its increased
- volatility, relative to <emphasis>-STABLE</emphasis>.</para>
+ volatility, relative to
+ <emphasis>-STABLE</emphasis>.</para>
<para>Releases are made <link linkend="release-freq">every
few months</link>. While many people stay more
@@ -923,8 +925,9 @@
compressed files, uncompress them, and then copy
the appropriate documents into place.</para>
- <para>For example, the split HTML version of the <acronym>FAQ</acronym>,
- compressed using &man.bzip2.1;, can be found in
+ <para>For example, the split HTML version of the
+ <acronym>FAQ</acronym>, compressed using &man.bzip2.1;,
+ can be found in
<filename>doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/faq/book.html-split.tar.bz2</filename>
To download and uncompress that file, type:</para>
@@ -983,12 +986,11 @@
questions. Other users can help with
the basics, referring to the Handbook whenever
possible and providing links for learning more about
- a particular topic. This is primarily an
- English speaking channel, though it does have users from
- all over the world. Non-native English speakers should
- try to ask the question in
- English first and then relocate to
- <literal>##freebsd-lang</literal> as
+ a particular topic. This is primarily an English
+ speaking channel, though it does have users from all
+ over the world. Non-native English speakers should
+ try to ask the question in English first and then
+ relocate to <literal>##freebsd-lang</literal> as
appropriate.</para>
</listitem>
@@ -1080,11 +1082,19 @@
<chapter xml:id="install">
<info>
- <title>Installation</title>
+ <title>Installation</title>
- <author><personname><firstname>Nik</firstname><surname>Clayton</surname></personname><affiliation>
- <address><email>nik at FreeBSD.org</email></address>
- </affiliation></author>
+ <author>
+ <personname>
+ <firstname>Nik</firstname>
+ <surname>Clayton</surname>
+ </personname>
+ <affiliation>
+ <address>
+ <email>nik at FreeBSD.org</email>
+ </address>
+ </affiliation>
+ </author>
</info>
<qandaset>
@@ -1100,8 +1110,8 @@
<para>&arch.amd64; is the term &os; uses for 64-bit
compatible x86 architectures (also known as "x86-64" or
"x64"). Most modern computers should use &arch.amd64;.
- Older hardware should use &arch.i386;. When
- installing on a non-x86-compatible architecture, select the
+ Older hardware should use &arch.i386;. When installing
+ on a non-x86-compatible architecture, select the
platform which best matches the hardware.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
@@ -1114,8 +1124,8 @@
<answer>
<para>On the <link
xlink:href="http://www.freebsd.org/where.html">Getting
- &os;</link> page, select <literal>[iso]</literal> next to
- the architecture that matches the hardware.</para>
+ &os;</link> page, select <literal>[iso]</literal> next
+ to the architecture that matches the hardware.</para>
<para>Any of the following can be used:</para>
@@ -1175,27 +1185,28 @@
<qandaentry>
<question xml:id="floppy-image-too-large">
- <para>What do I do if the install image does not boot?</para>
+ <para>What do I do if the install image does not
+ boot?</para>
</question>
<answer>
<para>This can be caused by not downloading the image in
- <emphasis>binary</emphasis> mode when using
- <acronym>FTP</acronym>.</para>
+ <emphasis>binary</emphasis> mode when using
+ <acronym>FTP</acronym>.</para>
- <para>Some FTP clients default their transfer mode to
- <emphasis>ascii</emphasis> and attempt to change any
- end-of-line characters received to match the
- conventions used by the client's system. This will
- almost invariably corrupt the boot image. Check the
- SHA-256 checksum of the downloaded boot image: if it is not
- <emphasis>exactly</emphasis> that on the server, then
- the download process is suspect.</para>
-
- <para>When using a command line FTP client, type <emphasis>binary</emphasis> at
- the FTP command prompt after getting connected to the
- server and before starting the download of the
- image.</para>
+ <para>Some FTP clients default their transfer mode to
+ <emphasis>ascii</emphasis> and attempt to change any
+ end-of-line characters received to match the
+ conventions used by the client's system. This will
+ almost invariably corrupt the boot image. Check the
+ SHA-256 checksum of the downloaded boot image: if it
+ is not <emphasis>exactly</emphasis> that on the
+ server, then the download process is suspect.</para>
+
+ <para>When using a command line FTP client, type
+ <emphasis>binary</emphasis> at the FTP command prompt
+ after getting connected to the server and before
+ starting the download of the image.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
@@ -1403,8 +1414,8 @@
buildworld</command> and <command>make
buildkernel</command> to update the kernel.</para>
- <para>Boot the system by specifying the kernel directly at the
- second stage, pressing any key when the
+ <para>Boot the system by specifying the kernel directly at
+ the second stage, pressing any key when the
<literal>|</literal> shows up before loader is
started.</para>
</answer>
@@ -1439,8 +1450,8 @@
<answer>
<para>This is discussed continually on the &os; mailing
- lists but is to be expected since hardware changes so quickly.
- Read through the Hardware Notes
+ lists but is to be expected since hardware changes so
+ quickly. Read through the Hardware Notes
for &os; <link
xlink:href="&rel.current.hardware;">&rel.current;</link>
or <link
@@ -1474,7 +1485,8 @@
4 GB of memory (and usually less than that because
of PCI address space) and &i386; with PAE supports at
most 64 GB memory. As of &os; 10, AMD64
- platforms support up to 4 TB of physical memory.</para>
+ platforms support up to 4 TB of physical
+ memory.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
@@ -1522,7 +1534,8 @@
thumb is that if the driver is usable on 64-bit
architectures (like AMD64), it is also usable with PAE.
When creating a custom kernel configuration
- file, PAE can be enabled by adding the following line:</para>
+ file, PAE can be enabled by adding the following
+ line:</para>
<programlisting>options PAE</programlisting>
@@ -1663,12 +1676,12 @@
&man.chio.1;.</para>
<para>While
- <application>AMANDA</application> and some other products
- already understands changers, other applications
- only know how to move a tape from one point to another/
- In this case, keep track of which slot a tape is in
- and which slot the tape currently in the drive needs to
- go back to.</para>
+ <application>AMANDA</application> and some other
+ products already understands changers, other
+ applications only know how to move a tape from one point
+ to another. In this case, keep track of which slot a
+ tape is in and which slot the tape currently in the
+ drive needs to go back to.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
@@ -1687,8 +1700,8 @@
drive. See &man.burncd.8; for details.</para>
<para>&os; also supports any SCSI CD-R or CD-RW drives.
- Install the <package>sysutils/cdrtools</package>
- port or package, then use <command>cdrecord</command>.</para>
+ Install the <package>sysutils/cdrtools</package> port or
+ package, then use <command>cdrecord</command>.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
</qandaset>
@@ -1706,10 +1719,10 @@
<answer>
<para>The default console driver,
- &man.syscons.4;, provides the ability to use a mouse pointer in text
- consoles to cut & paste text. Run the mouse daemon,
- &man.moused.8;, and turn on the mouse pointer in the
- virtual console:</para>
+ &man.syscons.4;, provides the ability to use a mouse
+ pointer in text consoles to cut & paste text. Run
+ the mouse daemon, &man.moused.8;, and turn on the mouse
+ pointer in the virtual console:</para>
<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>moused -p /dev/xxxx -t yyyy</userinput>
&prompt.root; <userinput>vidcontrol -m on</userinput></screen>
@@ -1735,7 +1748,8 @@
<para>When the mouse daemon is running, access to the
mouse must be coordinated between the mouse daemon and
- other programs such as X Windows. Refer to the <acronym>FAQ</acronym>
+ other programs such as X Windows. Refer to the
+ <acronym>FAQ</acronym>
<link linkend="x-and-moused">Why does my mouse not work
with X?</link> for more details on this issue.</para>
</answer>
@@ -1749,9 +1763,8 @@
<answer>
<para>It is not possible to remove data using the mouse.
- However, it is possible to copy and
- paste.
- Once the mouse daemon is running as described in the <link
+ However, it is possible to copy and paste. Once the
+ mouse daemon is running as described in the <link
linkend="moused">previous question</link>, hold down
button 1 (left button) and move the mouse to select a
region of text. Then, press button 2 (middle button) to
@@ -1759,9 +1772,9 @@
button) will <quote>extend</quote> the selected region
of text.</para>
- <para>If the mouse does not have a middle button, it is possible
- to emulate one or remap buttons using mouse daemon
- options. See the &man.moused.8; manual page for
+ <para>If the mouse does not have a middle button, it is
+ possible to emulate one or remap buttons using mouse
+ daemon options. See the &man.moused.8; manual page for
details.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
@@ -1883,8 +1896,8 @@ bindkey ^[[3~ delete-char # for xterm</p
<para>On a 32-bit version of &os;, the memory appears lost,
since it will be remapped above 4 GB, which a 32-bit
kernel is unable to access. In this case, the solution is
- to build a PAE enabled kernel. See
- the entry on memory limits for more information.</para>
+ to build a PAE enabled kernel. See the entry on memory
+ limits for more information.</para>
<para>On a 64-bit version of &os;, or when running a
PAE-enabled kernel, &os; will correctly detect and remap
@@ -1923,8 +1936,9 @@ bindkey ^[[3~ delete-char # for xterm</p
<para>If it is a problem with part of the base &os;
system, it may also be buggy code, but more often than
not these problems are found and fixed long before us
- general <acronym>FAQ</acronym> readers get to use these bits of code
- (that is what -CURRENT is for).</para>
+ general <acronym>FAQ</acronym> readers get to use
+ these bits of code (that is what -CURRENT is
+ for).</para>
</listitem>
</orderedlist>
@@ -1937,8 +1951,8 @@ bindkey ^[[3~ delete-char # for xterm</p
<para>For example, if <command>make
buildworld</command> fails while trying
to compile <filename>ls.c</filename> into
- <filename>ls.o</filename> and, when run again, it fails in the
- same place, this is a broken build. Try
+ <filename>ls.o</filename> and, when run again, it fails
+ in the same place, this is a broken build. Try
updating source and try again. If the compile fails
elsewhere, it is almost certainly due to hardware.</para>
@@ -1954,8 +1968,8 @@ bindkey ^[[3~ delete-char # for xterm</p
<orderedlist>
<listitem>
- <para>The hard disks might be overheating: Check that the
- fans are still working, as the disk and
+ <para>The hard disks might be overheating: Check that
+ the fans are still working, as the disk and
other hardware might be overheating.</para>
</listitem>
@@ -2008,10 +2022,11 @@ bindkey ^[[3~ delete-char # for xterm</p
</listitem>
</orderedlist>
- <para>Read the section on <link linkend="signal11">Signal 11</link>
- for a further explanation and a discussion on how
- memory testing software or hardware can still pass faulty
- memory. There is an extensive <acronym>FAQ</acronym> on this at <link
+ <para>Read the section on
+ <link linkend="signal11">Signal 11</link> for a further
+ explanation and a discussion on how memory testing
+ software or hardware can still pass faulty memory. There
+ is an extensive <acronym>FAQ</acronym> on this at <link
xlink:href="http://www.bitwizard.nl/sig11/">the SIG11
problem <acronym>FAQ</acronym></link>.</para>
@@ -2037,16 +2052,16 @@ bindkey ^[[3~ delete-char # for xterm</p
<acronym>FAQ</acronym> section on <link
linkend="kernel-panic-troubleshooting">kernel
panics</link>, build a debugging kernel, and get a
- backtrace. This might sound difficult, but does not require
- any programming skills. Just follow the
+ backtrace. This might sound difficult, but does not
+ require any programming skills. Just follow the
instructions.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
<qandaentry>
<question xml:id="proc-table-full">
- <para>What is the meaning of the error <errorname>maxproc limit
- exceeded by uid %i, please see tuning(7) and
+ <para>What is the meaning of the error <errorname>maxproc
+ limit exceeded by uid %i, please see tuning(7) and
login.conf(5)</errorname>?</para>
</question>
@@ -2068,9 +2083,9 @@ bindkey ^[[3~ delete-char # for xterm</p
section refers to open files, the same limits apply to
processes.</para>
- <para>If the machine is lightly loaded but
- running a very large number of processes, adjust
- the <varname>kern.maxproc</varname> tunable by defining it in
+ <para>If the machine is lightly loaded but running a very
+ large number of processes, adjust the
+ <varname>kern.maxproc</varname> tunable by defining it in
<filename>/boot/loader.conf</filename>. The tunable will
not get adjusted until the system is rebooted. For more
information about tuning tunables, see
@@ -2091,18 +2106,18 @@ bindkey ^[[3~ delete-char # for xterm</p
<answer>
<para>The remote machine may be setting the terminal type to
- something other than <literal>xterm</literal> which is
- required by the &os; console. Alternatively the kernel
- may have the wrong values for the width and height of the
- terminal.</para>
+ something other than <literal>xterm</literal> which is
+ required by the &os; console. Alternatively the kernel
+ may have the wrong values for the width and height of the
+ terminal.</para>
<para>Check the value of the <envar>TERM</envar>
- enviroment variable is <literal>xterm</literal>. If the
+ environment variable is <literal>xterm</literal>. If the
remote machine does not support that try
<literal>vt100</literal>.</para>
<para>Run <command>stty -a</command> to check what the
- kernel thinks the terminal dimensions are. If they are
+ kernel thinks the terminal dimensions are. If they are
incorrect, they can be changed by running
<command>stty rows <replaceable>RR</replaceable> cols
<replaceable>CC</replaceable></command>.</para>
@@ -2182,9 +2197,9 @@ bindkey ^[[3~ delete-char # for xterm</p
</question>
<answer>
- <para>This error message indicates that the
- number of available file descriptors have been exhausted on the system.
- Refer to the <link
+ <para>This error message indicates that the number of
+ available file descriptors have been exhausted on the
+ system. Refer to the <link
xlink:href="&url.books.handbook;/configtuning-kernel-limits.html#kern-maxfiles">kern.maxfiles</link>
section of the <link
xlink:href="&url.books.handbook;/configtuning-kernel-limits.html">Tuning
@@ -2302,8 +2317,7 @@ kern.timecounter.hardware: TSC -> i82
&man.witness.4; is conservative. A true positive report
<emphasis>does not</emphasis> mean that a system is
dead-locked; instead it should be understood as a warning
- that a deadlock could
- have happened here.</para>
+ that a deadlock could have happened here.</para>
<note>
<para>Problematic <acronym>LOR</acronym>s tend to get
@@ -2420,10 +2434,10 @@ kern.timecounter.hardware: TSC -> i82
<para>Use SVN if custom patches to the
ports tree are needed. Refer to <link
xlink:href="&url.books.handbook;/svn.html">Using
- Subversion</link> for details.</para>
+ Subversion</link> for details.</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
- <para>Use <acronym>CTM</acronym>, as described in <link
+ <para>Use <acronym>CTM</acronym>, as described in <link
xlink:href="&url.books.handbook;/ctm.html">Using
<acronym>CTM</acronym></link> to receive patches by
email over an unreliable Internet connection.</para>
@@ -2457,10 +2471,10 @@ kern.timecounter.hardware: TSC -> i82
<emphasis>-STABLE</emphasis>, update the
Ports Collection using the instructions in <link
xlink:href="&url.books.handbook;/ports-using.html">Using
- the Ports Collection</link>. If the system is up-to-date,
- someone might have committed a change to the port
- which works for <emphasis>-CURRENT</emphasis> but which
- broke the port for <emphasis>-STABLE</emphasis>.
+ the Ports Collection</link>. If the system is
+ up-to-date, someone might have committed a change to the
+ port which works for <emphasis>-CURRENT</emphasis> but
+ which broke the port for <emphasis>-STABLE</emphasis>.
<link xlink:href="https://bugs.FreeBSD.org/submit/">Submit</link>
a bug report, since the Ports Collection is supposed to
work
@@ -2476,8 +2490,8 @@ kern.timecounter.hardware: TSC -> i82
</question>
<answer>
- <para>First, make sure that the
- Ports Collection is up-to-date. Errors that affect building
+ <para>First, make sure that the Ports Collection is
+ up-to-date. Errors that affect building
<filename>INDEX</filename> from an up-to-date copy of the
Ports Collection are high-visibility and are thus almost
always fixed immediately.</para>
@@ -2701,8 +2715,8 @@ kern.timecounter.hardware: TSC -> i82
to further reduce the size. See <xref
linkend="make-kernel"/> for more information.</para>
- <para>To put any of these options into effect, follow the instructions
- to <link
+ <para>To put any of these options into effect, follow the
+ instructions to <link
xlink:href="&url.books.handbook;/kernelconfig-building.html">build
and install</link> the new kernel.</para>
@@ -2735,7 +2749,7 @@ kern.timecounter.hardware: TSC -> i82
<listitem>
<para>The <command>make
buildkernel</command> command did not complete
- successfuly. The <command>make
+ successfully. The <command>make
buildkernel</command> target relies on files
generated by the <command>make buildworld</command>
target to complete its job correctly.</para>
@@ -2749,9 +2763,10 @@ kern.timecounter.hardware: TSC -> i82
Only releases are guaranteed to be
buildable, although <link
linkend="stable">&os;-STABLE</link> builds fine the
- majority of the time. Try re-fetching the source tree and see if the
- problem goes away. Try using a different mirror in
- case the previous one is having problems.</para>
+ majority of the time. Try re-fetching the source tree
+ and see if the problem goes away. Try using a
+ different mirror in case the previous one is having
+ problems.</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</answer>
@@ -2811,37 +2826,36 @@ kern.sched.name: ULE</screen>
</question>
<answer>
- <para>The best way is to reinstall the operating system on the new disk,
- then move the user data over. This is highly recommended
- when tracking <emphasis>-STABLE</emphasis> for
- more than one release or when updating a release instead
- of installing a new one. Install booteasy on both
- disks with &man.boot0cfg.8; and dual boot until you
- are happy with the new configuration. Skip the next
- paragraph to find out how to move the data after doing
- this.</para>
+ <para>The best way is to reinstall the operating system on
+ the new disk, then move the user data over. This is
+ highly recommended when tracking
+ <emphasis>-STABLE</emphasis> for more than one release or
+ when updating a release instead of installing a new one.
+ Install booteasy on both disks with &man.boot0cfg.8; and
+ dual boot until you are happy with the new configuration.
+ Skip the next paragraph to find out how to move the data
+ after doing this.</para>
<para>Alternatively, partition and label the new disk with
either &man.sade.8; or &man.gpart.8;. If the disks are
MBR-formatted, booteasy can be installed on both disks
- with &man.boot0cfg.8; so that the computer can dual boot to the
- old or new system after the copying is done.</para>
+ with &man.boot0cfg.8; so that the computer can dual boot
+ to the old or new system after the copying is done.</para>
<para>Once the new disk set up,
the data cannot just be copied. Instead, use tools that
- understand device files and syste flags, such as
+ understand device files and system flags, such as
&man.dump.8;. Although it is recommended
to move the data while in single-user mode, it
is not required.</para>
<para>When the disks are formatted with
- <acronym>UFS</acronym>, never use anything but &man.dump.8; and
- &man.restore.8; to move the root file system. These
- commands should also be used when
- moving a single partition to another empty
- partition. The sequence of steps to use
- <command>dump</command> to move the data from one
- <acronym>UFS</acronym> partitions to a new
+ <acronym>UFS</acronym>, never use anything but
+ &man.dump.8; and &man.restore.8; to move the root file
+ system. These commands should also be used when moving a
+ single partition to another empty partition. The sequence
+ of steps to use <command>dump</command> to move the data
+ from one <acronym>UFS</acronym> partitions to a new
partition is:</para>
<procedure>
@@ -2866,7 +2880,8 @@ kern.sched.name: ULE</screen>
<para>For example, to move
<filename>/dev/ada1s1a</filename> with
- <filename>/mnt</filename> as the temporary mount point, type:</para>
+ <filename>/mnt</filename> as the temporary mount point,
+ type:</para>
<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>newfs /dev/ada1s1a</userinput>
&prompt.root; <userinput>mount /dev/ada1s1a /mnt</userinput>
@@ -2902,9 +2917,9 @@ kern.sched.name: ULE</screen>
&prompt.root; <userinput>cd /mnt</userinput>
&prompt.root; <userinput>dump 0af - / | restore rf -</userinput></screen>
- <para>The &man.cpio.1; and &man.pax.1; utilities are also available
- for moving user data. These are known to lose file flag
- information, so use them with caution.</para>
+ <para>The &man.cpio.1; and &man.pax.1; utilities are also
+ available for moving user data. These are known to lose
+ file flag information, so use them with caution.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
@@ -2931,14 +2946,14 @@ kern.sched.name: ULE</screen>
When a large file is deleted the file still resides on
disk until the kernel actually performs the deletion.
This can cause a very simple race condition. Suppose
- one large file is deleted and another large file is immediately created.
- The first large file is not yet actually removed
- from the physical disk, so the disk might not have enough
- room for the second large file. This will produce an error that the
- partition does not have enough space, even though
- a large chunk of
- space has just been released. A few seconds later, the file
- creation works as expected.</para>
+ one large file is deleted and another large file is
+ immediately created. The first large file is not yet
+ actually removed from the physical disk, so the disk might
+ not have enough room for the second large file. This will
+ produce an error that the partition does not have enough
+ space, even though a large chunk of space has just been
+ released. A few seconds later, the file creation works as
+ expected.</para>
<para>If a system should crash after the kernel accepts a
chunk of data for writing to disk, but before that data is
@@ -3034,9 +3049,9 @@ kern.sched.name: ULE</screen>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
- <para>&os; includes the Network File System <acronym>NFS</acronym> and
- the &os; Ports Collection provides several FUSE applications
- to support many other
+ <para>&os; includes the Network File System
+ <acronym>NFS</acronym> and the &os; Ports Collection
+ provides several FUSE applications to support many other
file systems.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
@@ -3052,7 +3067,7 @@ kern.sched.name: ULE</screen>
example, if <literal>E</literal> is the
second DOS partition on the second SCSI drive, there will
be a device file for <quote>slice 5</quote> in
- <filename>/dev</filename>. To mount it:</para>
+ <filename>/dev</filename>. To mount it:</para>
<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>mount -t msdosfs /dev/da1s5 /dos/e</userinput></screen>
</answer>
@@ -3079,8 +3094,8 @@ kern.sched.name: ULE</screen>
</question>
<answer>
- <para>To boot &os; using <application>GRUB</application>, add the
- following to either
+ <para>To boot &os; using <application>GRUB</application>,
+ add the following to either
<filename>/boot/grub/menu.lst</filename> or
<filename>/boot/grub/grub.conf</filename>, depending upon
which is used by the &linux; distribution.</para>
@@ -3111,9 +3126,9 @@ kern.sched.name: ULE</screen>
then boot LILO from
<application>BootEasy</application>.</para>
- <para>This is recommended when running &windows; and &linux; as it
- makes it simpler to get &linux;
- booting again if &windows; is reinstalled.</para>
+ <para>This is recommended when running &windows; and &linux;
+ as it makes it simpler to get &linux; booting again if
+ &windows; is reinstalled.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
@@ -3125,10 +3140,10 @@ kern.sched.name: ULE</screen>
</question>
<answer>
- <para>This cannot be accomplished with the standard boot manager
- without rewriting it. There are a number of other boot
- managers in the <filename>sysutils</filename> category of the Ports
- Collection.</para>
+ <para>This cannot be accomplished with the standard boot
+ manager without rewriting it. There are a number of other
+ boot managers in the <filename>sysutils</filename>
+ category of the Ports Collection.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
@@ -3145,8 +3160,8 @@ kern.sched.name: ULE</screen>
<para>If the drive will only be used with &os; systems,
partition it with <acronym>UFS</acronym> or
- <acronym>ZFS</acronym>. This will provide long filename support,
- improvement in performance, and stability. If
+ <acronym>ZFS</acronym>. This will provide long filename
+ support, improvement in performance, and stability. If
the drive will be used by other operating systems, a more
portable choice, such as msdosfs, is better.</para>
@@ -3178,9 +3193,8 @@ kern.sched.name: ULE</screen>
</question>
<answer>
- <para>The type of device
- to mount must be specified. This is described in the Handbook
- section on <link
+ <para>The type of device to mount must be specified. This
+ is described in the Handbook section on <link
xlink:href="&url.books.handbook;/creating-cds.html#mounting-cd">Using
Data CDs</link>.</para>
</answer>
@@ -3342,26 +3356,27 @@ kern.sched.name: ULE</screen>
</question>
<answer>
- <para>This is due to how these commands actually work. <command>du</command>
- goes through the directory tree, measures how large each
- file is, and presents the totals. <command>df</command>
- just asks the file system how much space it has left.
- They seem to be the same thing, but a file without a
- directory entry will affect <command>df</command> but not
+ <para>This is due to how these commands actually work.
+ <command>du</command> goes through the directory tree,
+ measures how large each file is, and presents the totals.
+ <command>df</command> just asks the file system how much
+ space it has left. They seem to be the same thing, but a
+ file without a directory entry will affect
+ <command>df</command> but not
<command>du</command>.</para>
- <para>When a program is using a file, and the file is deleted,
- the file is not really removed from the file system
- until the program stops using it. The file is immediately
- deleted from the directory listing, however. As an example,
- consider a file that is large
- enough that its presence affects the output of
- <command>du</command> and <command>df</command>. If this file is deleted
- while using <command>more</command> on it,
+ <para>When a program is using a file, and the file is
+ deleted, the file is not really removed from the file
+ system until the program stops using it. The file is
+ immediately deleted from the directory listing, however.
+ As an example, consider a file that is large enough that
+ its presence affects the output of
+ <command>du</command> and <command>df</command>. If this
+ file is deleted while using <command>more</command> on it,
<command>more</command> does not immediately choke and
complain that it cannot view the file. The entry is
- removed from the directory so no other program or
- user can access it. However, <command>du</command> shows that it
+ removed from the directory so no other program or user can
+ access it. However, <command>du</command> shows that it
is gone as it has walked the directory tree and the
file is not listed. <command>df</command> shows that it
is still there, as the file system knows that
@@ -3391,7 +3406,7 @@ kern.sched.name: ULE</screen>
</question>
<answer>
- <para>This section<link
+ <para>This section <link
xlink:href="&url.books.handbook;/adding-swap-space.html">of the Handbook</link>
describes how to do this.</para>
</answer>
@@ -3625,14 +3640,14 @@ kern.sched.name: ULE</screen>
<answer>
<para>The primary configuration file is
- <filename>/etc/defaults/rc.conf</filename> which is described in
- &man.rc.conf.5;. System startup scripts such as
- <filename>/etc/rc</filename> and
- <filename>/etc/rc.d</filename>, which are described in &man.rc.8;,
- include this file. <emphasis>Do not edit this
+ <filename>/etc/defaults/rc.conf</filename> which is
+ described in &man.rc.conf.5;. System startup scripts
+ such as <filename>/etc/rc</filename> and
+ <filename>/etc/rc.d</filename>, which are described in
+ &man.rc.8;, include this file. <emphasis>Do not edit this
file!</emphasis> Instead, to edit an entry in
- <filename>/etc/defaults/rc.conf</filename>, copy the line into
- <filename>/etc/rc.conf</filename> and change it
+ <filename>/etc/defaults/rc.conf</filename>, copy the line
+ into <filename>/etc/rc.conf</filename> and change it
there.</para>
<para>For example, if to start &man.named.8;, the
@@ -3693,11 +3708,13 @@ kern.sched.name: ULE</screen>
</question>
<answer>
- <para>This is a security feature. In order to <command>su</command>
- to <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem>, or any
- other account with superuser privileges, the user account must be a member of
- the <systemitem class="groupname">wheel</systemitem>
- group. If this feature were not there, anybody with an
+ <para>This is a security feature. In order to
+ <command>su</command> to
+ <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem>, or any
+ other account with superuser privileges, the user account
+ must be a member of the
+ <systemitem class="groupname">wheel</systemitem> group.
+ If this feature were not there, anybody with an
account on a system who also found out <systemitem
class="username">root</systemitem>'s password would be
able to gain superuser level access to the system.</para>
@@ -3761,7 +3778,8 @@ kern.sched.name: ULE</screen>
<answer>
<para>See the <link
xlink:href="&url.books.handbook;/printing.html">Handbook
- entry on printing</link> for troubleshooting tips.</para>
+ entry on printing</link> for troubleshooting
+ tips.</para>
</answer>
</qandaentry>
@@ -3915,15 +3933,16 @@ options SYSVMSG # enable for
class="username">root</systemitem> password when
entering the single-user mode, it means that the console
has been marked as <literal>insecure</literal> in
- <filename>/etc/ttys</filename>. In this case, it will be
- required to boot from a &os; installation disk, choose
- the <guimenuitem>Live CD</guimenuitem> or
+ <filename>/etc/ttys</filename>. In this case, it will
+ be required to boot from a &os; installation disk,
+ choose the <guimenuitem>Live CD</guimenuitem> or
<guimenuitem>Shell</guimenuitem> at the beginning of the
install process and issue the commands mentioned above.
Mount the specific partition in this
- case and then chroot to it. For example, replace <command>mount
- -urw /</command> with <command>mount /dev/ada0p1 /mnt;
- chroot /mnt</command> for a system on
+ case and then chroot to it. For example, replace
+ <command>mount -urw /</command> with
+ <command>mount /dev/ada0p1 /mnt; chroot /mnt</command>
+ for a system on
<replaceable>ada0p1</replaceable>.</para>
</note>
@@ -4089,10 +4108,11 @@ options SYSVMSG # enable for
<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>sysctl kern.securelevel</userinput></screen>
- <para>The security level cannot be lowered in multi-user mode, so boot
- to single-user mode to install the kernel, or change the
- security level in <filename>/etc/rc.conf</filename> then
- reboot. See the &man.init.8; manual page for details on
+ <para>The security level cannot be lowered in multi-user
+ mode, so boot to single-user mode to install the kernel,
+ or change the security level in
+ <filename>/etc/rc.conf</filename> then reboot. See the
+ &man.init.8; manual page for details on
<literal>securelevel</literal>, and see
<filename>/etc/defaults/rc.conf</filename> and the
&man.rc.conf.5; manual page for more information on
@@ -4117,10 +4137,11 @@ options SYSVMSG # enable for
<screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>sysctl kern.securelevel</userinput></screen>
- <para>The security level cannot be lowered in multi-user mode. Either boot
- to single-user mode to change the date or change the
- security level in <filename>/etc/rc.conf</filename> and
- reboot. See the &man.init.8; manual page for details on
+ <para>The security level cannot be lowered in multi-user
+ mode. Either boot to single-user mode to change the date
+ or change the security level in
+ <filename>/etc/rc.conf</filename> and reboot. See the
+ &man.init.8; manual page for details on
<literal>securelevel</literal>, and see
<filename>/etc/defaults/rc.conf</filename> and the
&man.rc.conf.5; manual page for more information on
@@ -4389,9 +4410,10 @@ options SYSVMSG # enable for
information, see at the &man.init.8; manual page.</para>
<para>There are two solutions to the problem: set the
- <literal>securelevel</literal> back down to zero or run &man.xdm.1;
- (or an alternative display manager) at boot time before
- the <literal>securelevel</literal> is raised.</para>
+ <literal>securelevel</literal> back down to zero or run
+ &man.xdm.1; (or an alternative display manager) at boot
+ time before the <literal>securelevel</literal> is
+ raised.</para>
<para>See <xref linkend="xdm-boot"/> for more information
about running &man.xdm.1; at boot time.</para>
@@ -4464,7 +4486,7 @@ options SYSVMSG # enable for
<filename>/etc/X11/xorg.conf</filename>, as seen in this
example:</para>
- <programlisting>Section "InputDevice"
+ <programlisting>Section "InputDevice"
Identifier "Mouse1"
Driver "mouse"
Option "Protocol" "auto"
@@ -4590,23 +4612,24 @@ ttyvb "/usr/libexec/getty Pc"
<para>The more virtual
terminals, the more resources that are used. This can be
- problematic on systems with 8 MB RAM or less. Consider
- changing <literal>secure</literal> to
+ problematic on systems with 8 MB RAM or less.
+ Consider changing <literal>secure</literal> to
<literal>insecure</literal>.</para>
<note>
<para>Versions of &os; prior to 9.0 used the <quote>
cons25</quote> terminal type, and not <quote>
xterm</quote>. Use the format of existing entries in
- when adding entries to <filename>/etc/ttys</filename>.</para>
+ when adding entries to
+ <filename>/etc/ttys</filename>.</para>
</note>
<important>
<para>In order to run an X server, at least one virtual
- terminal must be left to <literal>off</literal> for it to use. This
- means that only eleven of the Alt-function keys can be
- used as virtual consoles so that one is left for the
- X server.</para>
+ terminal must be left to <literal>off</literal> for it
+ to use. This means that only eleven of the Alt-function
+ keys can be used as virtual consoles so that one is left
+ for the X server.</para>
</important>
<para>For example, to run X and eleven virtual consoles, the
@@ -4738,9 +4761,9 @@ ttyvb "/usr/libexec/getty Pc"
</question>
<answer>
- <para>The mouse and the mouse driver may have
- become out of synchronization. In rare cases, the driver may also erroneously report
- synchronization errors:</para>
+ <para>The mouse and the mouse driver may have become out of
+ synchronization. In rare cases, the driver may also
+ erroneously report synchronization errors:</para>
<programlisting>psmintr: out of sync (xxxx != yyyy)</programlisting>
@@ -4760,8 +4783,8 @@ ttyvb "/usr/libexec/getty Pc"
<answer>
<para>Type
- <command>xmodmap -e "pointer = 3 2 1"</command>. Add this command to
- <filename>~/.xinitrc</filename> or
+ <command>xmodmap -e "pointer = 3 2 1"</command>. Add this
+ command to <filename>~/.xinitrc</filename> or
<filename>~/.xsession</filename> to make it happen
automatically.</para>
</answer>
@@ -4846,8 +4869,8 @@ ttyvb "/usr/libexec/getty Pc"
keycode 116 = F14
keycode 117 = F15</programlisting>
- <para>For the <package>x11-wm/fvwm2</package> desktop manager,
- one could map the keys so that
+ <para>For the <package>x11-wm/fvwm2</package> desktop
+ manager, one could map the keys so that
<keycap>F13</keycap> iconifies or de-iconifies the
window the cursor is in, <keycap>F14</keycap> brings the
window the cursor is in to the front or, if it is already
@@ -4960,9 +4983,8 @@ Key F15 A A Menu Wo
xlink:href="&url.books.handbook;/userppp.html">Handbook
entry on user PPP</link>.</para>
- <para>If the
- connection to the Internet is over Ethernet, use &man.natd.8;.
- A tutorial can be found in the <link
+ <para>If the connection to the Internet is over Ethernet,
+ use &man.natd.8;. A tutorial can be found in the <link
xlink:href="&url.books.handbook;/firewalls-ipfw.html#network-natd">natd</link>
section of the Handbook.</para>
</answer>
@@ -5009,7 +5031,8 @@ Key F15 A A Menu Wo
*** DIFF OUTPUT TRUNCATED AT 1000 LINES ***
More information about the svn-doc-all
mailing list