Fix typos and misuse of `

Found by:	codespell (some of them)
This commit is contained in:
Ulrich Spörlein 2011-06-02 13:00:21 +00:00
parent d720e0a3e8
commit 44b0633f84
Notes: svn2git 2020-12-08 03:00:23 +00:00
svn path=/www/; revision=37327
5 changed files with 57 additions and 57 deletions

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@ -4077,7 +4077,7 @@
? This presentation takes a partisan looks a why
UNIX never became a big success in the eighties,
failed to win the market in the nineties, and still
struggles in the market in the new millenium.
struggles in the market in the new millennium.
Poul-Henning will take a critical look at the
mistakes of the past and the mistakes of the present
and try to make it really clear what needs to happen
@ -6700,7 +6700,7 @@
</p><p>
Tom Limoncelli is a FreeBSD user and the author of
the O'Reilly book,"Time Management for System
Administrators". He`ll be giving a brief presentation
Administrators". He'll be giving a brief presentation
with highlights from his book then will take questions
from the audience. Whether you are a system
administrator, a developer (or even a Linux user)
@ -6754,7 +6754,7 @@
<br>
Victor Duchovni trained in mathematics, switched
tracks to CS in 1980s leaving Princeton with a
master`s degree in mathematics and newly acquired
master's degree in mathematics and newly acquired
skills in Unix system administration and system
programming. In 1990 moved to Lehman Brothers,
worked on system management tooling, and network
@ -6804,7 +6804,7 @@
Empowering Media. Empowering Media is a consulting
firm and managed hosting provider. Larry Ludwig
has been in the industry for over 15 years as a
system administration and system programmer. He`s
system administration and system programmer. He's
had previous experience working for many Fortune
500 corporations and holds a BS in CS from Clemson
University. Larry, along with Eric E. Moore and
@ -7124,7 +7124,7 @@
provide a thorough description and walk through of
the various stages of running OpenBSD in any size
environment, and some of the features and tools at
the administrator`s disposal.
the administrator's disposal.
</p><p>
Okan Demirmen has been working with UNIX-like systems
for as long as he can remember and has found OpenBSD
@ -7380,7 +7380,7 @@
in matters concerning IPv6, he can be found gaming
(Anarchy Online), helping out with the <a
href="http://www.jaxlug.org/">Jacksonville Linux
User`s Group</a>, being one of the benevolent
User's Group</a>, being one of the benevolent
dictators of the <a
href="http://www.hackerpimps.com/">Hacker Pimps
Security Think Tank</a>, or fixing up his house.
@ -7498,7 +7498,7 @@
<item source="nycbug" added="20070708">
<title>Isaac `Ike` Levy on the Real Unix Tradition</title>
<title>Isaac 'Ike' Levy on the Real Unix Tradition</title>
<desc><![CDATA[
<p>
"The Real Unix Tradition"
@ -7513,15 +7513,15 @@
called it that". - Brian Redman, 2003
</p><p>
UNIX is the oldest active and growing computing
culture alive today. From it`s humble roots in the
back room at Bell Laboratories, to today`s global
culture alive today. From it's humble roots in the
back room at Bell Laboratories, to today's global
internet infrastructure- UNIX has consistently been
at the core of major advances in computing. Today,
the BSD legacy is the most direct continuation of
the most successful principles in UNIX, and continues
to lead major advances in computing.
</p><p>
Why? What`s so great about UNIX?
Why? What's so great about UNIX?
</p><p>
This lecture aims to prove that UNIX history is
surprisingly useful (and fun)- for developers,
@ -7531,8 +7531,8 @@
Isaac Levy, (ike) is a freelance BSD hadker based
in NYC. He runs Diversaform Inc. as an engine to
make his hacking feed itself, (and ike). Diversaform
specializes in *BSD based solutions, providing `IT
special weapons and tatics` for various sized
specializes in *BSD based solutions, providing 'IT
special weapons and tatics' for various sized
business clients, as well as running a small
high-availability datacenter operation from lower
Manhattan. With regard to FreeBSD jail(8), ike was
@ -7645,7 +7645,7 @@
Ray is an OpenBSD developer who uses Subversion by
day, CVS by night. Taking the phrase "complexity
is the enemy of security" to heart, he believes
that the beauty of UNIX`s security is in its
that the beauty of UNIX's security is in its
simplicity.
</p>
]]></desc>
@ -7733,7 +7733,7 @@
became a fact and proved to be "a better CVS" he
researched it and last year deployed it for his
NYC-based employer Ariel Partners
(http://www.arielpartners.com/). He intergrated the
(http://www.arielpartners.com/). He integrated the
Subversion repositories with Apache Web Server over
https to enable a reliable and secure way to access
them from any point.
@ -7755,7 +7755,7 @@
<title>Okan Demirmen on PF</title>
<desc>
We have had lots of meetings that have peripherally
discussed OpenBSD`s wildly popular PF firewall...
discussed OpenBSD's wildly popular PF firewall...
but finally we will have a meeting focused on it.
</desc>
<overview>http://www.fetissov.org/public/nycbug/</overview>
@ -7907,15 +7907,15 @@
</item>
<item source="nycbug" added="20060909">
<title>Isaac `Ike` Levy on m0n0wall and PFSense</title>
<title>Isaac 'Ike' Levy on m0n0wall and PFSense</title>
<desc><![CDATA[
UNIX professionals are busy these days. Setting up
routers and firewalls are fundamental to any network,
but in environments where the focus is on various
applications, (servers, workstations, and the
software that runs on them), it`s difficult for a
software that runs on them), it's difficult for a
business not to choose off-the-shelf SOHO routers
and networking gear. The web management gui`s are
and networking gear. The web management GUIs are
understandable by everyone, (even techs without
UNIX knowledge), and the gear is cheap - this saves
time and money.
@ -7926,11 +7926,11 @@
<br />
Enter m0n0wall and PFSense, 2 BSD based packaged
router/firewall solutions that are as solid and
full featured as you`d expect from any BSD system-
full featured as you'd expect from any BSD system-
PLUS THEY HAVE HTML WEB INTERFACES FOR MANAGEMENT!
<br />
m0n0wall and PFSense become an easy sell in any
small professional enviornment, any competent tech
small professional environment, any competent tech
can manage the network within minutes... At home,
in every hackers home network, they free the hacker
to have trusted tools available, but are as time-saving
@ -7939,17 +7939,17 @@
m0n0wall and PFSense are both light and clean,
designed to run on embedded systems- (Soekris,
WRAP), but are monsters when unleashed on even
legacy PC`s around the office. If you manage UNIX
legacy PCs around the office. If you manage UNIX
networks and systems all day, do you really want
to manage the router for your DSL when you get home?
But then doesn`t it bug you to use a chincey Linksys
But then doesn't it bug you to use a chincey Linksys
box?
<br />
Ike has been a member of NYC*BUG since we first
launched in January 2004. He is a long-time member
of the Lower East Side Mac Unix User Group. He has
spoken frequently on a number of topics at various
venues, particularly on the issue of FreeBSD`s jail
venues, particularly on the issue of FreeBSD's jail
(8).
]]></desc>
<tags>nycbug,presentation,monowall,pfsense,isaac levy</tags>
@ -7967,13 +7967,13 @@
<desc><![CDATA[
Alfred will discuss the hacks used to turn Sendmail
into a high performance solution for delivering
millions of messages to OKCupid`s subscribers.
millions of messages to OKCupid's subscribers.
Topics covered will be system tuning and sendmail
hacks used in house to achieve massive throughput.
<br />
Alfred Perlstein is the CTO of OKcupid.com, the
largest free online dating site. He has been a
FreeBSD hacker for five years, he`s worked on NFS,
FreeBSD hacker for five years, he's worked on NFS,
VFS, pthreads, networking and general system
maintenance during his tenure on both FreeBSD and
OS X kernels.
@ -8050,7 +8050,7 @@
<li>Macromedia plugin</li>
<li>FreeBSD-Linux differences part 2</li>
<li>John Baldwin Introduction</li>
<li>Podcast anouncement - call for co-hosts!</li>
<li>Podcast announcement - call for co-hosts!</li>
</ul>
]]></desc>
<overview>http://freebsdforall.blogspot.com/2006/06/episode-06.html</overview>
@ -8572,15 +8572,15 @@
<title>Fosdem 2006: BSD</title>
<desc>
We talk with Daniel Seuffert about BSD. Several
flavours of bsd were represented in a joint BSD
booth: openbsd, freebsd, netbsd and miros. Daniel
flavours of BSD were represented in a joint BSD
booth: OpenBSD, FreeBSD, NetBSD and MirOS. Daniel
is representative of the FreeBSD project and among
other things talks about the different operating
systems that are build on top of freebsd. For
instance, there are two distributions called pcbsd
and desktopbsd that are targetted towards desktop
systems that are build on top of FreeBSD. For
instance, there are two distributions called PC-BSD
and DesktopBSD that are targeted towards desktop
users. There also is a version that specializes on
security entitled trustedbsd.
security entitled TrustedBSD.
</desc>
<link>http://www.source21.nl/2006/06/05/fosdem-2006-bsd/</link>
<tags>source21,interview,daniel seuffert</tags>
@ -9358,7 +9358,7 @@
<file>
<url>05-Official_Bulgarian_FreeBSD_Mirror-Dimiter_Vasilev.avi</url>
<size>411 Mb</size>
<desc>Offical Bulgarian FreeBSD Mirror - Dimiter Vasilev</desc>
<desc>Official Bulgarian FreeBSD Mirror - Dimiter Vasilev</desc>
<tags>freebsd,mirror,avi,dimiter vasilev</tags>
</file>
<file>

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@ -9,7 +9,7 @@
<xsl:stylesheet version="1.0" xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform">
<xsl:import href="http://www.FreeBSD.org/XML/www/lang/share/sgml/libcommon.xsl"/>
<xsl:variable name="date" select="'$FreeBSD: www/en/platforms/ia64/todo.xsl,v 1.9 2006/08/19 21:20:41 hrs Exp $'"/>
<xsl:variable name="date" select="'$FreeBSD: www/en/platforms/ia64/todo.xsl,v 1.10 2011/04/03 19:30:06 rene Exp $'"/>
<xsl:output doctype-public="-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"
encoding="iso-8859-1" method="html"/>
@ -50,7 +50,7 @@
This page tries to be the starting point for people trying to find
anything that can be done. The order of the items on this page are
not strictly an indication of priority, but it is a good indication.
There are in all likelyhood tasks that are not mentioned here, but
There are in all likelihood tasks that are not mentioned here, but
that should be done nonetheless. A typical example is the maintenance
of the ia64 web pages... unfortunately.
</p>
@ -75,7 +75,7 @@
</li>
<li>
Port the X server (ports/x11/XFree86-4-Server). Not really
required for tier 1 status, but one cannot truely do without
required for tier 1 status, but one cannot truly do without
if one wants to use ia64 as a desktop machine.
</li>
</ul>
@ -117,7 +117,7 @@
<p>
On top of the high-level things that do not work or do not exist,
there is also some rather involved rewriting to be done at the
foundation and can potentionally affect all other platforms as well.
foundation and can potentially affect all other platforms as well.
This includes:
</p>
<ul>

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@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional-Based Extension//EN" [
<!ENTITY base CDATA "../..">
<!ENTITY date "$FreeBSD: www/en/projects/c99/index.sgml,v 1.117 2011/03/05 23:08:13 kargl Exp $">
<!ENTITY date "$FreeBSD: www/en/projects/c99/index.sgml,v 1.118 2011/03/06 08:56:53 das Exp $">
<!ENTITY title "FreeBSD C99 and &posix; Conformance Project">
<!ENTITY email 'standards'>
<!ENTITY % navinclude.developers "INCLUDE">
@ -586,7 +586,7 @@
</tr>
<tr>
<td> Obtain a64l(), l64a(), and l64a_r() (extention) from NetBSD (PR: <a href="http://www.FreeBSD.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=51209">51209</a>). </td>
<td> Obtain a64l(), l64a(), and l64a_r() (extension) from NetBSD (PR: <a href="http://www.FreeBSD.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=51209">51209</a>). </td>
<td> &a.trhodes; </td>
<td nowrap> 27 February 2006 </td>
<td> &status.done; </td>

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@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional-Based Extension//EN" [
<!ENTITY base CDATA "..">
<!ENTITY date "$FreeBSD: www/en/projects/summerofcode-2007.sgml,v 1.17 2007/10/09 11:28:26 jkoshy Exp $">
<!ENTITY date "$FreeBSD: www/en/projects/summerofcode-2007.sgml,v 1.18 2007/10/14 15:42:41 netchild Exp $">
<!ENTITY title "FreeBSD Summer of Code 2007">
<!ENTITY % navinclude.developers "INCLUDE">
<!ENTITY % developers SYSTEM "../developers.sgml"> %developers;
@ -135,12 +135,12 @@
<strong>Student:</strong> Attilio Rao<br>
<strong>Mentor:</strong> &a.jeff;<br>
<strong>Summary:</strong>
<p>This project involved rewriting the lockmgr syncronization
<p>This project involved rewriting the lockmgr synchronization
primitive since recent efforts (in particular sun4v porting)
evicted that this is a strong bottleneck for fs workloads (due
to its spreadness in VFS land). One of the main goal of the
rewriting was offering a more customed interface, trimming all
unused (and possibily bugged) features of lockmgr and offering
to its spreadness in VFS land). One of the main goals of the
rewriting was offering a more customized interface, trimming all
unused (and possibly bugged) features of lockmgr and offering
a more intelligent interface (that would help a lot in
debugging and lock assertions).</p>
<strong>Ready to enter CVS:</strong> not determined yet<br><br>

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@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional-Based Extension//EN" [
<!ENTITY base CDATA "..">
<!ENTITY date "$FreeBSD: www/en/projects/summerofcode-2008.sgml,v 1.4 2008/09/18 14:44:56 danger Exp $">
<!ENTITY date "$FreeBSD: www/en/projects/summerofcode-2008.sgml,v 1.5 2010/04/09 19:56:04 jkois Exp $">
<!ENTITY title "FreeBSD Summer of Code 2008">
<!ENTITY % navinclude.developers "INCLUDE">
<!ENTITY % developers SYSTEM "../developers.sgml"> %developers;
@ -46,7 +46,7 @@
code has been ported to FreeBSD from the OpenBSD/NetBSD
operating systems. Basic functionality of sending and receiving
packets was the main goal of the project, but unfortunately this
was not acheived. It is very close to having this functionality,
was not achieved. It is very close to having this functionality,
but there are a few minor bugs preventing the code from
integrating fully with the FreeBSD networking stack.</p>
@ -112,14 +112,14 @@
not supported in FreeBSD, the Open Solaris Dtrace Toolkit should be
ported to &os;. Its main job is to find whether a given probe is supported by
FreeBSD, if so, find it; if not, develop one to support this
function. This summer, at first, I went throught all DTK script
function. This summer, at first, I went through all DTK script
commands, found some of them work directly. But most do
not. Under my mentor John Birrell careful help, I retrieved the
respective FreeBSD kernel variables, and ended up making
system/uname.d work. In addition, I tried to make sar-c.d work
under FreeBSD. Since we need to investigate in Sun Open
Solaris Kernel how Open Solaris defines the probe and
what probes it needs, this work is realy time consuming, and not
what probes it needs, this work is really time consuming, and not
done yet. From this project, I got to know much about FreeBSD
kernel and Dtrace probes. I found kernel hacking/coding pretty
interesting.</p>
@ -153,7 +153,7 @@
pkg_convert(1).</p>
<p>Two bugs in the existing pkg_tools have also been discovered
and fixed, everything is ofcourse backwards-compatible with the
and fixed, everything is of course backwards-compatible with the
older/original pkg_install tools.</p></li>
<li>
@ -177,7 +177,7 @@
modifications.</p>
<strong>Ready to enter CVS/SVN:</strong> If we can accept the
regex differencies in grep, it is ready to enter SVN after some
regex differences in grep, it is ready to enter SVN after some
thorough testing. As for diff and sort, they can be installed
via the Ports Collection.
</li>
@ -215,11 +215,11 @@
<li>for last few days I am working on implementing expansions, I will
not rest until they work</li>
<li>I was not able to start writing manpages and create a megapatch
agains HEAD, I'll do that when the algorithm is 100% correct
against HEAD, I'll do that when the algorithm is 100% correct
for all the languages.</li>
</ul>
<p>Current informatin will be available on my wiki:
<p>Current information will be available on my wiki:
http://wiki.freebsd.org/KonradJankowski/Collation</p>
<strong>Ready to enter CVS/SVN:</strong> After finishing expansion support and
@ -346,7 +346,7 @@
admins to synchronize with NTP servers. SNTP's networking code
is written protocol independent and should work with almost any
protocol like IPv4 or IPv6. SNTP supports MD5 authentication to
verify the authencity of the queried server.</p>
verify the authenticity of the queried server.</p>
<strong>Ready to enter CVS/SVN:</strong> Not determined yet.
</li>
@ -361,7 +361,7 @@
<p>The aim of my GSoC project was to implement NFSv4 ACLs in a
similar way POSIX.1e ACLs are supported. That was done by
extending user utilities (setfacl(1)/getfacl(1)), libc API and
adding neccessary kernel stuff, for ACL storage and enforcement
adding necessary kernel stuff, for ACL storage and enforcement
on both UFS and ZFS. Regression tests were implemented to ensure
correct operation. Semantics is supposed to be identical to the
one in SunOS. There is also a wrapper (distributed separately)
@ -428,7 +428,7 @@ Collection
<p>This project is about adding license support to the Ports
Collection, so ports with certain licenses can be
identified. The ports makefile part is functional (may need some
adjustements though): definition of licenses by port, notions of
adjustments though): definition of licenses by port, notions of
permissions (sell and redistribute, for distfiles and packages)
replacing NO_{PACKAGE,CDROM} and RESTRICTED, configuration
(one-time, and saved; with checksum in case the license
@ -542,7 +542,7 @@ Collection
<p>The next step is basically finish implementing PF and
IPFILTER's auditing support. On the IPFW side, my research
showed that the way it handles statefull connections (even
showed that the way it handles stateful connections (even
before my work) needs improvement. I will also work on this. I
will keep working on this project in order to polish every rough
edge we might find. Once this is finished, I'll probably begin
@ -583,7 +583,7 @@ Collection
cross compiling, I cannot verify that the cross compiled product
I had made sense as a bootable image. I've started configuring
qemu now to see if I can verify via that. In discussion with my
mentor, I believe a profitable method of applying my knowedge
mentor, I believe a profitable method of applying my knowledge
post-GSOC is to get a Makefile prepared for TinyBSD that cross
compiles out of the box.</p>