Fix lots of typos, add $Id$s.

Submitted by:	Wolfram "typo police" Schneider <wosch@cs.tu-berlin.de>
This commit is contained in:
John Fieber 1996-10-06 20:17:19 +00:00
parent 3efc5c8e58
commit 76aa45de46
Notes: svn2git 2020-12-08 03:00:23 +00:00
svn path=/head/; revision=584
7 changed files with 26 additions and 20 deletions

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@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
++
++ Copyright Eric L. Hernes - Wednesday, August 2, 1995
++
++ $Id: ddwg.sgml,v 1.1.1.1 1996-09-24 17:45:58 jfieber Exp $
++ $Id: ddwg.sgml,v 1.2 1996-10-06 20:17:08 jfieber Exp $
++
++ Sgml doc for something
-->
@ -435,7 +435,7 @@ These are typically named something like ioctl_dev.h or devio.h.
If a driver is being written which, from user space is
identical to a device which already exists, care should be taken to
use the same ioctl interface and data structures. For example, from
user space, a SCSI cdrom drive should be identical to an IDE cdrom
user space, a SCSI CDROM drive should be identical to an IDE cdrom
drive; or a serial line on an intelligent multiport card (Digiboard,
Cyclades, ...) should be identical to the sio devices. These devices
have a fairly well defined interface which should be used.

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@ -1,4 +1,5 @@
<!DOCTYPE linuxdoc PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//DTD linuxdoc//EN">
<!-- $Id: devel.sgml,v 1.2 1996-10-06 20:17:10 jfieber Exp $ -->
<!--
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
@ -1623,7 +1624,7 @@ locate these files by doing
find /usr/ports/lang/whizbang -name *.el -print
</verb></tscreen>
and install them by copying them into Emac's site Lisp directory. On
and install them by copying them into the Emacs site Lisp directory. On
FreeBSD 2.1.0-RELEASE, this is /usr/local/share/emacs/site-lisp.
So for example, if the output from the find command was

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@ -1,10 +1,12 @@
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2//EN" [
<!ENTITY base CDATA "../..">
<!ENTITY date "$Date: 1996-09-24 17:46:00 $">
<!ENTITY date "$Date: 1996-10-06 20:17:12 $">
<!ENTITY title "Diskless X Server: a how to guide">
<!ENTITY copyright " ">
<!ENTITY % includes SYSTEM "../../includes.sgml"> %includes;
]>
<!-- $Id: disklessx.sgml,v 1.2 1996-10-06 20:17:12 jfieber Exp $ -->
<html>
&header;
@ -14,7 +16,7 @@
<p>With the help of some 'friends' on the FreeBSD-hackers list, I have
been able to create a diskless X terminal... The creation of the X terminal
required first creating a diskless system with minimal utilities mounted
via NFS. These same steps were used to create 2 seperate diskless systems.
via NFS. These same steps were used to create 2 separate diskless systems.
The first is 'altair.kcis.com'. A diskless X terminal that I run on my
old 386DX-40. It has a 340Meg hard disk but, I did not want to change it.
So, it boots from 'antares.kcis.com' across a ethernet. The second system

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@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
<!-- $Id: mh.sgml,v 1.2 1996-10-06 20:17:14 jfieber Exp $ -->
<!--
From matt@garply.com Wed May 22 08:25:18 1996
Date: Tue, 23 Jan 1996 11:02:50 -0600
@ -130,7 +131,7 @@ you have new email. <em/msgchk/ takes the same <tt/-host/ and
<label id="show"></>
<p>
<em/show/ is to show a letter in your current folder. Like inc,
<em/show/ is a fairly straightfoward command. If you just type
<em/show/ is a fairly straightforward command. If you just type
<em/show/ and hit return then it displays the current message. You can
also give specific message numbers to show:
<tscreen><verb>
@ -165,7 +166,7 @@ a <em/show/ it will display that message.
One useful option for scan is the <tt/-reverse/ option. This will list
your messages with the highest message number first and lowest message
number last. Another useful option with <em/scan/ is to to have it
number last. Another useful option with <em/scan/ is to have it
read from a file. If you want to scan your incoming mailbox on FreeBSD
without having to <em/inc/ it you can do <tt>scan -file
/var/mail/username</tt>. This can be used with any file that is in the
@ -260,7 +261,7 @@ displaying them is fairly intuitive and easy.
<sect>Folders and Mail Searching
<p>
Anybody who gets lots of email definately wants to be able to
Anybody who gets lots of email definitely wants to be able to
prioritize, stamp, brief, de-brief, and number their emails in a
variety of different ways. MH can do this better than just about
anything. One thing that we haven't really talked about is the concept

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@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
<!-- $Id: multios.sgml,v 1.2 1996-10-06 20:17:16 jfieber Exp $ -->
<!-- LinuxDoc file was created by LyX 0.8 (C) 1995 by Matthias Ettrich -->
<!-- Export filter v0.5 by Pascal Andre -->
@ -355,7 +356,7 @@ removed (well, pushed up to 8 Gigabytes anyway). If you have an LBA
BIOS, you can put FreeBSD or any OS anywhere you want and not hit the
1024 cylinder limit.
<P>To use my my 1.6 Gig Western Digital as an example again, it's
<P>To use my 1.6 Gig Western Digital as an example again, it's
physical geometry is:
<VERB>
(3148 cyl, 16 heads, 63 sectors/track, 512 bytes/sector)

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@ -1,4 +1,5 @@
<!DOCTYPE linuxdoc PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//DTD linuxdoc//EN">
<!-- $Id: newuser.sgml,v 1.2 1996-10-06 20:17:19 jfieber Exp $ -->
<article>
<title>For People New to Both FreeBSD <em>and</em> Unix
@ -113,7 +114,7 @@ Here are some commands and what they do:
the home directory of the person logged in---e.g.,
<tt>/usr/home/jack</tt>. Try <tt>cd /cdrom</tt>,
and then <tt>ls</tt>, to find out
if your cdrom is mounted and working.
if your CDROM is mounted and working.
<tag/<tt>view <em>filename</em></tt>/
Lets you look at a file (named <em>filename</em>
without changing
@ -380,7 +381,7 @@ find /usr -name "<em>filename</em>"
You can use <tt>*</tt> as a wildcard in <tt>"<em>filename</em>"</tt>
(which should be in quotes). If you tell find to search in
<tt>/</tt> instead of <tt>/usr</tt> it will look for the file(s)
on all mounted file systems, including the cdrom and the dos
on all mounted file systems, including the CDROM and the dos
partition.
An excellent book that explains Unix commands and utilities is
@ -399,7 +400,7 @@ great deal of information in the FreeBSD handbook (which is
probably on your hard drive) and <url
url="http://www.freebsd.org" name="FreeBSD's web site">. A wide
variety of packages and ports are on the <htmlurl
url="http://www.cdrom.com" name="Walnut Creek"> cdrom as well as
url="http://www.cdrom.com" name="Walnut Creek"> CDROM as well as
the web site. The handbook tells you more about how to use them
(get the package if it exists, with <tt>pkg_add
/cdrom/packages/All/<em>packagename</em></tt>, where
@ -424,7 +425,7 @@ cp -R /cdrom/ports/comm/kermit /usr/local
</tscreen>
This should result in a <tt>/usr/local/kermit</tt> subdirectory
that has all the files that the <tt>kermit</tt> subdirectory on
the cdrom has.
the CDROM has.
Next, check <tt>/cdrom/ports/distfiles</tt> for a file with a name
that indicates it's the port you want. Copy that file to
@ -473,7 +474,7 @@ slash.)
You might want to get the most recent version of Netscape from their
<url url="ftp://ftp.netscape.com" name="ftp site">. (Netscape
requires the X window sytem.) The version you want is the "unknown
requires the X Window System.) The version you want is the "unknown
bsd" version. Just use <tt>gunzip <em>filename</em></tt> and <tt>tar
xvf <em>filename</em></tt> on it, move the binary to
<tt>/usr/local/bin</tt> or some other place binaries are kept,
@ -488,7 +489,7 @@ This assumes that the file <tt>XKeysymDB</tt> and the directory
<tt>nls</tt> are in
<tt>/usr/X11R6/lib/X11</tt>; if they're not, find them and put them there.
If you originally got Netscape as a port using the cdrom (or ftp),
If you originally got Netscape as a port using the CDROM (or ftp),
don't replace <tt>/usr/local/bin/netscape</tt> with the new netscape binary;
this is just a shell script that sets up the environmental variables
for you. Instead rename the new binary to <tt>netscape.bin</tt> and replace the
@ -499,12 +500,12 @@ binary, which is <tt>/usr/local/lib/netscape/netscape.bin</tt>.
<!-- ************************************************************ -->
<sect>Other
<p>As root, you can dismount the cdrom with <tt>/sbin/umount
<p>As root, you can dismount the CDROM with <tt>/sbin/umount
/cdrom</tt>, take it out of the drive, insert another one, and
mount it with <tt>/sbin/mount_cd9660 /dev/cd0a /cdrom</tt>
assuming <tt>cd0a</tt> is the device name for your cdrom drive.
assuming <tt>cd0a</tt> is the device name for your CDROM drive.
Using the live file system---the second of FreeBSD's cdrom disks---is
Using the live file system---the second of FreeBSD's CDROM disks---is
useful if you've got limited space. You might try using
<tt>emacs</tt> or playing games from the cdrom. This involves using
<tt>lndir</tt>, which gets installed with the X Window System, to tell the

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@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
++
++ Copyright Eric L. Hernes - Wednesday, August 2, 1995
++
++ $Id: ddwg.sgml,v 1.1.1.1 1996-09-24 17:45:58 jfieber Exp $
++ $Id: ddwg.sgml,v 1.2 1996-10-06 20:17:08 jfieber Exp $
++
++ Sgml doc for something
-->
@ -435,7 +435,7 @@ These are typically named something like ioctl_dev.h or devio.h.
If a driver is being written which, from user space is
identical to a device which already exists, care should be taken to
use the same ioctl interface and data structures. For example, from
user space, a SCSI cdrom drive should be identical to an IDE cdrom
user space, a SCSI CDROM drive should be identical to an IDE cdrom
drive; or a serial line on an intelligent multiport card (Digiboard,
Cyclades, ...) should be identical to the sio devices. These devices
have a fairly well defined interface which should be used.