PERFORCE change 174489 for review

Rene Ladan rene at FreeBSD.org
Mon Feb 8 20:48:00 UTC 2010


http://p4web.freebsd.org/chv.cgi?CH=174489

Change 174489 by rene at rene_self on 2010/02/08 20:47:00

	IFC

Affected files ...

.. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/contributors/contrib.additional.sgml#49 integrate
.. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/contributors/contrib.committers.sgml#37 integrate
.. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/contributors/contrib.develalumni.sgml#6 integrate
.. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/eresources/chapter.sgml#15 integrate
.. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/linuxemu/chapter.sgml#6 integrate
.. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/en_US.ISO8859-1/captions/2009/dcbsdcon/bejtlich-networksecurity.sbv#2 integrate
.. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/en_US.ISO8859-1/share/sgml/authors.ent#30 integrate
.. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/en_US.ISO8859-1/share/sgml/mailing-lists.ent#12 integrate
.. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/nl_NL.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/virtualization/chapter.sgml#18 integrate
.. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/share/pgpkeys/bschmidt.key#1 branch
.. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/share/pgpkeys/pgpkeys-developers.sgml#32 integrate
.. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/share/pgpkeys/pgpkeys.ent#29 integrate
.. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/www/en/developers.sgml#30 integrate
.. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/www/en/donations/donors.sgml#25 integrate
.. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/www/en/releng/index.sgml#31 integrate
.. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/www/en/security/security.sgml#9 integrate
.. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/www/share/sgml/commercial.consult.xml#17 integrate
.. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/www/share/sgml/commercial.hardware.xml#4 integrate
.. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/www/share/sgml/commercial.isp.xml#15 integrate
.. //depot/projects/docproj_nl/www/share/sgml/news.xml#66 integrate

Differences ...

==== //depot/projects/docproj_nl/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/contributors/contrib.additional.sgml#49 (text+ko) ====

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-<!-- $FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/contributors/contrib.additional.sgml,v 1.899 2010/01/30 17:03:59 manolis Exp $ -->
+<!-- $FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/contributors/contrib.additional.sgml,v 1.900 2010/02/04 02:52:35 tabthorpe Exp $ -->
 <!--
 	NOTE TO COMMITTERS: Contributors lists are sorted in alphabetical
 	order by first name.
@@ -2075,6 +2075,11 @@
     </listitem>
 
     <listitem>
+      <para>Darren Pilgrim
+	<email>ports.maintainer at evilphi.com</email></para>
+    </listitem>
+
+    <listitem>
       <para>Dave Adkins
 	<email>adkin003 at tc.umn.edu</email></para>
     </listitem>

==== //depot/projects/docproj_nl/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/contributors/contrib.committers.sgml#37 (text+ko) ====

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-<!-- $FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/contributors/contrib.committers.sgml,v 1.283 2010/02/01 06:07:40 linimon Exp $ -->
+<!-- $FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/contributors/contrib.committers.sgml,v 1.285 2010/02/06 18:08:09 bschmidt Exp $ -->
 <!--
 	NOTE TO NEW COMMITTERS: Core and committers lists are sorted in
 	alphabetical order by last name. Please keep in mind that fact while
@@ -163,10 +163,6 @@
     </listitem>
 
     <listitem>
-      <para>&a.brucec;</para>
-    </listitem>
-
-    <listitem>
       <para>&a.brueffer;</para>
     </listitem>
 
@@ -211,11 +207,11 @@
     </listitem>
 
     <listitem>
-      <para>&a.dchagin;</para>
+      <para>&a.adrian;</para>
     </listitem>
 
     <listitem>
-      <para>&a.adrian;</para>
+      <para>&a.dchagin;</para>
     </listitem>
 
     <listitem>
@@ -271,6 +267,10 @@
     </listitem>
 
     <listitem>
+      <para>&a.brucec;</para>
+    </listitem>
+
+    <listitem>
       <para>&a.joel;</para>
     </listitem>
 
@@ -647,11 +647,11 @@
     </listitem>
 
     <listitem>
-      <para>&a.skreuzer;</para>
+      <para>&a.keramida;</para>
     </listitem>
 
     <listitem>
-      <para>&a.keramida;</para>
+      <para>&a.fjoe;</para>
     </listitem>
 
     <listitem>
@@ -663,10 +663,6 @@
     </listitem>
 
     <listitem>
-      <para>&a.fjoe;</para>
-    </listitem>
-
-    <listitem>
       <para>&a.jkim;</para>
     </listitem>
 
@@ -707,6 +703,10 @@
     </listitem>
 
     <listitem>
+      <para>&a.skreuzer;</para>
+    </listitem>
+
+    <listitem>
       <para>&a.gabor;</para>
     </listitem>
 
@@ -886,9 +886,9 @@
       <para>&a.rmacklem;</para>
     </listitem>
 
-     <listitem>
+    <listitem>
       <para>&a.kmacy;</para>
-     </listitem>
+    </listitem>
 
     <listitem>
       <para>&a.bmah;</para>
@@ -985,7 +985,7 @@
     <listitem>
       <para>&a.marcel;</para>
     </listitem>
-    
+
     <listitem>
       <para>&a.kmoore;</para>
     </listitem>
@@ -1275,6 +1275,10 @@
     </listitem>
 
     <listitem>
+      <para>&a.bschmidt;</para>
+    </listitem>
+
+    <listitem>
       <para>&a.sos;</para>
     </listitem>
 
@@ -1335,10 +1339,6 @@
     </listitem>
 
     <listitem>
-      <para>&a.sylvio;</para>
-    </listitem>
-
-    <listitem>
       <para>&a.syrinx;</para>
     </listitem>
 
@@ -1479,6 +1479,10 @@
     </listitem>
 
     <listitem>
+      <para>&a.sylvio;</para>
+    </listitem>
+
+    <listitem>
       <para>&a.itetcu;</para>
     </listitem>
 
@@ -1615,10 +1619,6 @@
     </listitem>
 
     <listitem>
-      <para>&a.wen;</para>
-    </listitem>
-
-    <listitem>
       <para>&a.twinterg;</para>
     </listitem>
 

==== //depot/projects/docproj_nl/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/contributors/contrib.develalumni.sgml#6 (text+ko) ====

@@ -1,7 +1,11 @@
-<!-- $FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/contributors/contrib.develalumni.sgml,v 1.57 2009/11/30 20:24:40 wilko Exp $ -->
+<!-- $FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/contributors/contrib.develalumni.sgml,v 1.58 2010/02/04 06:32:18 uqs Exp $ -->
 
   <itemizedlist>
     <listitem>
+      <para>&a.bmah; ( - 2009)</para>
+    </listitem>
+
+    <listitem>
       <para>&a.koitsu; (2006 - 2008)</para>
     </listitem>
 
@@ -708,10 +712,6 @@
     <listitem>
       <para>Andrew L. Moore (1993 - 1995)</para>
     </listitem>
-
-    <listitem>
-      <para>Bruce A. Mah ( - 2009)</para>
-    </listitem>
   </itemizedlist>
 
 <!--

==== //depot/projects/docproj_nl/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/eresources/chapter.sgml#15 (text+ko) ====

@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 <!--
      The FreeBSD Documentation Project
 
-     $FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/eresources/chapter.sgml,v 1.199 2009/06/08 16:56:16 bcr Exp $
+     $FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/eresources/chapter.sgml,v 1.200 2010/02/04 03:41:31 tabthorpe Exp $
 -->
 
 <appendix id="eresources">
@@ -720,6 +720,13 @@
 	    </row>
 
 	    <row>
+	      <entry>&a.svn-src-stable-8.name;</entry>
+	      <entry><filename>/usr/src</filename></entry>
+	      <entry>All changes to the <filename>stable/8</filename>
+		branch of the src Subversion repository</entry>
+	    </row>
+
+	    <row>
 	      <entry>&a.svn-src-stable-other.name;</entry>
 	      <entry><filename>/usr/src</filename></entry>
 	      <entry>All changes to the

==== //depot/projects/docproj_nl/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/linuxemu/chapter.sgml#6 (text+ko) ====

@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 <!--
      The FreeBSD Documentation Project
 
-     $FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/linuxemu/chapter.sgml,v 1.139 2009/08/31 18:02:32 bsam Exp $
+     $FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/linuxemu/chapter.sgml,v 1.140 2010/02/04 11:30:11 jkois Exp $
 -->
 
 <chapter id="linuxemu">
@@ -314,7 +314,7 @@
 Abort</screen>
 
       <para>To help the FreeBSD kernel distinguish between a FreeBSD ELF
-	binary from a Linux binary, use the &man.brandelf.1;
+	binary and a Linux binary, use the &man.brandelf.1;
 	utility.</para>
 
       <screen>&prompt.user; <userinput>brandelf -t Linux my-linux-elf-binary</userinput></screen>

==== //depot/projects/docproj_nl/en_US.ISO8859-1/captions/2009/dcbsdcon/bejtlich-networksecurity.sbv#2 (text+ko) ====

@@ -87,7 +87,7 @@
 the last year it’s been an exciting ride
 
 0:01:22.110,0:01:25.230
-the ads general electric we get three hundred thousand users
+the ads General Electric we get three hundred thousand users
 
 0:01:25.230,0:01:28.360
 um just a few security issues as you might
@@ -137,11 +137,11 @@
 
 0:01:56.320,0:01:59.179
 what I’m going to describe isn’t exactly what I do
-with general electric
+with General Electric
 
 0:01:59.179,0:02:02.390
-or at least it's not officially what I do at general
-electric
+or at least it's not officially what I do at General
+Electric
 
 0:02:02.390,0:02:06.950
 but you can imagine that I just don’t come up with
@@ -234,7 +234,7 @@
 how’s your blood pressure
 
 0:03:25.719,0:03:27.940
-well it’s under one hundred and twenty over eighty
+well it’s under 120 over 80
 
 0:03:27.940,0:03:29.659
 that's sort of one data point
@@ -393,13 +393,13 @@
 on a peer-to-peer network somewhere
 
 0:05:22.669,0:05:25.949
-that's that's an ouput that means you had a failure somewhere
+that's an ouput that means you had a failure somewhere
 
 0:05:25.949,0:05:28.069
 do you have a system or network that’s unavailable
 
 0:05:28.069,0:05:29.720
-due to a Ddos attack
+due to a DDoS attack
 
 0:05:29.720,0:05:31.060
 these are all outputs so
@@ -412,7 +412,7 @@
 these can influence these
 
 0:05:36.459,0:05:40.539
-these are the things that I I care about
+these are the things that I care about
 
 0:05:40.539,0:05:44.129
 and just to step a
@@ -442,8 +442,8 @@
 lots of discussions about
 
 0:06:01.030,0:06:05.289
-you made this change and you get a five percent difference
-or you made this change and you get a ten percent difference
+you made this change and you get a 5% difference
+or you made this change and you get a 10% difference
 
 0:06:05.289,0:06:07.019
 none of that happens in security 
@@ -606,7 +606,7 @@
 I in relation to where the bad guys are
 
 0:07:57.409,0:08:02.359
-then you make a decision like okay is there’s a bad guy
+then you make a decision like okay there’s a bad guy
 I better roll over and shoot it down
 
 0:08:02.359,0:08:04.269
@@ -663,7 +663,7 @@
 of security period
 
 0:08:45.120,0:08:49.830
-my aplogies to my European friends this
+my apologies to my European friends this
 is the football poll security
 
 0:08:49.830,0:08:54.710
@@ -701,20 +701,20 @@
 something different
 
 0:09:15.680,0:09:19.650
-and I first started thinking about this in 2000 2001
+and I first started thinking about this in 2000-2001
 
 0:09:19.650,0:09:21.800
 where there were some guys in Finland
 
 0:09:21.800,0:09:27.060
-who did this huge innumeration they were doing some of the
+who did this huge enumeration they were doing some of the
 first fuzzing work against SMTP
 
 0:09:27.060,0:09:27.849
-it was called the 
+it was called 
 
 0:09:27.849,0:09:29.000
-protos toolkit
+The Protos Toolkit
 
 0:09:29.000,0:09:32.140
 and they did all this work in and they found that
@@ -779,7 +779,7 @@
 their rights and their privacy
 
 0:10:13.750,0:10:15.100
-and meanwhie you got like
+and meanwhile you got like
 
 0:10:15.100,0:10:16.899
 Romanians and Russians and Chinese and
@@ -893,7 +893,7 @@
 don’t complain
 
 0:11:49.920,0:11:50.850
-So anwyay wow
+So anyway wow
 
 0:11:50.850,0:11:51.909
 that came out of nowhere
@@ -974,13 +974,13 @@
 I apply some instrumentation
 
 0:12:41.280,0:12:43.620
-and then I collect analyse and escalate
+and then I collect analyze and escalate
 
 0:12:43.620,0:12:46.000
 %uh collect meaning I get the information
 
 0:12:46.000,0:12:48.420
-analyse I look at it figure out what it means
+analyze I look at it figure out what it means
 
 0:12:48.420,0:12:48.889
 escalate
@@ -1125,7 +1125,7 @@
 
 0:14:38.570,0:14:42.620
 that's like trying to make things more secure
-have been trying to do that for like twenty years
+have been trying to do that for like 20 years
 
 0:14:42.620,0:14:44.240
 it just doesn't work
@@ -1199,7 +1199,7 @@
 blog
 
 0:15:40.870,0:15:44.800
-and %uh he's he's a fellow employee with
+and %uh he's a fellow employee with
 me is that we always considering this because
 
 0:15:44.800,0:15:45.380
@@ -1218,7 +1218,7 @@
 is an SSL encrypted pipe
 
 0:15:53.530,0:15:58.430
-%um it doesn't help me too much to inpsect it at the
+%um it doesn't help me too much to inspect it at the
 network level right
 
 0:15:58.430,0:16:00.129
@@ -1232,10 +1232,10 @@
 
 0:16:04.650,0:16:10.110
 try getting good logs out of any of the cloud buyers
-it is absolutely horrible they they don't
+it is absolutely horrible they don't
 
 0:16:10.110,0:16:14.150
-they don't want to store them they don't want
+want to store them they don't want
 to provide you the data in any format that’s useful
 
 0:16:14.150,0:16:17.710
@@ -1268,7 +1268,7 @@
 so forth
 
 0:16:36.600,0:16:38.400
-virtualisation is obviously an issue
+virtualization is obviously an issue
 
 0:16:38.400,0:16:40.100
 %um if you think about
@@ -1318,7 +1318,7 @@
 I mean it could be
 
 0:17:09.490,0:17:11.390
-somewhere else in the united states obviously but for
+somewhere else in the United States obviously but for
 
 0:17:11.390,0:17:14.449
 the most part like if someone were to compromise
@@ -1512,10 +1512,10 @@
 the first network based IDS that taught
 
 0:19:33.490,0:19:35.400
-he wrote it in UC Davis in ‘89
+he wrote it in UC Davis in 1989
 
 0:19:35.400,0:19:39.520
-so this is wow that’s twenty years I feel
+so this is wow that’s 20 years I feel
 freaking old right now
 
 0:19:39.520,0:19:39.979
@@ -1540,7 +1540,7 @@
 
 0:19:50.470,0:19:56.750
 and they call them network forensic appliances
-and they charge you fifty thousand dollars
+and they charge you 50,000 dollars
 
 0:19:56.750,0:20:02.110
 for the enterprise that’s right
@@ -1578,7 +1578,7 @@
 so I learned from people who invented this stuff
 
 0:20:27.480,0:20:30.779
-you know wow that's like fifteen years ago
+you know wow that's like 15 years ago
 
 0:20:30.779,0:20:35.279
 alright so why network censors
@@ -1752,13 +1752,13 @@
 you're not surfing
 
 0:23:03.019,0:23:06.370
-MySpace on your Windows server
+MySpace on your Windows Server
 
 0:23:06.370,0:23:08.070
-right well you’re not on a Windows server
+right well you’re not on a Windows Server
 
 0:23:08.070,0:23:13.590
-but well you can admin on a Windows server
+but well you can admin on a Windows Server
 but you know what I mean
 
 0:23:13.590,0:23:16.710
@@ -1872,7 +1872,7 @@
 what a user platform is telling me
 
 0:24:35.180,0:24:35.980
-so if I’m
+so
 
 0:24:35.980,0:24:37.799
 if I’m on a user platform
@@ -1897,7 +1897,7 @@
 so this is why I like
 
 0:24:51.120,0:24:54.020
-to itroduce these sorts of devices
+to introduce these sorts of devices
 
 0:24:54.020,0:24:55.070
 let me talk a little bit
@@ -2075,7 +2075,7 @@
 is not an Intel system
 
 0:27:04.310,0:27:06.940
-it's a Mac mini
+it's a Mac Mini
 
 0:27:06.940,0:27:08.550
 and it’s running Debian on top
@@ -2348,7 +2348,7 @@
 
 0:31:06.470,0:31:11.210
 he did a concert once actually he didn't
-do a concert he attended somebody else’s concert
+do a concert he attended somebody's else concert
 
 0:31:11.210,0:31:15.190
 and I don't know who it was like Johnny Cash or something
@@ -2419,8 +2419,8 @@
 right at this point he’s got two options he can either ignore it
 
 0:32:05.940,0:32:10.240
-or he can satisfy his fifteen minute SOA that his customer
-pays three thousand dollars a month 
+or he can satisfy his 15 minute SOA that his customer
+pays $3,000 a month 
 
 0:32:10.240,0:32:10.860
 for
@@ -2543,10 +2543,10 @@
 intruders in China
 
 0:33:39.509,0:33:41.049
-who had writtten their own
+who had written their own
 
 0:33:41.049,0:33:44.010
-virtualisation platform on top of Solaris
+virtualization platform on top of Solaris
 
 0:33:44.010,0:33:46.159
 who were doing stuff we were like holy cow
@@ -2755,7 +2755,7 @@
 
 0:36:20.819,0:36:23.099
 yes I’m an ISP what happens when I get stuff from
-Massachussetts or California and they’re going you can’t do that
+Massachusetts or California and they’re going you can’t do that
 
 0:36:27.329,0:36:28.269
 yes okay so there’s two things 
@@ -2855,7 +2855,7 @@
 you could literally walk out of here
 
 0:37:48.249,0:37:50.619
-go into the freeBSD ports tree find a SGUIL ports
+go into the FreeBSD ports tree find a SGUIL ports
 
 0:37:52.119,0:37:54.840
 do your make I mean the ports are a little ugh
@@ -3029,7 +3029,7 @@
 where the result was
 
 0:40:14.779,0:40:16.179
-UID zero
+UID 0
 
 0:40:16.179,0:40:19.529
 is that good or is that bad I mean you’d probably say that sounds bad 
@@ -3271,7 +3271,7 @@
 
 0:43:29.130,0:43:33.189
 can we release so we're trying to work
-out those I think it'll be resolved postively
+out those I think it'll be resolved positively
 
 0:43:33.189,0:43:35.119
 because we're GE’s actually fairly pro-open-source
@@ -3456,10 +3456,10 @@
 so whereas
 
 0:46:24.309,0:46:26.510
-five years ago it might have been like ninety percent
+five years ago it might have been like 90%
 
 0:46:26.510,0:46:28.619
-these days it's like twenty five percent
+these days it's like 25%
 
 0:46:28.619,0:46:35.619
 so they probably can pull in a certain percentage
@@ -3496,8 +3496,8 @@
 my last budget
 
 0:47:11.769,0:47:15.319
-I could only spend about twenty five hundred
-to three grand per sensor
+I could only spend about 2,500
+to 3,000 per sensor
 
 0:47:15.319,0:47:18.949
 which limited me to about one to
@@ -3700,7 +3700,7 @@
 and the reason I do this approach is because it’s cheap
 
 0:50:10.190,0:50:14.099
-you know twenty five hundred dollar commodity hardware 
+you know twenty $500 commodity hardware 
 open source software
 
 0:50:14.099,0:50:15.820
@@ -3771,7 +3771,7 @@
 as far as FreeBSD goes specifically
 
 0:51:10.930,0:51:14.229
-there’s som like minor things that make my
+there’s some like minor things that make my
 life better
 
 0:51:14.229,0:51:18.349
@@ -3814,7 +3814,7 @@
 you can track performance with the what was it
 
 0:51:40.109,0:51:41.609
-net stat dash B
+netstat -B
 
 0:51:41.609,0:51:42.400
 capital B
@@ -4213,14 +4213,14 @@
 California he's using the UUnet
 
 0:57:35.449,0:57:38.170
-the Uunet blocker however they’re signing they’re signing
+the UUnet blocker however they’re signing they’re signing
 the IPs
 
 0:57:38.170,0:57:41.390
-it's just all over the place we're blocking Uunet
+it's just all over the place we're blocking UUnet
 
 0:57:41.390,0:57:43.799
-all of Uunet to the air force
+all of UUnet to the air force
 
 0:57:43.799,0:57:44.790
 so
@@ -4343,7 +4343,7 @@
 one you’re researcher or two you have a lot of time on your hands
 
 0:59:32.119,0:59:36.039
-because I have like a network of three hundred thousand
+because I have like a network of 300,000
 honey pots
 
 0:59:36.039,0:59:38.479

==== //depot/projects/docproj_nl/en_US.ISO8859-1/share/sgml/authors.ent#30 (text+ko) ====

@@ -13,7 +13,7 @@
                  builds for the other languages, and we will poke fun of you
                  in public.
 
-     $FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/share/sgml/authors.ent,v 1.496 2010/01/28 14:55:44 uqs Exp $
+     $FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/share/sgml/authors.ent,v 1.497 2010/02/06 18:08:09 bschmidt Exp $
 -->
 
 <!ENTITY a.aaron "Aaron Dalton <email>aaron at FreeBSD.org</email>">
@@ -160,6 +160,8 @@
 
 <!ENTITY a.bsam "Boris Samorodov <email>bsam at FreeBSD.org</email>">
 
+<!ENTITY a.bschmidt "Bernhard Schmidt <email>bschmidt at FreeBSD.org</email>">
+
 <!ENTITY a.bsd "Brian S. Dean <email>bsd at FreeBSD.org</email>">
 
 <!ENTITY a.bushman "Michael Bushkov <email>bushman at FreeBSD.org</email>">

==== //depot/projects/docproj_nl/en_US.ISO8859-1/share/sgml/mailing-lists.ent#12 (text+ko) ====

@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 <!--
      Names of FreeBSD mailing lists and related software.
 
-     $FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/share/sgml/mailing-lists.ent,v 1.68 2009/04/22 13:32:44 pgj Exp $
+     $FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/share/sgml/mailing-lists.ent,v 1.69 2010/02/04 03:41:31 tabthorpe Exp $
 -->
 
 <!ENTITY a.mailman.listinfo "http://lists.FreeBSD.org/mailman/listinfo">
@@ -435,6 +435,10 @@
 <!ENTITY a.svn-src-stable-7 "<ulink url='&a.svn-src-stable-7.url;'>SVN commit messages for only the 7-stable src tree</ulink>">
 <!ENTITY a.svn-src-stable-7.name "<ulink url='&a.svn-src-stable-7.url;'>svn-src-stable-7</ulink>">
 
+<!ENTITY a.svn-src-stable-8.url "&a.mailman.listinfo;/svn-src-stable-8">
+<!ENTITY a.svn-src-stable-8 "<ulink url='&a.svn-src-stable-8.url;'>SVN commit messages for only the 8-stable src tree</ulink>">
+<!ENTITY a.svn-src-stable-8.name "<ulink url='&a.svn-src-stable-8.url;'>svn-src-stable-8</ulink>">
+
 <!ENTITY a.svn-src-stable-other.url "&a.mailman.listinfo;/svn-src-stable-other">
 <!ENTITY a.svn-src-stable-other "<ulink url='&a.svn-src-stable-other.url;'>SVN commit messages for the old stable src trees</ulink>">
 <!ENTITY a.svn-src-stable-other.name "<ulink url='&a.svn-src-stable-other.url;'>svn-src-stable-other</ulink>">

==== //depot/projects/docproj_nl/nl_NL.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/virtualization/chapter.sgml#18 (text+ko) ====

@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 <!--
      The FreeBSD Documentation Project
 
-     $FreeBSD: doc/nl_NL.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/virtualization/chapter.sgml,v 1.8 2009/11/17 22:36:13 rene Exp $
+     $FreeBSD: doc/nl_NL.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/virtualization/chapter.sgml,v 1.9 2010/02/03 22:04:14 rene Exp $
 
      %SOURCE%	en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/virtualization/chapter.sgml
      %SRCID%	1.23

==== //depot/projects/docproj_nl/share/pgpkeys/pgpkeys-developers.sgml#32 (text+ko) ====

@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 <!--
      The FreeBSD Documentation Project
 
-     $FreeBSD: doc/share/pgpkeys/pgpkeys-developers.sgml,v 1.116 2010/01/29 14:47:04 brucec Exp $
+     $FreeBSD: doc/share/pgpkeys/pgpkeys-developers.sgml,v 1.118 2010/02/06 18:08:09 bschmidt Exp $
 -->
 
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-ariff">
@@ -9,6 +9,11 @@
       &pgpkey.ariff;
     </sect2>
 
+    <sect2 id="pgpkey-tabthorpe">
+      <title>&a.tabthorpe;</title>
+      &pgpkey.tabthorpe;
+    </sect2>
+
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-shaun">
       <title>&a.shaun;</title>
       &pgpkey.shaun;
@@ -34,9 +39,9 @@
       &pgpkey.anholt;
     </sect2>
 
-    <sect2 id="pgpkey-mat">
-      <title>&a.mat;</title>
-      &pgpkey.mat;
+    <sect2 id="pgpkey-mva">
+      <title>&a.mva;</title>
+      &pgpkey.mva;
     </sect2>
 
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-araujo">
@@ -44,6 +49,11 @@
       &pgpkey.araujo;
     </sect2>
 
+    <sect2 id="pgpkey-mat">
+      <title>&a.mat;</title>
+      &pgpkey.mat;
+    </sect2>
+
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-asami">
       <title>&a.asami;</title>
       &pgpkey.asami;
@@ -84,16 +94,6 @@
       &pgpkey.dougb;
     </sect2>
 
-    <sect2 id="pgpkey-bvs">
-      <title>&a.bvs;</title>
-      &pgpkey.bvs;
-    </sect2>
-
-    <sect2 id="pgpkey-garga">
-      <title>&a.garga;</title>
-      &pgpkey.garga;
-    </sect2>
-
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-kib">
       <title>&a.kib;</title>
       &pgpkey.kib;
@@ -119,17 +119,27 @@
       &pgpkey.mbr;
     </sect2>
 
+    <sect2 id="pgpkey-bvs">
+      <title>&a.bvs;</title>
+      &pgpkey.bvs;
+    </sect2>
+
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-novel">
       <title>&a.novel;</title>
       &pgpkey.novel;
     </sect2>
 
+    <sect2 id="pgpkey-garga">
+      <title>&a.garga;</title>
+      &pgpkey.garga;
+    </sect2>
+
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-alexbl">
       <title>&a.alexbl;</title>
       &pgpkey.alexbl;
     </sect2>
 
-    <sect2 id="pgpkey-hart">
+    <sect2 id="pgpkey-harti">
       <title>&a.harti;</title>
       &pgpkey.harti;
     </sect2>
@@ -144,6 +154,11 @@
       &pgpkey.makc;
     </sect2>
 
+    <sect2 id="pgpkey-jmb">
+      <title>&a.jmb;</title>
+      &pgpkey.jmb;
+    </sect2>
+
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-antoine">
       <title>&a.antoine;</title>
       &pgpkey.antoine;
@@ -154,16 +169,6 @@
       &pgpkey.db;
     </sect2>
 
-    <sect2 id="pgpkey-jmb">
-      <title>&a.jmb;</title>
-      &pgpkey.jmb;
-    </sect2>
-
-    <sect2 id="pgpkey-brucec">
-      <title>&a.brucec;</title>
-      &pgpkey.brucec;
-    </sect2>
-
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-brueffer">
       <title>&a.brueffer;</title>
       &pgpkey.brueffer;
@@ -206,6 +211,11 @@
     </sect2>
 -->
 
+    <sect2 id="pgpkey-dchagin">
+      <title>&a.dchagin;</title>
+      &pgpkey.dchagin;
+    </sect2>
+
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-perky">
       <title>&a.perky;</title>
       &pgpkey.perky;
@@ -255,12 +265,17 @@
       <title>&a.nik;</title>
       &pgpkey.nik;
     </sect2>
- 
+
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-benjsc">
       <title>&a.benjsc;</title>
       &pgpkey.benjsc;
     </sect2>
 
+    <sect2 id="pgpkey-brucec">
+      <title>&a.brucec;</title>
+      &pgpkey.brucec;
+    </sect2>
+
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-aaron">
       <title>&a.aaron;</title>
       &pgpkey.aaron;
@@ -376,16 +391,6 @@
       &pgpkey.lioux;
     </sect2>
 
-    <sect2 id="pgpkey-lippe">
-      <title>&a.lippe;</title>
-      &pgpkey.lippe;
-    </sect2>
-
-    <sect2 id="pgpkey-fabient">
-      <title>&a.fabient;</title>
-      &pgpkey.fabient;
-    </sect2>
-
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-fanf">
       <title>&a.fanf;</title>
       &pgpkey.fanf;
@@ -466,6 +471,11 @@
       &pgpkey.dhartmei;
     </sect2>
 
+    <sect2 id="pgpkey-ehaupt">
+      <title>&a.ehaupt;</title>
+      &pgpkey.ehaupt;
+    </sect2>
+
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-jhay">
       <title>&a.jhay;</title>
       &pgpkey.jhay;
@@ -506,6 +516,11 @@
       &pgpkey.mux;
     </sect2>
 
+    <sect2 id="pgpkey-dhn">
+      <title>&a.dhn;</title>
+      &pgpkey.dhn;
+    </sect2>
+
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-pho">
       <title>&a.pho;</title>
       &pgpkey.pho;
@@ -537,8 +552,8 @@
     </sect2>
 
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-versus">
-	<title>&a.versus;</title>
-	&pgpkey.versus;
+      <title>&a.versus;</title>
+      &pgpkey.versus;
     </sect2>
 
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-weongyo">
@@ -546,6 +561,11 @@
       &pgpkey.weongyo;
     </sect2>
 
+    <sect2 id="pgpkey-jinmei">
+      <title>&a.jinmei;</title>
+      &pgpkey.jinmei;
+    </sect2>
+
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-ahze">
       <title>&a.ahze;</title>
       &pgpkey.ahze;
@@ -581,11 +601,6 @@
       &pgpkey.kris;
     </sect2>
 
-    <sect2 id="pgpkey-skreuzer">
-      <title>&a.skreuzer;</title>
-      &pgpkey.skreuzer;
-    </sect2>
-
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-fjoe">
       <title>&a.fjoe;</title>
       &pgpkey.fjoe;
@@ -617,8 +632,8 @@
     </sect2>
 
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-maxim">
-       <title>&a.maxim;</title>
-       &pgpkey.maxim;
+      <title>&a.maxim;</title>
+      &pgpkey.maxim;
     </sect2>
 
     <sect2 id="pgpkey-jkoshy">
@@ -631,6 +646,11 @@
       &pgpkey.wkoszek;
     </sect2>
 

>>> TRUNCATED FOR MAIL (1000 lines) <<<


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