svn commit: r41183 - head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/basics
Giorgos Keramidas
keramida at FreeBSD.org
Tue Mar 12 18:47:39 UTC 2013
Author: keramida
Date: Tue Mar 12 18:47:38 2013
New Revision: 41183
URL: http://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/doc/41183
Log:
Whitespace only change. Translators can ignore this.
Rewrap lines after the class='directory' attributes
pushed some of the text over the 70-column boundary.
Modified:
head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/basics/chapter.xml
Modified: head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/basics/chapter.xml
==============================================================================
--- head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/basics/chapter.xml Tue Mar 12 18:44:34 2013 (r41182)
+++ head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/basics/chapter.xml Tue Mar 12 18:47:38 2013 (r41183)
@@ -961,13 +961,16 @@ root 5211 0.0 0.2 3620 1724 2
class="directory">/usr/local/</filename></entry>
<entry>Local executables and libraries. Also used as
the default destination for the &os; ports
- framework. Within <filename class="directory">/usr/local</filename>,
- the general layout sketched out by &man.hier.7; for
- <filename class="directory">/usr</filename> should be used. Exceptions
- are the man directory, which is directly under
- <filename class="directory">/usr/local</filename> rather than under
- <filename class="directory">/usr/local/share</filename>, and the ports
- documentation is in
+ framework. Within
+ <filename class="directory">/usr/local</filename>, the
+ general layout sketched out by &man.hier.7; for
+ <filename class="directory">/usr</filename> should be
+ used. Exceptions are the man directory, which is
+ directly under
+ <filename class="directory">/usr/local</filename>
+ rather than under
+ <filename class="directory">/usr/local/share</filename>,
+ and the ports documentation is in
<filename class="directory">share/doc/<replaceable>port</replaceable></filename>.</entry>
</row>
@@ -975,7 +978,8 @@ root 5211 0.0 0.2 3620 1724 2
<entry><filename
class="directory">/usr/obj/</filename></entry>
<entry>Architecture-specific target tree produced by
- building the <filename class="directory">/usr/src</filename>
+ building the
+ <filename class="directory">/usr/src</filename>
tree.</entry>
</row>
@@ -1076,8 +1080,8 @@ root 5211 0.0 0.2 3620 1724 2
<literal>/</literal>, followed by any other directory names that
are necessary. For example, if the directory
<filename class="directory">foo</filename> contains a directory
- <filename class="directory">bar</filename> which contains the file
- <filename>readme.txt</filename>, the full name, or
+ <filename class="directory">bar</filename> which contains the
+ file <filename>readme.txt</filename>, the full name, or
<firstterm>path</firstterm>, to the file is
<filename>foo/bar/readme.txt</filename>. Note that this is
different from &windows; which uses
@@ -1152,8 +1156,10 @@ root 5211 0.0 0.2 3620 1724 2
<para>Any files that are in the <literal>B1</literal> or
<literal>B2</literal> directories can be reached with the path
- <filename class="directory">/A1/B1</filename> or <filename class="directory">/A1/B2</filename> as
- necessary. Any files that were in <filename class="directory">/A1</filename> have
+ <filename class="directory">/A1/B1</filename> or
+ <filename class="directory">/A1/B2</filename> as
+ necessary. Any files that were in
+ <filename class="directory">/A1</filename> have
been temporarily hidden. They will reappear if
<literal>B</literal> is <firstterm>unmounted</firstterm> from
<literal>A</literal>.</para>
@@ -1180,8 +1186,10 @@ root 5211 0.0 0.2 3620 1724 2
</textobject>
</mediaobject>
- <para>and the paths would be <filename class="directory">/A2/B1</filename> and
- <filename class="directory">/A2/B2</filename> respectively.</para>
+ <para>and the paths would be
+ <filename class="directory">/A2/B1</filename> and
+ <filename class="directory">/A2/B2</filename>
+ respectively.</para>
<para>File systems can be mounted on top of one another.
Continuing the last example, the <literal>C</literal> file
@@ -1257,9 +1265,9 @@ root 5211 0.0 0.2 3620 1724 2
file system can be mounted read-only, making it impossible
for users to inadvertently delete or edit a critical file.
Separating user-writable file systems, such as
- <filename class="directory">/home</filename>, from other file systems allows
- them to be mounted <firstterm>nosuid</firstterm>. This
- option prevents the
+ <filename class="directory">/home</filename>, from other
+ file systems allows them to be mounted
+ <firstterm>nosuid</firstterm>. This option prevents the
<firstterm>suid</firstterm>/<firstterm>guid</firstterm> bits
on executables stored on the file system from taking effect,
possibly improving security.</para>
@@ -2635,7 +2643,8 @@ Swap: 256M Total, 38M Used, 217M Free, 1
equivalent to using &man.apropos.1;.</para>
<para>To determine what the commands in
- <filename class="directory">/usr/bin</filename> do, type:</para>
+ <filename class="directory">/usr/bin</filename> do,
+ type:</para>
<screen>&prompt.user; <userinput>cd /usr/bin</userinput>
&prompt.user; <userinput>man -f *</userinput></screen>
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