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Date:      Mon, 5 May 2014 20:28:46 +0000 (UTC)
From:      Dru Lavigne <dru@FreeBSD.org>
To:        doc-committers@freebsd.org, svn-doc-all@freebsd.org, svn-doc-head@freebsd.org
Subject:   svn commit: r44767 - head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/config
Message-ID:  <201405052028.s45KSkGO059756@svn.freebsd.org>

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Author: dru
Date: Mon May  5 20:28:46 2014
New Revision: 44767
URL: http://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/doc/44767

Log:
  White space fix only. Translators can ignore.
  
  Sponsored by:	iXsystems

Modified:
  head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/config/chapter.xml

Modified: head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/config/chapter.xml
==============================================================================
--- head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/config/chapter.xml	Mon May  5 19:49:44 2014	(r44766)
+++ head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/config/chapter.xml	Mon May  5 20:28:46 2014	(r44767)
@@ -232,30 +232,29 @@ run_rc_command "$1"</programlisting>
       <secondary>configuration</secondary>
     </indexterm>
 
-    <para>One of the most useful utilities in &os; is <application>cron</application>.
-      This utility runs in the background and regularly checks
+    <para>One of the most useful utilities in &os; is
+      <application>cron</application>.  This utility runs in the
+      background and regularly checks
       <filename>/etc/crontab</filename> for tasks to execute and
-      searches <filename>/var/cron/tabs</filename> for custom
-      crontab files.  These files are used to schedule
-      tasks which <application>cron</application> runs at the
-      specified times.  Each entry in a crontab defines a task to run
-      and is known as a <firstterm>cron job</firstterm>.</para>
-
-    <para>Two different types of configuration files are used:
-      the system crontab, which should not be modified, and user
-      crontabs, which can be created and edited as needed.  The format
-      used by these files is documented in &man.crontab.5;.  The
-      format of the system crontab, <filename>/etc/crontab</filename>
-      includes a <literal>who</literal> column which does not exist in
-      user crontabs.  In the system crontab,
-      <application>cron</application> runs the command as
-      the user specified in this column.  In a user
-      crontab, all commands run as the user who
-      created the crontab.</para>
-
-    <para>User crontabs allow
-      individual users to schedule their own tasks.  The <systemitem
-      class="username">root</systemitem> user
+      searches <filename>/var/cron/tabs</filename> for custom crontab
+      files.  These files are used to schedule tasks which
+      <application>cron</application> runs at the specified times.
+      Each entry in a crontab defines a task to run and is known as a
+      <firstterm>cron job</firstterm>.</para>
+
+    <para>Two different types of configuration files are used: the
+      system crontab, which should not be modified, and user crontabs,
+      which can be created and edited as needed.  The format used by
+      these files is documented in &man.crontab.5;.  The format of the
+      system crontab, <filename>/etc/crontab</filename> includes a
+      <literal>who</literal> column which does not exist in user
+      crontabs.  In the system crontab,
+      <application>cron</application> runs the command as the user
+      specified in this column.  In a user crontab, all commands run
+      as the user who created the crontab.</para>
+
+    <para>User crontabs allow individual users to schedule their own
+      tasks.  The <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> user
       can also have a user <filename>crontab</filename> which can be
       used to schedule tasks that do not exist in the system
       <filename>crontab</filename>.</para>
@@ -276,13 +275,12 @@ PATH=/etc:/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin 
 
     <calloutlist>
       <callout arearefs="co-comments">
-	<para>Lines that begin
-	  with the <literal>#</literal> character are comments.  A
-	  comment can be placed in the file as a reminder of what and
-	  why a desired action is performed.  Comments cannot be on
-	  the same line as a command or else they will be interpreted
-	  as part of the command; they must be on a new line.  Blank
-	  lines are ignored.</para>
+	<para>Lines that begin with the <literal>#</literal> character
+	  are comments.  A comment can be placed in the file as a
+	  reminder of what and why a desired action is performed.
+	  Comments cannot be on the same line as a command or else
+	  they will be interpreted as part of the command; they must
+	  be on a new line.  Blank lines are ignored.</para>
       </callout>
 
       <callout arearefs="co-env">
@@ -290,45 +288,43 @@ PATH=/etc:/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin 
 	  define any environment settings.  In this example, it is
 	  used to define the <envar>SHELL</envar> and
 	  <envar>PATH</envar>.  If the <envar>SHELL</envar> is
-	  omitted, <application>cron</application> will use the default Bourne shell.
-	  If the <envar>PATH</envar> is omitted, the full path must be given to the
-	  command or script to run.</para>
+	  omitted, <application>cron</application> will use the
+	  default Bourne shell.  If the <envar>PATH</envar> is
+	  omitted, the full path must be given to the command or
+	  script to run.</para>
       </callout>
 
       <callout arearefs="co-field-descr">
-	<para>This line defines the seven fields used in a system crontab:
-	  <literal>minute</literal>,
-	  <literal>hour</literal>, <literal>mday</literal>,
-	  <literal>month</literal>, <literal>wday</literal>,
-	  <literal>who</literal>, and <literal>command</literal>.
-	  The
-	  <literal>minute</literal> field is the time in minutes when the
-	  specified command will be run, the <literal>hour</literal> is
-	  the hour when the specified command will be run, the
-	  <literal>mday</literal> is the day of the month,
-	  <literal>month</literal> is the month, and
-	  <literal>wday</literal> is the day of the week.
+	<para>This line defines the seven fields used in a system
+	  crontab: <literal>minute</literal>, <literal>hour</literal>,
+	  <literal>mday</literal>, <literal>month</literal>,
+	  <literal>wday</literal>, <literal>who</literal>, and
+	  <literal>command</literal>.  The <literal>minute</literal>
+	  field is the time in minutes when the specified command will
+	  be run, the <literal>hour</literal> is the hour when the
+	  specified command will be run, the <literal>mday</literal>
+	  is the day of the month, <literal>month</literal> is the
+	  month, and <literal>wday</literal> is the day of the week.
 	  These fields must be numeric values, representing the
 	  twenty-four hour clock, or a <literal>*</literal>,
 	  representing all values for that field.  The
 	  <literal>who</literal> field only exists in the system
-	  crontab and specifies which user the command
-	  should be run as.  The last field is the command to be
-	  executed.</para>
+	  crontab and specifies which user the command should be run
+	  as.  The last field is the command to be executed.</para>
       </callout>
 
       <callout arearefs="co-main">
-	<para>This entry defines the values for this cron job.
-	  The <literal>*/5</literal>, followed
-	  by several more <literal>*</literal> characters, specifies that
+	<para>This entry defines the values for this cron job.  The
+	  <literal>*/5</literal>, followed by several more
+	  <literal>*</literal> characters, specifies that
 	  <command>/usr/libexec/atrun</command> is invoked by
 	  <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> every five
 	  minutes of every hour, of every day and day of the week, of
 	  every month.</para>
 
-	<para>Commands can include any number of switches.
-	  However, commands which extend to multiple lines need to be
-	  broken with the backslash <quote>\</quote> continuation
+	<para>Commands can include any number of switches.  However,
+	  commands which extend to multiple lines need to be broken
+	  with the backslash <quote>\</quote> continuation
 	  character.</para>
       </callout>
     </calloutlist>
@@ -346,30 +342,30 @@ PATH=/etc:/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin 
 	an empty file.  Once a user creates a crontab, this command
 	will open that file for editing.</para>
 
-    <para>It is useful to add these lines to the top of the crontab
-      file in order to set the environment variables and to remember
-      the meanings of the fields in the crontab:</para>
-      
-    <programlisting>SHELL=/bin/sh
+      <para>It is useful to add these lines to the top of the crontab
+	file in order to set the environment variables and to remember
+	the meanings of the fields in the crontab:</para>
+
+      <programlisting>SHELL=/bin/sh
 PATH=/etc:/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin
 # Order of crontab fields
 # minute	hour	mday	month	wday	command</programlisting>
 
-    <para>Then add a line for each command or script to run,
-      specifying the time to run the command.  This example runs the
-      specified custom Bourne shell script every day at two in the
-      afternoon.  Since the path to the script is not specified in
-      <literal>PATH</literal>, the full path to the script is
-      given:</para>
-      
-    <programlisting>0	14	*	*	*	/usr/home/dru/bin/mycustomscript.sh</programlisting>
-
-    <tip>
-      <para>Before using a custom script, make sure it is executable
-	and test that it works as intended from the command line.
-	This is especially important if the script includes any
-	commands that deletes files using wildcards.</para>
-    </tip>
+      <para>Then add a line for each command or script to run,
+	specifying the time to run the command.  This example runs the
+	specified custom Bourne shell script every day at two in the
+	afternoon.  Since the path to the script is not specified in
+	<literal>PATH</literal>, the full path to the script is
+	given:</para>
+
+      <programlisting>0	14	*	*	*	/usr/home/dru/bin/mycustomscript.sh</programlisting>
+
+      <tip>
+	<para>Before using a custom script, make sure it is executable
+	  and test that it works as intended from the command line.
+	  This is especially important if the script includes any
+	  commands that deletes files using wildcards.</para>
+      </tip>
 
       <para>When finished editing the crontab, save the file.  It
 	will automatically be installed and
@@ -381,10 +377,9 @@ PATH=/etc:/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin
 0	14	*	*	*	/usr/home/dru/bin/mycustomscript.sh</screen>
 
       <para>To remove all of the cron jobs in a user crontab:</para>
-      
+
       <screen>&prompt.user; <userinput>crontab -l</userinput>
 remove crontab for dru? <userinput>y</userinput></screen>
-      
     </sect2>
   </sect1>
 
@@ -654,14 +649,14 @@ ifconfig_fxp0="inet 10.1.1.1/8"</program
 	information about the supported hardware and any known
 	limitations of the driver.</para>
 
-      <para>The drivers for common <acronym>NIC</acronym>s are
-	already present in the <filename>GENERIC</filename> kernel,
-	meaning the <acronym>NIC</acronym> should be probed during boot.
-	The system's boot messages can be viewed by typing
+      <para>The drivers for common <acronym>NIC</acronym>s are already
+	present in the <filename>GENERIC</filename> kernel, meaning
+	the <acronym>NIC</acronym> should be probed during boot.  The
+	system's boot messages can be viewed by typing
 	<command>more /var/run/dmesg.boot</command> and using the
 	spacebar to scroll through the text.  In this example, two
-	Ethernet <acronym>NIC</acronym>s using the
-	&man.dc.4; driver are present on the system:</para>
+	Ethernet <acronym>NIC</acronym>s using the &man.dc.4; driver
+	are present on the system:</para>
 
       <screen>dc0: &lt;82c169 PNIC 10/100BaseTX&gt; port 0xa000-0xa0ff mem 0xd3800000-0xd38
 000ff irq 15 at device 11.0 on pci0



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