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Date:      Fri, 15 Oct 2004 13:44:05 +0400
From:      Denis Peplin <den@FreeBSD.org>
To:        Denis Peplin <den@FreeBSD.org>
Cc:        "Simon L. Nielsen" <simon@FreeBSD.org>
Subject:   Re: TCP Wrappers section (handbook/security): services is not daemons
Message-ID:  <416F9BE5.5020403@FreeBSD.org>
In-Reply-To: <416E8CD3.9070700@FreeBSD.org>
References:  <416E4DFD.3040203@FreeBSD.org> <20041014102459.GD799@zaphod.nitro.dk>	<20041014092213.22d6914d@localhost> <416E8491.8080500@FreeBSD.org> <20041014101233.399d4b40@localhost> <416E8CD3.9070700@FreeBSD.org>

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Hello!

I have patch for this issue (attached), and keramida help
me to fix it English form.

log:
Obtain some information from inetd(8) to fix "inetd"
description in network-servers chapter.
Add note about "daemon" term to "tcpwrappers" section
of security chapter.

Denis Peplin wrote:
> Hello!
> 
> Tom Rhodes wrote:
> 
>> On Thu, 14 Oct 2004 17:52:17 +0400
>> Denis Peplin <den@FreeBSD.org> wrote:
>>
>>
>>> Hello!
>>>
>>> Yes, i see now that using word "daemon" for services is
>>> tradition here :)
>>>
>>> It will not be a big problem, if we will add short
>>> description for this "term" (explain tradition) in
>>> beginning of the section.
>>
>>
>>
>> We can do that, but I do see one slight problem:  Should you
>> write a patch or should I?  I'm kind of in the middle of a
>> move and a new job so my FreeBSD time is pretty short.  :)
>>
> I can write it, but i'm not native English speaker, so you preferred :)

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Index: network-servers/chapter.sgml
===================================================================
RCS file: /home/dcvs/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/network-servers/chapter.sgml,v
retrieving revision 1.31
diff -u -r1.31 chapter.sgml
--- network-servers/chapter.sgml	8 Oct 2004 15:22:40 -0000	1.31
+++ network-servers/chapter.sgml	15 Oct 2004 09:36:06 -0000
@@ -111,12 +111,12 @@
 
       <para>&man.inetd.8; is referred to as the <quote>Internet
 	Super-Server</quote> because it manages connections for
-	several daemons.  Programs that provide network service are
-	commonly known as daemons.  <application>inetd</application>
-	serves as a managing server for other daemons.  When a
+	several services.  When a
 	connection is received by <application>inetd</application>, it
-	determines which daemon the connection is destined for, spawns
-	the particular daemon and delegates the socket to it.  Running
+	determines which program the connection is destined for, spawns
+	the particular process and delegates the socket to it (the program
+	is invoked with the service socket as its standard input, output
+	and error descriptors).  Running
 	one instance of <application>inetd</application> reduces the
 	overall system load as compared to running each daemon
 	individually in stand-alone mode.</para>
Index: security/chapter.sgml
===================================================================
RCS file: /home/dcvs/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/security/chapter.sgml,v
retrieving revision 1.228
diff -u -r1.228 chapter.sgml
--- security/chapter.sgml	3 Oct 2004 23:35:59 -0000	1.228
+++ security/chapter.sgml	15 Oct 2004 09:36:08 -0000
@@ -1501,6 +1501,12 @@
       read the <link linkend="network-inetd">inetd configuration</link>
       section.</para>
 
+    <note>
+      <para>While programs run by &man.inetd.8; are not exactly
+	<quote>daemons</quote>, they have traditionally been called
+	daemons.  This is the term we will use in this section too.</para>
+    </note>
+
     <sect2>
       <title>Initial Configuration</title>
 

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