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Date:      4 Oct 1999 14:06:24 -0000
From:      nbm@rucus.ru.ac.za
To:        FreeBSD-gnats-submit@freebsd.org
Subject:   docs/14114: article-ify formatting-media
Message-ID:  <19991004140624.38630.qmail@rucus.ru.ac.za>

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>Number:         14114
>Category:       docs
>Synopsis:       article-ify formatting-media
>Confidential:   no
>Severity:       non-critical
>Priority:       low
>Responsible:    freebsd-doc
>State:          open
>Quarter:        
>Keywords:       
>Date-Required:
>Class:          change-request
>Submitter-Id:   current-users
>Arrival-Date:   Mon Oct  4 07:10:01 PDT 1999
>Closed-Date:
>Last-Modified:
>Originator:     Neil Blakey-Milner
>Release:        FreeBSD 3.0-STABLE i386
>Organization:
Rhodes University Computer Users' Society
>Environment:

FreeBSD rucus.ru.ac.za 3.0-STABLE FreeBSD 3.0-STABLE #0: Tue Feb  9 22:52:23 GMT 1999     grahams@rucus.ru.ac.za:/usr/src/sys/compile/RUCUS-SMP  i386

>Description:

formatting-media isn't an article, and it should be.  Automated
transformation, indentation and whitespace changes still needed.

>How-To-Repeat:

>Fix:

cvs diff: Diffing .
Index: article.sgml
===================================================================
RCS file: /home/ncvs/doc/en_US.ISO_8859-1/articles/formatting-media/article.sgml,v
retrieving revision 1.7
diff -u -r1.7 article.sgml
--- article.sgml	1999/09/06 06:52:36	1.7
+++ article.sgml	1999/10/04 13:58:47
@@ -1,9 +1,8 @@
-<!DOCTYPE BOOK PUBLIC "-//Davenport//DTD DocBook V3.0//EN">
+<!DOCTYPE ARTICLE PUBLIC "-//FreeBSD//DTD DocBook V3.1-Based Extension//EN">
 <!-- $FreeBSD: doc/en_US.ISO_8859-1/articles/formatting-media/article.sgml,v 1.7 1999/09/06 06:52:36 peter Exp $ -->
-<book>
+<article>
 
-<bookinfo>
-<bookbiblio>
+<artheader>
 <title>Formatting Media For Use With FreeBSD 2.2-RELEASE</title>
 <subtitle>A Tutorial</subtitle>
 
@@ -23,13 +22,12 @@
 examples given have been tested under FreeBSD 2.2-GAMMA and may work
 for other releases. </para>
 </abstract>
-</bookbiblio>
-</bookinfo>
+</artheader>
 
-<chapter>
+<sect1>
 <title>Introduction & Definitions</title>
 
-<sect1>
+<sect2>
 <title>Overview</title>
 <para>Successfully adding disks to an existing system is the mark of an
 experienced system administrator.  Slicing, partitioning, and adding
@@ -69,8 +67,8 @@
 method is running the tools manually from a root command line.  For
 dangerously dedicated mode, only three or four commands are involved
 while <command>sysinstall</command> requires some manipulation.</para>
-</sect1>
-<sect1>
+</sect2>
+<sect2>
 <title>Definitions</title>
 
 <para>UNIX disk management over the centuries has invented many new
@@ -112,9 +110,9 @@
 represents 512 bytes of data.</para></listitem>
 
 </itemizedlist>
-</sect1>
+</sect2>
 
-<sect1>
+<sect2>
 <title>Warnings & Pitfalls</title>
 
 <para>Building disks is not something to take lightly.  It is quite possible
@@ -128,9 +126,9 @@
 <para>Needless to say, we are not responsible for any damage to any data 
 or hardware that you may experience.  You work at your own risk!</para>
 
-</sect1>
+</sect2>
 
-<sect1>
+<sect2>
 <title>Zip, Jaz, and Other Removables</title>
 
 <para>Removable disks can be formatted in the same way as normal hard
@@ -147,21 +145,21 @@
 then the disk was not in the drive.  In this case, you will need to restart the
 machine before attempting to format disks.
 </para>
-</sect1>
+</sect2>
 
-</chapter>
-<chapter>
+</sect1>
+<sect1>
 <title>Formatting Disks in Dedicated Mode</title>
 
-<sect1>
+<sect2>
 <title>Introduction</title>
 
 <para>This section details how to make disks that are totally dedicated to
 FreeBSD.  Remember, dedicated mode disks cannot be booted by the PC
 architecture.</para>
 
-</sect1>
-<sect1>
+</sect2>
+<sect2>
 <title>Making Dedicated Mode Disks using Sysinstall</title>
 
 <para><command>/stand/sysinstall</command>, the system installation
@@ -218,8 +216,8 @@
 <listitem><para>Exit out by repeatedly pressing <keycap>ESCAPE</keycap>.</para></listitem>
 </orderedlist>
 
-</sect1>
-<sect1>
+</sect2>
+<sect2>
 <title>Making Dedicated Mode Disks Using the Command Line</title>
 
 
@@ -254,13 +252,13 @@
 
 <para>Your disk is now ready for use.</para>
 
+</sect2>
 </sect1>
-</chapter>
 
-<chapter>
+<sect1>
 <title>Making Compatibility Mode Disks</title>
 
-<sect1>
+<sect2>
 <title>Introduction</title>
 <para>The command line is the easiest way to make dedicated disks, and
 the worst way to make compatibility disks.  The command-line fdisk
@@ -268,8 +266,8 @@
 the slice table, which is more than most people want to deal with.
 Use sysinstall for compatibility disks, as described below.</para>
 
-</sect1>
-<sect1>
+</sect2>
+<sect2>
 
 <title>Making Compatibility Mode Disks Using Sysinstall</title>
 
@@ -320,12 +318,12 @@
 
 <para>Your new disk is now ready for use.</para>
 
+</sect2>
 </sect1>
-</chapter>
 
-<chapter>
-<title>Other Disk Operations</title>
 <sect1>
+<title>Other Disk Operations</title>
+<sect2>
 <title>Adding Swap Space</title>
 
 <para>As a system grows, it's need for swap space can also grow.
@@ -362,9 +360,9 @@
 </para></listitem>
 </orderedlist>
 </para>
-</sect1>
+</sect2>
 
-<sect1>
+<sect2>
 <title>Copying the Contents of Disks</title>
 <!-- Should have specific tag -->
 <para>Submitted By:  Renaud Waldura (<email>renaud@softway.com</email>) </para>
@@ -383,9 +381,9 @@
 </screen>
 </informalexample>
 </para>
-</sect1>
+</sect2>
 
-<sect1>
+<sect2>
 <title>Creating Striped Disks using CCD</title>
 <para>Commands Submitted By: Stan Brown (<email>stanb@awod.com</email>) </para>
 
@@ -429,10 +427,10 @@
 <para>Now you can mount and use your CCD by referencing device /dev/ccd0c.
 </para>
 
+</sect2>
 </sect1>
-</chapter>
 
-<chapter>
+<sect1>
 <title>Credits</title>
 
 
@@ -457,8 +455,6 @@
 </itemizedlist>
 </para>
 
-</chapter>
-
-
+</sect1>
 
-</book>
+</article>

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