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Date:      Wed, 24 Jul 2013 04:38:49 +0000 (UTC)
From:      Warren Block <wblock@FreeBSD.org>
To:        doc-committers@freebsd.org, svn-doc-all@freebsd.org, svn-doc-head@freebsd.org
Subject:   svn commit: r42409 - in head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook: boot cutting-edge install introduction l10n network-servers
Message-ID:  <201307240438.r6O4cnjT004319@svn.freebsd.org>

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Author: wblock
Date: Wed Jul 24 04:38:49 2013
New Revision: 42409
URL: http://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/doc/42409

Log:
  Whitespace-only fixes.  Translators, please ignore.

Modified:
  head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/boot/chapter.xml
  head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/cutting-edge/chapter.xml
  head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/install/chapter.xml
  head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/introduction/chapter.xml
  head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/l10n/chapter.xml
  head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/network-servers/chapter.xml

Modified: head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/boot/chapter.xml
==============================================================================
--- head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/boot/chapter.xml	Wed Jul 24 03:00:29 2013	(r42408)
+++ head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/boot/chapter.xml	Wed Jul 24 04:38:49 2013	(r42409)
@@ -65,20 +65,18 @@
       operating system, and the operating system programs are on the
       disk, how is the operating system started?</para>
 
-    <para>This problem parallels one in the book <citetitle>The
-	Adventures of Baron Munchausen</citetitle>.  A character had
-      fallen part way down a manhole, and pulled himself out by
-      grabbing his bootstraps, and lifting.  In the early days of
-      computing the term <firstterm>bootstrap</firstterm> was applied
-      to the mechanism used to load the operating system, which has
-      become shortened to <quote>booting</quote>.</para>
+    <para>This problem parallels one in the book
+      <citetitle>The Adventures of Baron Munchausen</citetitle>.  A
+      character had fallen part way down a manhole, and pulled himself
+      out by grabbing his bootstraps, and lifting.  In the early days
+      of computing the term <firstterm>bootstrap</firstterm> was
+      applied to the mechanism used to load the operating system,
+      which has become shortened to <quote>booting</quote>.</para>
 
     <indexterm><primary><acronym>BIOS</acronym></primary></indexterm>
 
-    <indexterm>
-      <primary>Basic Input/Output System</primary>
-      <see><acronym>BIOS</acronym></see>
-    </indexterm>
+    <indexterm><primary>Basic Input/Output
+	System</primary><see><acronym>BIOS</acronym></see></indexterm>
 
     <para>On x86 hardware the Basic Input/Output System
       (<acronym>BIOS</acronym>) is responsible for loading the
@@ -340,7 +338,7 @@ boot:</screen>
 
 	<para>Finally, by default, the loader issues a 10 second wait
 	  for key presses, and boots the kernel if it is not
-	  interrupted. If interrupted, the user is presented with a
+	  interrupted.  If interrupted, the user is presented with a
 	  prompt which understands the command set, where the user may
 	  adjust variables, unload all modules, load modules, and then
 	  finally boot or reboot.</para>
@@ -505,7 +503,9 @@ boot:</screen>
 
 	<itemizedlist>
 	  <listitem>
-	    <para>To boot the usual kernel in single-user mode<indexterm><primary>single-user mode</primary></indexterm>:</para>
+	    <para>To boot the usual kernel in single-user
+	      mode<indexterm><primary>single-user
+		  mode</primary></indexterm>:</para>
 
 	    <screen><userinput>boot -s</userinput></screen>
 	  </listitem>
@@ -521,8 +521,9 @@ boot:</screen>
 	      the default kernel that comes with an installation, or
 	      <filename>kernel.old</filename><indexterm>
 	      <primary><filename>kernel.old</filename></primary></indexterm>
-	      to refer to the previously installed kernel before a system
-	      upgrade or before configuring a custom kernel.</para>
+	      to refer to the previously installed kernel before a
+	      system upgrade or before configuring a custom
+	      kernel.</para>
 
 	    <note>
 	      <para>Use the following to load the usual modules with
@@ -788,6 +789,7 @@ bitmap_name="<replaceable>/boot/splash.b
 
       <para> </para>
     </sect2> -->
+
   </sect1>
 
   <sect1 id="device-hints">

Modified: head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/cutting-edge/chapter.xml
==============================================================================
--- head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/cutting-edge/chapter.xml	Wed Jul 24 03:00:29 2013	(r42408)
+++ head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/cutting-edge/chapter.xml	Wed Jul 24 04:38:49 2013	(r42409)
@@ -1288,9 +1288,9 @@ Fetching 133 new ports or files... done.
 	  </listitem>
 
 	  <listitem>
-	    <para>A quick way of getting bug fixes.  Any given commit is
-	      just as likely to introduce new bugs as to fix existing
-	      ones.</para>
+	    <para>A quick way of getting bug fixes.  Any given commit
+	      is just as likely to introduce new bugs as to fix
+	      existing ones.</para>
 	  </listitem>
 
 	  <listitem>
@@ -1334,15 +1334,21 @@ Fetching 133 new ports or files... done.
 
 	    <orderedlist>
 	      <listitem>
-		<para>Use <link linkend="svn">svn</link><indexterm><primary>Subversion</primary>
-		  </indexterm><indexterm><primary>-CURRENT</primary>
-		  <secondary>Syncing with <application>Subversion</application></secondary>
-		  </indexterm> to check out
-		  the desired development or release branch.  This is
-		  the recommended method, providing access to &os;
-		  development as it occurs.  Checkout the -CURRENT
-		  code from the <literal>head</literal> branch of one
-		  of the <link linkend="svn-mirrors">Subversion mirror
+		<para>Use <link
+		    linkend="svn">svn</link><indexterm>
+		      <primary>Subversion</primary>
+		  </indexterm>
+		  <indexterm>
+		    <primary>-CURRENT</primary>
+		    <secondary>Syncing with
+		      <application>Subversion</application></secondary>
+		  </indexterm>
+		  to check out the desired development or release
+		  branch.  This is the recommended method, providing
+		  access to &os; development as it occurs.  Checkout
+		  the -CURRENT code from the <literal>head</literal>
+		  branch of one of the <link
+		    linkend="svn-mirrors">Subversion mirror
 		    sites</link>.  Due to the size of the repository,
 		  it is recommended that only desired subtrees be
 		  checked out.</para>
@@ -1351,13 +1357,13 @@ Fetching 133 new ports or files... done.
 	      <listitem>
 		<para>Use the <application><link
 		      linkend="ctm">CTM</link></application><indexterm>
-		  <primary>-CURRENT</primary><secondary>Syncing with CTM</secondary>
-		  </indexterm> facility.
-		  If you have bad connectivity such as high price
-		  connections or only email access,
+		    <primary>-CURRENT</primary>
+		    <secondary>Syncing with CTM</secondary>
+		  </indexterm> facility.  If you have bad connectivity
+		  such as high price connections or only email access,
 		  <application>CTM</application> is an option, but it
-		  is not as reliable as <application><link
-		    linkend="svn">Subversion</link></application>.
+		  is not as reliable as <application>
+		  <link linkend="svn">Subversion</link></application>.
 		  For this reason, <application><link
 		    linkend="svn">Subversion</link></application>
 		  is the recommended method for any system with
@@ -1374,8 +1380,11 @@ Fetching 133 new ports or files... done.
 	      compile just a subset is almost guaranteed to cause
 	      problems.</para>
 
-	    <para>Before compiling &os.current;<indexterm><primary>-CURRENT</primary>
-	      <secondary>compiling</secondary></indexterm>, read
+	    <para>Before compiling
+	      &os.current;<indexterm>
+		<primary>-CURRENT</primary>
+		<secondary>compiling</secondary>
+	      </indexterm>, read
 	      <filename>/usr/src/Makefile</filename> very carefully.
 	      <link linkend="makeworld">Install a new kernel and
 	      rebuild the world</link> the first time through as part
@@ -1504,16 +1513,20 @@ Fetching 133 new ports or files... done.
 	    <orderedlist>
 	      <listitem>
 		<para>Use <link linkend="svn">svn</link><indexterm>
-		  <primary>Subversion</primary></indexterm> to check out
-		  the desired development or release branch.  This is
-		  the recommended method, providing access to &os;
-		  development as it occurs.  Branch names include
-		  <literal>head</literal> for the current development
-		  head, and branches identified in <ulink
-		    url="&url.base;/releng/">the release engineering
-		    page</ulink>, such as <literal>stable/9</literal><indexterm>
-		  <primary>-STABLE</primary>
-		  <secondary>syncing with <application>Subversion</application></secondary></indexterm>
+		    <primary>Subversion</primary>
+
+		  </indexterm> to check out the desired development or
+		  release branch.  This is the recommended method,
+		  providing access to &os; development as it occurs.
+		  Branch names include <literal>head</literal> for the
+		  current development head, and branches identified in
+		  <ulink url="&url.base;/releng/">the release
+		    engineering page</ulink>, such as
+		  <literal>stable/9</literal><indexterm>
+		    <primary>-STABLE</primary>
+		    <secondary>syncing with
+		      <application>Subversion</application></secondary>
+		  </indexterm>
 		  or <literal>releng/9.0</literal>.  URL prefixes for
 		  <application>Subversion</application> checkout of
 		  the base system are shown in <link
@@ -1527,20 +1540,23 @@ Fetching 133 new ports or files... done.
 	      <listitem>
 		<para>Consider using <application><link
 		      linkend="ctm">CTM</link></application><indexterm>
-		  <primary>-STABLE</primary><secondary>syncing with CTM</secondary>
-		  </indexterm> if you do
-		  not have a fast connection to the Internet.</para>
+		    <primary>-STABLE</primary>
+		    <secondary>syncing with CTM</secondary>
+		  </indexterm> if you do not have a fast connection to
+		  the Internet.</para>
 	      </listitem>
 	    </orderedlist>
 	  </listitem>
 
 	  <listitem>
-	    <para>Before compiling &os.stable;<indexterm><primary>-STABLE</primary>
-	      <secondary>compiling</secondary></indexterm>, read
-	      <filename>/usr/src/Makefile</filename> carefully.  <link
-		linkend="makeworld">Install a new kernel and rebuild
-	      the world</link> the first time through as part of the
-	      upgrading process.  Read &a.stable; and
+	    <para>Before compiling &os.stable;<indexterm>
+		<primary>-STABLE</primary>
+		<secondary>compiling</secondary>
+	      </indexterm>, read
+	      <filename>/usr/src/Makefile</filename> carefully.
+	      <link linkend="makeworld">Install a new kernel and
+	      rebuild the world</link> the first time through as part
+	      of the upgrading process.  Read &a.stable; and
 	      <filename>/usr/src/UPDATING</filename> to keep
 	      up-to-date on other bootstrapping procedures that
 	      sometimes become necessary on the road to the next
@@ -1694,12 +1710,12 @@ Fetching 133 new ports or files... done.
 	help about synchronizing to a newer version.</para>
 
       <para>Updating the system from source is a more subtle process
-        than it might initially seem to be, and the &os; developers have
-	found it necessary over the years to change the recommended
-	approach fairly dramatically as new kinds of unavoidable
-	dependencies come to light.  The rest of this section
-	describes the rationale behind the currently recommended
-	upgrade sequence.</para>
+	than it might initially seem to be, and the &os; developers
+	have found it necessary over the years to change the
+	recommended approach fairly dramatically as new kinds of
+	unavoidable dependencies come to light.  The rest of this
+	section describes the rationale behind the currently
+	recommended upgrade sequence.</para>
 
       <para>Any successful update sequence must deal with the
 	following issues:</para>
@@ -1833,11 +1849,12 @@ Fetching 133 new ports or files... done.
 	  <para><command>make
 	      <maketarget>delete-old</maketarget></command></para>
 
-	  <para>This target deletes old (obsolete) files.  This is important
-	    because sometimes they cause problems if left on the disk, for
-	    example the presence of the old <filename>utmp.h</filename>
-	    causes problems in some ports when the new
-	    <filename>utmpx.h</filename> is installed.</para>
+	  <para>This target deletes old (obsolete) files.  This is
+	    important because sometimes they cause problems if left on
+	    the disk, for example the presence of the old
+	    <filename>utmp.h</filename> causes problems in some ports
+	    when the new <filename>utmpx.h</filename> is
+	    installed.</para>
 	</listitem>
 
 	<listitem>
@@ -1848,10 +1865,11 @@ Fetching 133 new ports or files... done.
 	</listitem>
 
 	<listitem>
-	  <para><command>make <maketarget>delete-old-libs</maketarget></command></para>
+	  <para><command>make
+	      <maketarget>delete-old-libs</maketarget></command></para>
 
-	  <para>Remove any obsolete libraries to avoid conflicts with newer
-	    ones.  Make sure that all ports have been rebuilt
+	  <para>Remove any obsolete libraries to avoid conflicts with
+	    newer ones.  Make sure that all ports have been rebuilt
 	    before old libraries are removed.</para>
 	</listitem>
       </orderedlist>
@@ -2622,27 +2640,28 @@ Script done, &hellip;</screen>
 	<primary>Deleting obsolete files and directories</primary>
       </indexterm>
 
-      <para>As a part of the &os; development lifecycle, files and their
-	contents occasionally become obsolete.  This may be because
-	functionality is implemented elsewhere, the version number of
-	the library has changed, or it was removed from the system
-	entirely.  This includes old files, libraries, and directories,
-	which should be removed when updating the system.  The benefit
-	is that the system is not cluttered with old files which take up
-	unnecessary space on the storage and backup media.
-	Additionally, if the old library has a security or stability
-	issue, the system should be updated to the newer library to keep
-	it safe and to prevent crashes caused by the old library.
-	Files, directories, and libraries which are considered obsolete
-	are listed in <filename>/usr/src/ObsoleteFiles.inc</filename>.
-	The following instructions should be used to remove obsolete
-	files during the system upgrade process.</para>
-
-      <para>After the <command>make
-	<maketarget>installworld</maketarget></command>
-	and the subsequent <command>mergemaster</command> have finished
-	successfully, check for obsolete files and libraries as
-	follows:</para>
+      <para>As a part of the &os; development lifecycle, files and
+	their contents occasionally become obsolete.  This may be
+	because functionality is implemented elsewhere, the version
+	number of the library has changed, or it was removed from the
+	system entirely.  This includes old files, libraries, and
+	directories, which should be removed when updating the system.
+	The benefit is that the system is not cluttered with old files
+	which take up unnecessary space on the storage and backup
+	media.  Additionally, if the old library has a security or
+	stability issue, the system should be updated to the newer
+	library to keep it safe and to prevent crashes caused by the
+	old library.  Files, directories, and libraries which are
+	considered obsolete are listed in
+	<filename>/usr/src/ObsoleteFiles.inc</filename>.  The
+	following instructions should be used to remove obsolete files
+	during the system upgrade process.</para>
+
+      <para>After the
+	<command>make <maketarget>installworld</maketarget></command>
+	and the subsequent <command>mergemaster</command> have
+	finished successfully, check for obsolete files and libraries
+	as follows:</para>
 
       <screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>cd /usr/src</userinput>
 &prompt.root; <userinput>make check-old</userinput></screen>
@@ -2686,9 +2705,9 @@ Script done, &hellip;</screen>
 	<title>Warning</title>
 
 	<para>Deleting obsolete files will break applications that
-	  still depend on those obsolete files.  This is especially true
-	  for old libraries.  In most cases, the programs, ports, or
-	  libraries that used the old library need to be recompiled
+	  still depend on those obsolete files.  This is especially
+	  true for old libraries.  In most cases, the programs, ports,
+	  or libraries that used the old library need to be recompiled
 	  before <command>make
 	    <maketarget>delete-old-libs</maketarget></command> is
 	  executed.</para>
@@ -2696,28 +2715,29 @@ Script done, &hellip;</screen>
 
       <para>Utilities for checking shared library dependencies are
 	available from the Ports Collection in
-	<filename role="package">sysutils/libchk</filename> or <filename
+	<filename role="package">sysutils/libchk</filename> or
+	<filename
 	  role="package">sysutils/bsdadminscripts</filename>.</para>
 
-      <para>Obsolete shared libraries can conflict with newer libraries,
-	causing messages like these:</para>
+      <para>Obsolete shared libraries can conflict with newer
+	libraries, causing messages like these:</para>
 
       <screen>/usr/bin/ld: warning: libz.so.4, needed by /usr/local/lib/libtiff.so, may conflict with libz.so.5
 /usr/bin/ld: warning: librpcsvc.so.4, needed by /usr/local/lib/libXext.so, may conflict with librpcsvc.so.5</screen>
 
-      <para>To solve these problems, determine which port installed the
-	library:</para>
+      <para>To solve these problems, determine which port installed
+	the library:</para>
 
       <screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>pkg_info -W  /usr/local/lib/libtiff.so</userinput>
   /usr/local/lib/libtiff.so was installed by package tiff-3.9.4
   &prompt.root; <userinput>pkg_info -W /usr/local/lib/libXext.so</userinput>
   /usr/local/lib/libXext.so was installed by package libXext-1.1.1,1</screen>
 
-      <para>Then deinstall, rebuild and reinstall the port.  <filename
-	  role="package">ports-mgmt/portmaster</filename> can be used to
-	automate this process.  After all ports are rebuilt and no
-	longer use the old libraries, delete the old libraries using the
-	following command:</para>
+      <para>Then deinstall, rebuild and reinstall the port.
+	<filename role="package">ports-mgmt/portmaster</filename> can
+	be used to automate this process.  After all ports are rebuilt
+	and no longer use the old libraries, delete the old libraries
+	using the following command:</para>
 
       <screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>make delete-old-libs</userinput></screen>
 
@@ -2780,7 +2800,9 @@ Script done, &hellip;</screen>
 	<qandaentry>
 	  <question>
 	    <para>My compile failed with lots of
-	      signal 11<indexterm><primary>signal 11</primary></indexterm>
+	      signal 11<indexterm>
+		<primary>signal 11</primary>
+	      </indexterm>
 	      (or other signal number) errors.  What happened?</para>
 	  </question>
 

Modified: head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/install/chapter.xml
==============================================================================
--- head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/install/chapter.xml	Wed Jul 24 03:00:29 2013	(r42408)
+++ head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/install/chapter.xml	Wed Jul 24 04:38:49 2013	(r42409)
@@ -2292,47 +2292,47 @@ Mounting root from ufs:/dev/md0c
 	      firewall</guimenuitem></term>
 
 	  <listitem>
-	    <para>This option instructs &man.sysinstall.8;
-	      to use passive mode<indexterm>
-	      <primary>FTP</primary><secondary>passive mode</secondary>
-	      </indexterm> for all FTP operations.
-	      This allows the user to pass through firewalls
-	      that do not allow incoming connections on random TCP ports.
+	    <para>This option instructs &man.sysinstall.8; to use
+	      passive mode<indexterm>
+		<primary>FTP</primary>
+		<secondary>passive mode</secondary>
+	      </indexterm> for all FTP operations.  This allows the
+	      user to pass through firewalls that do not allow
+	      incoming connections on random TCP ports.
 	    </para>
 	  </listitem>
 	</varlistentry>
 
 	<varlistentry>
-	  <term>FTP via a HTTP proxy: <guimenuitem>Install from an FTP server
-	      through a http proxy</guimenuitem></term>
+	  <term>FTP via a HTTP proxy: <guimenuitem>Install from an FTP
+	      server through a http proxy</guimenuitem></term>
 
 	  <listitem>
-	    <para>This option instructs &man.sysinstall.8;
-	      to use the HTTP
-	      protocol to connect to a proxy
-	      for all FTP operations.  The proxy will translate
-	      the requests and send them to the FTP server.
-	      This allows the user to pass through firewalls
-	      that do not allow FTP, but offer a HTTP
-	      proxy<indexterm><primary>FTP</primary>
-	      <secondary>via a HTTP proxy</secondary></indexterm>.
-	      In this case, specify the proxy in
+	    <para>This option instructs &man.sysinstall.8; to use the
+	      HTTP protocol to connect to a proxy for all FTP
+	      operations.  The proxy will translate the requests and
+	      send them to the FTP server. This allows the user to
+	      pass through firewalls that do not allow FTP, but offer
+	      a HTTP proxy<indexterm>
+		<primary>FTP</primary>
+		<secondary>via a HTTP proxy</secondary>
+	      </indexterm>.  In this case, specify the proxy in
 	      addition to the FTP server.</para>
 	  </listitem>
 	</varlistentry>
       </variablelist>
 
-      <para>For a proxy FTP server, give the name of the
-	server as part of the username, after an
-	<quote>@</quote> sign.  The proxy server then <quote>fakes</quote>
-	the real server.  For example, to install from
-	<hostid role="fqdn">ftp.FreeBSD.org</hostid>, using the proxy FTP
-	server <hostid role="fqdn">foo.example.com</hostid>, listening on port
-	1234, go to the options menu, set the FTP username
-	to <literal>ftp@ftp.FreeBSD.org</literal> and the password to
-	an
-	email address.  As the installation media, specify FTP (or
-	passive FTP, if the proxy supports it), and the URL
+      <para>For a proxy FTP server, give the name of the server as
+	part of the username, after an <quote>@</quote> sign.  The
+	proxy server then <quote>fakes</quote> the real server.  For
+	example, to install from
+	<hostid role="fqdn">ftp.FreeBSD.org</hostid>, using the proxy
+	FTP server <hostid role="fqdn">foo.example.com</hostid>,
+	listening on port 1234, go to the options menu, set the FTP
+	username to <literal>ftp@ftp.FreeBSD.org</literal> and the
+	password to an email address.  As the installation media,
+	specify FTP (or passive FTP, if the proxy supports it), and
+	the URL
 	<literal>ftp://foo.example.com:1234/pub/FreeBSD</literal>.</para>;
 
       <para>Since <filename class="directory">/pub/FreeBSD</filename>

Modified: head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/introduction/chapter.xml
==============================================================================
--- head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/introduction/chapter.xml	Wed Jul 24 03:00:29 2013	(r42408)
+++ head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/introduction/chapter.xml	Wed Jul 24 04:38:49 2013	(r42409)
@@ -78,76 +78,81 @@
 
       <itemizedlist>
 	<listitem>
-	  <para><emphasis>Preemptive multitasking</emphasis><indexterm>
-	    <primary>preemptive multitasking</primary></indexterm> with
-	    dynamic priority adjustment to ensure smooth and fair
-	    sharing of the computer between applications and users,
-	    even under the heaviest of loads.</para>
+	  <para><emphasis>Preemptive
+	      multitasking</emphasis><indexterm>
+	      <primary>preemptive multitasking</primary>
+	    </indexterm> with dynamic priority adjustment to ensure
+	    smooth and fair sharing of the computer between
+	    applications and users, even under the heaviest of
+	    loads.</para>
 	</listitem>
 
 	<listitem>
 	  <para><emphasis>Multi-user facilities</emphasis><indexterm>
-	    <primary>multi-user facilities</primary></indexterm> which allow
-	    many people to use a &os; system simultaneously for a
-	    variety of things.  This means, for example, that system
-	    peripherals such as printers and tape drives are properly
-	    shared between all users on the system or the network and
-	    that individual resource limits can be placed on users or
-	    groups of users, protecting critical system resources from
-	    over-use.</para>
-	</listitem>
-	<listitem>
-	  <para>Strong <emphasis>TCP/IP networking</emphasis><indexterm>
-	    <primary>TCP/IP networking</primary></indexterm> with
-	    support for industry standards such as SCTP, DHCP, NFS,
-	    NIS, PPP, SLIP, IPsec, and IPv6.  This means that your
-	    &os; machine can interoperate easily with other systems as
-	    well as act as an enterprise server, providing vital
-	    functions such as NFS (remote file access) and email
-	    services or putting your organization on the Internet with
-	    WWW, FTP, routing and firewall (security) services.</para>
+	      <primary>multi-user facilities</primary>
+	    </indexterm> which allow many people to use a &os; system
+	    simultaneously for a variety of things.  This means, for
+	    example, that system peripherals such as printers and tape
+	    drives are properly shared between all users on the system
+	    or the network and that individual resource limits can be
+	    placed on users or groups of users, protecting critical
+	    system resources from over-use.</para>
+	</listitem>
+
+	<listitem>
+	  <para>Strong <emphasis>TCP/IP
+	      networking</emphasis><indexterm>
+	      <primary>TCP/IP networking</primary>
+	    </indexterm> with support for industry standards such as
+	    SCTP, DHCP, NFS, NIS, PPP, SLIP, IPsec, and IPv6.  This
+	    means that your &os; machine can interoperate easily with
+	    other systems as well as act as an enterprise server,
+	    providing vital functions such as NFS (remote file access)
+	    and email services or putting your organization on the
+	    Internet with WWW, FTP, routing and firewall (security)
+	    services.</para>
 	</listitem>
 
 	<listitem>
 	  <para><emphasis>Memory protection</emphasis><indexterm>
-	    <primary>memory protection</primary></indexterm> ensures that
-	    applications (or users) cannot interfere with each other.
-	    One application crashing will not affect others in any
-	    way.</para>
+	      <primary>memory protection</primary>
+	    </indexterm> ensures that applications (or users) cannot
+	    interfere with each other.  One application crashing will
+	    not affect others in any way.</para>
 	</listitem>
 
 	<listitem>
 	  <para>The industry standard <emphasis>X Window
 	      System</emphasis><indexterm>
-	    <primary>X Window System</primary></indexterm>
-	    (X11R7) provides a graphical user
-	    interface (GUI) for the cost of a common VGA card and
-	    monitor and comes with full sources.</para>
+	      <primary>X Window System</primary>
+	    </indexterm> (X11R7) provides a graphical user interface
+	    (GUI) for the cost of a common VGA card and monitor and
+	    comes with full sources.</para>
 	</listitem>
 
 	<listitem>
 	  <para>
-	  <indexterm>
-	    <primary>binary compatibility</primary>
-	    <secondary>Linux</secondary>
-	  </indexterm>
-	  <indexterm>
-	    <primary>binary compatibility</primary>
-	    <secondary>SCO</secondary>
-	  </indexterm>
-	  <indexterm>
-	    <primary>binary compatibility</primary>
-	    <secondary>SVR4</secondary>
-	  </indexterm>
-	  <indexterm>
-	    <primary>binary compatibility</primary>
-	    <secondary>BSD/OS</secondary>
-	  </indexterm>
-	  <indexterm>
-	    <primary>binary compatibility</primary>
-	    <secondary>NetBSD</secondary>
-	  </indexterm>
-	  <emphasis>Binary compatibility</emphasis> with many
+	    <indexterm>
+	      <primary>binary compatibility</primary>
+	      <secondary>Linux</secondary>
+	    </indexterm>
+	    <indexterm>
+	      <primary>binary compatibility</primary>
+	      <secondary>SCO</secondary>
+	    </indexterm>
+	    <indexterm>
+	      <primary>binary compatibility</primary>
+	      <secondary>SVR4</secondary>
+	    </indexterm>
+	    <indexterm>
+	      <primary>binary compatibility</primary>
+	      <secondary>BSD/OS</secondary>
+	    </indexterm>
+	    <indexterm>
+	      <primary>binary compatibility</primary>
+	      <secondary>NetBSD</secondary>
+	    </indexterm>
+	    <emphasis>Binary compatibility</emphasis> with many
 	    programs built for Linux, SCO, SVR4, BSDI and
 	    NetBSD.</para>
 	</listitem>
@@ -169,30 +174,33 @@
 	    compile.</para>
 	</listitem>
 	<listitem>
-	  <para>Demand paged <emphasis>virtual memory</emphasis><indexterm>
-	    <primary>virtual memory</primary></indexterm> and
-	    <quote>merged VM/buffer cache</quote> design efficiently
-	    satisfies applications with large appetites for memory
-	    while still maintaining interactive response to other
-	    users.</para>
+	  <para>Demand paged <emphasis>virtual
+	      memory</emphasis><indexterm>
+	      <primary>virtual memory</primary>
+	    </indexterm> and <quote>merged VM/buffer cache</quote>
+	    design efficiently satisfies applications with large
+	    appetites for memory while still maintaining interactive
+	    response to other users.</para>
 	</listitem>
 
 	<listitem>
 	  <para><emphasis>SMP</emphasis><indexterm>
-	    <primary>Symmetric Multi-Processing (SMP)</primary></indexterm>
-	    support for machines with multiple CPUs.</para>
+	      <primary>Symmetric Multi-Processing
+		(SMP)</primary>
+	    </indexterm> support for machines with multiple
+	    CPUs.</para>
 	</listitem>
 
 	<listitem>
 	  <para>
-	  <indexterm>
-	    <primary>compilers</primary>
-	    <secondary>C</secondary>
-	  </indexterm>
-	  <indexterm>
-	    <primary>compilers</primary>
-	    <secondary>C++</secondary>
-	  </indexterm>
+	    <indexterm>
+	      <primary>compilers</primary>
+	      <secondary>C</secondary>
+	    </indexterm>
+	    <indexterm>
+	      <primary>compilers</primary>
+	      <secondary>C++</secondary>
+	    </indexterm>
 	    A full complement of <emphasis>C</emphasis>
 	    and <emphasis>C++</emphasis>
 	    development tools.
@@ -203,11 +211,11 @@
 
 	<listitem>
 	  <para><emphasis>Source code</emphasis><indexterm>
-	    <primary>source code</primary></indexterm> for the entire system
-	    means you have the greatest degree of control over your
-	    environment.  Why be locked into a proprietary solution
-	    at the mercy of your vendor when you can have a truly open
-	    system?</para>
+	      <primary>source code</primary>
+	    </indexterm> for the entire system means you have the
+	    greatest degree of control over your environment.  Why be
+	    locked into a proprietary solution at the mercy of your
+	    vendor when you can have a truly open system?</para>
 	</listitem>
 
 	<listitem>
@@ -221,18 +229,19 @@
       </itemizedlist>
 
       <para>&os; is based on the 4.4BSD-Lite<indexterm>
-	<primary>4.4BSD-Lite</primary></indexterm> release from Computer
+	  <primary>4.4BSD-Lite</primary>
+	</indexterm> release from Computer
 	Systems Research Group (CSRG)<indexterm>
-	<primary>Computer Systems Research Group (CSRG)</primary></indexterm>
-	at the University of California
-	at Berkeley, and carries on the distinguished tradition of BSD
-	systems development.  In addition to the fine work provided by
-	CSRG, the &os;&nbsp;Project has put in many thousands of hours
-	in fine tuning the system for maximum performance and
-	reliability in real-life load situations.  As many of the
-	commercial giants struggle to field PC operating systems with
-	such features, performance and reliability, &os; can offer
-	them <emphasis>now</emphasis>!</para>
+	  <primary>Computer Systems Research Group (CSRG)</primary>
+	</indexterm> at the University of California at Berkeley, and
+	carries on the distinguished tradition of BSD systems
+	development.  In addition to the fine work provided by CSRG,
+	the &os;&nbsp;Project has put in many thousands of hours in
+	fine tuning the system for maximum performance and reliability
+	in real-life load situations.  As many of the commercial
+	giants struggle to field PC operating systems with such
+	features, performance and reliability, &os; can offer them
+	<emphasis>now</emphasis>!</para>
 
       <para>The applications to which &os; can be put are truly
 	limited only by your own imagination.  From software
@@ -264,13 +273,15 @@
 	  <itemizedlist>
 	    <listitem>
 	      <para>FTP servers<indexterm>
-		<primary>FTP servers</primary></indexterm></para>
+		  <primary>FTP servers</primary>
+		</indexterm></para>
 	    </listitem>
 
 	    <listitem>
 	      <para>World Wide Web servers<indexterm>
-		<primary>web servers</primary></indexterm> (standard or secure
-		[SSL])</para>
+		  <primary>web servers</primary>
+		</indexterm>
+		(standard or secure [SSL])</para>
 	    </listitem>
 
 	    <listitem>
@@ -278,25 +289,31 @@
 	    </listitem>
 
 	    <listitem>
-	      <para>Firewalls<indexterm><primary>firewall</primary></indexterm>
-		and NAT<indexterm><primary>NAT</primary></indexterm>
+	      <para>Firewalls<indexterm>
+		  <primary>firewall</primary>
+		</indexterm>
+		and NAT<indexterm>
+		  <primary>NAT</primary>
+		</indexterm>
 		(<quote>IP masquerading</quote>) gateways</para>
 	    </listitem>
 
 	    <listitem>
 	      <para>
-	      <indexterm>
-		<primary>electronic mail</primary>
-		<see>email</see>
-	      </indexterm>
-	      <indexterm>
-		<primary>email</primary>
-	      </indexterm>
-	      Electronic Mail servers</para>
+		<indexterm>
+		  <primary>electronic mail</primary>
+		  <see>email</see>
+		</indexterm>
+		<indexterm>
+		  <primary>email</primary>
+		</indexterm>
+		Electronic Mail servers</para>
 	    </listitem>
 
 	    <listitem>
-	      <para>USENET<indexterm><primary>USENET</primary></indexterm>
+	      <para>USENET<indexterm>
+		  <primary>USENET</primary>
+		</indexterm>
 		News or Bulletin Board Systems</para>
 	    </listitem>
 
@@ -335,11 +352,12 @@
 	</listitem>
 
 	<listitem>
-	  <para><emphasis>Networking:</emphasis>  Need a new router?<indexterm>
-	    <primary>router</primary></indexterm>
-	    A name server (DNS)?<indexterm>
-	    <primary>DNS Server</primary></indexterm> A firewall to
-	    keep people out of your
+	  <para><emphasis>Networking:</emphasis> Need a new
+	    router?<indexterm>
+	      <primary>router</primary>
+	    </indexterm>  A name server (DNS)?<indexterm>
+	      <primary>DNS Server</primary>
+	    </indexterm>  A firewall to keep people out of your
 	    internal network?  &os; can easily turn that unused 386 or
 	    486 PC sitting in the corner into an advanced router with
 	    sophisticated packet-filtering capabilities.</para>
@@ -347,14 +365,14 @@
 
 	<listitem>
 	  <para>
-	  <indexterm>
-	    <primary>X Window System</primary>
-	  </indexterm>
-	  <indexterm>
-	    <primary>X Window System</primary>
-	    <secondary>Accelerated-X</secondary>
-	  </indexterm>
-	  <emphasis>X Window workstation:</emphasis> &os; is a
+	    <indexterm>
+	      <primary>X Window System</primary>
+	    </indexterm>
+	    <indexterm>
+	      <primary>X Window System</primary>
+	      <secondary>Accelerated-X</secondary>
+	    </indexterm>
+	    <emphasis>X Window workstation:</emphasis> &os; is a
 	    fine choice for an inexpensive X terminal solution,
 	    using the freely available X11 server.
 	    Unlike an X terminal, &os; allows many applications to
@@ -368,7 +386,9 @@
 	  <para><emphasis>Software Development:</emphasis>  The basic
 	    &os; system comes with a full complement of development
 	    tools including the renowned GNU
-	    C/C++<indexterm><primary>GNU Compiler Collection</primary></indexterm>
+	    C/C++<indexterm>
+	      <primary>GNU Compiler Collection</primary>
+	    </indexterm>
 	    compiler and debugger.</para>
 	</listitem>
       </itemizedlist>
@@ -444,19 +464,21 @@
 	</listitem>
 
 	<listitem>
-	  <para><ulink url="http://www.sina.com/">Sina</ulink><indexterm>;
-	    <primary>Sina</primary></indexterm></para>
+	  <para><ulink
+	      url="http://www.sina.com/">Sina</ulink><indexterm>;
+	      <primary>Sina</primary>
+	    </indexterm></para>
 	</listitem>
 
 	<listitem>
-	  <para><ulink
-	      url="http://www.pair.com/">Pair Networks</ulink><indexterm>
+	  <para><ulink url="http://www.pair.com/">Pair
+	      Networks</ulink><indexterm>
 	      <primary>Pair Networks</primary></indexterm></para>
 	</listitem>
 
 	<listitem>
-	  <para><ulink
-	      url="http://www.sony.co.jp/">Sony Japan</ulink><indexterm>
+	  <para><ulink url="http://www.sony.co.jp/">Sony
+	      Japan</ulink><indexterm>
 	      <primary>Sony Japan</primary></indexterm></para>
 	</listitem>
 
@@ -480,14 +502,16 @@
 
 	<listitem>
 	  <para><ulink url="http://www.telehouse.com/">TELEHOUSE
-	      America</ulink><indexterm><primary>TELEHOUSE America</primary>
-	      </indexterm></para>
+	      America</ulink><indexterm>
+	      <primary>TELEHOUSE America</primary>
+	    </indexterm></para>
 	</listitem>
 
 	<listitem>
 	  <para><ulink url="http://www.experts-exchange.com/">Experts
-	      Exchange</ulink><indexterm><primary>Experts Exchange</primary>
-	      </indexterm></para>
+	      Exchange</ulink><indexterm>
+	      <primary>Experts Exchange</primary>
+	    </indexterm></para>
 	</listitem>
       </itemizedlist>
 
@@ -541,11 +565,11 @@
       <indexterm><primary>Greenman, David</primary></indexterm>
       <indexterm><primary>Walnut Creek CDROM</primary></indexterm>
       <para>The trio thought that the goal remained
-	worthwhile, even without Bill's support, and so they adopted the
-	name "&os;" coined by David Greenman.  The
-	initial objectives were set after consulting with the system's
-	current users and, once it became clear that the project was
-	on the road to perhaps even becoming a reality, Jordan contacted
+	worthwhile, even without Bill's support, and so they adopted
+	the name "&os;" coined by David Greenman.  The initial
+	objectives were set after consulting with the system's current
+	users and, once it became clear that the project was on the
+	road to perhaps even becoming a reality, Jordan contacted
 	Walnut Creek CDROM with an eye toward improving &os;'s
 	distribution channels for those many unfortunates without easy
 	access to the Internet.  Walnut Creek CDROM not only supported
@@ -704,32 +728,32 @@
 	    id="development-cvs-repository"/></term>
 	  <listitem>
 	    <para>
-	    <indexterm>
-	      <primary>CVS</primary>
-	    </indexterm>
+	      <indexterm>
+		<primary>CVS</primary>
+	      </indexterm>
 
-	    <indexterm>
-	      <primary>CVS Repository</primary>
-	    </indexterm>
+	      <indexterm>
+		<primary>CVS Repository</primary>
+	      </indexterm>
 
-	    <indexterm>
-	      <primary>Concurrent Versions System</primary>
-	      <see>CVS</see>
-	    </indexterm>
+	      <indexterm>
+		<primary>Concurrent Versions System</primary>
+		<see>CVS</see>
+	      </indexterm>
 
-	    <indexterm>
-	      <primary>Subversion</primary>
-	    </indexterm>
+	      <indexterm>
+		<primary>Subversion</primary>
+	      </indexterm>
 
-	    <indexterm>
-	      <primary>Subversion Repository</primary>
-	    </indexterm>
+	      <indexterm>
+		<primary>Subversion Repository</primary>
+	      </indexterm>
 
-	    <indexterm>
-	      <primary>SVN</primary>
-	      <see>Subversion</see>
-	    </indexterm>
-	    For several years, the central source tree for &os;
+	      <indexterm>
+		<primary>SVN</primary>
+		<see>Subversion</see>
+	      </indexterm>
+	      For several years, the central source tree for &os;
 	      was maintained by
 	      <ulink url="http://www.nongnu.org/cvs/">CVS</ulink>;
 	      (Concurrent Versions System), a freely available source
@@ -749,7 +773,7 @@
 	      your source tree</link> section for more information on
 	      obtaining the &os; <literal>src/</literal> repository
 	      and <link linkend="ports-using">Using the Ports
-	        Collection</link> for details on obtaining the &os;
+		Collection</link> for details on obtaining the &os;
 	      Ports Collection.</para>
 	  </listitem>
 	</varlistentry>
@@ -760,7 +784,7 @@
 
 	  <listitem>
 	    <para>The <firstterm>committers</firstterm><indexterm>
-	      <primary>committers</primary></indexterm>
+		<primary>committers</primary></indexterm>
 	      are the people who have <emphasis>write</emphasis>
 	      access to the Subversion tree, and are authorized to
 	      make modifications to the &os; source (the term
@@ -780,17 +804,18 @@
 
 	  <listitem>
 	    <para>The <firstterm>&os; core team</firstterm><indexterm>
-	      <primary>core team</primary></indexterm>
-	      would be equivalent to the board of directors if the
-	      &os;&nbsp;Project were a company.  The primary task of
-	      the core team is to make sure the project, as a whole,
-	      is in good shape and is heading in the right directions.
-	      Inviting dedicated and responsible developers to join
-	      our group of committers is one of the functions of the
-	      core team, as is the recruitment of new core team
-	      members as others move on.  The current core team was
-	      elected from a pool of committer candidates in July
-	      2012. Elections are held every 2 years.</para>
+		<primary>core team</primary>
+	      </indexterm> would be equivalent to the board of
+	      directors if the &os;&nbsp;Project were a company.  The
+	      primary task of the core team is to make sure the
+	      project, as a whole, is in good shape and is heading in
+	      the right directions.  Inviting dedicated and
+	      responsible developers to join our group of committers
+	      is one of the functions of the core team, as is the
+	      recruitment of new core team members as others move on.
+	      The current core team was elected from a pool of
+	      committer candidates in July 2012.  Elections are held
+	      every 2 years.</para>
 
 	    <para>Some core team members also have specific areas of
 	      responsibility, meaning that they are committed to
@@ -867,18 +892,18 @@
 	were over &os.numports; ports!  The list of ports ranges from
 	http servers, to games, languages, editors, and almost
 	everything in between.  The entire Ports Collection requires
-	approximately &ports.size;.  To compile a port, you simply change
-	to the directory of the program you wish to install, type
-	<command>make install</command>, and let the system do the
-	rest.  The full original distribution for each port you build
-	is retrieved dynamically
-	so you need only enough disk space to build the ports you
-	want.  Almost every port is also provided as a pre-compiled
-	<quote>package</quote>, which can be installed with a simple
-	command (<command>pkg_add</command>) by those who do not wish
-	to compile their own ports from source.  More information on
-	packages and ports can be found in <xref
-	  linkend="ports"/>.</para>
+	approximately &ports.size;.  To compile a port, you simply
+	change to the directory of the program you wish to install,
+	type <command>make install</command>, and let the system do
+	the rest.  The full original distribution for each port you
+	build is retrieved dynamically so you need only enough disk
+	space to build the ports you want.  Almost every port is also

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