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[GNUnet-SVN] r469 - GNUnet/doc/man
From: |
grothoff |
Subject: |
[GNUnet-SVN] r469 - GNUnet/doc/man |
Date: |
Sun, 20 Mar 2005 15:57:14 -0800 (PST) |
Author: grothoff
Date: 2005-03-20 15:57:12 -0800 (Sun, 20 Mar 2005)
New Revision: 469
Modified:
GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-chat.1
GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-delete.1
GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-download-manager.1
GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-gtk.1
GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-insert.1
GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-pseudonym.1
GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-search.1
GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-tbench.1
GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-tracekit.1
GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-transport-check.1
GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-update.1
GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet.conf.5
GNUnet/doc/man/gnunetd.1
Log:
removing tailing whitespace
Modified: GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-chat.1
===================================================================
--- GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-chat.1 2005-03-20 23:56:50 UTC (rev 468)
+++ GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-chat.1 2005-03-20 23:57:12 UTC (rev 469)
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
.TH GNUNET-CHAT "1" "24 Apr 2004" "GNUnet"
.SH NAME
-gnunet-chat \- a command line interface to chat via GNUnet
+gnunet-chat \- a command line interface to chat via GNUnet
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B gnunet\-chat
[\fIOPTIONS\fR]
@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@
\fB\-L \fILOGLEVEL\fR, \fB\-\-loglevel=LOGLEVEL\fR
change the loglevel. Possible values for LOGLEVEL are NOTHING, FATAL, ERROR,
FAILURE, WARNING, MESSAGE, INFO, DEBUG, CRON and EVERYTHING.
.SH NOTES
-gnunet-chat is meant as a demo application for how to implement applications
using the GNUnet infrastructure. It is not meant as a serious tool. You need to
enable the "chat" in gnunet.conf in order to use gnunet-chat. gnunet-chat is
neither efficient nor secure and has serious design flaws.
+gnunet-chat is meant as a demo application for how to implement applications
using the GNUnet infrastructure. It is not meant as a serious tool. You need to
enable the "chat" in gnunet.conf in order to use gnunet-chat. gnunet-chat is
neither efficient nor secure and has serious design flaws.
.SH FILES
.TP
~/.gnunet/gnunet.conf
Modified: GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-delete.1
===================================================================
--- GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-delete.1 2005-03-20 23:56:50 UTC (rev 468)
+++ GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-delete.1 2005-03-20 23:57:12 UTC (rev 469)
@@ -3,10 +3,10 @@
gnunet-delete \- a command line interface for deleting indexed files from
GNUnet
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B gnunet\-delete
-[\fIOPTIONS\fR] \-f FILENAME
+[\fIOPTIONS\fR] \-f FILENAME
.SH DESCRIPTION
.PP
-gnunet-delete is used for deleting indexed files from GNUnet.
+gnunet-delete is used for deleting indexed files from GNUnet.
.TP
\fB\-h\fR, \fB\-\-help\fR
print help page
@@ -26,7 +26,7 @@
\fB\-L \fILOGLEVEL\fR, \fB\-\-loglevel=LOGLEVEL\fR
change the loglevel. Possible values for LOGLEVEL are NOTHING, FATAL, ERROR,
FAILURE, WARNING, MESSAGE, INFO, DEBUG, CRON and EVERYTHING.
.SH NOTES
-The option -f is used to specify the name of the file that should be deleted.
+The option -f is used to specify the name of the file that should be deleted.
.TP
You can only delete files that you indexed (or inserted?? FIXME!) and that you
still have available locally in full. You should use gnunet-delete on files
that you indexed (not inserted) and that you are going to delete locally.
.TP
Modified: GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-download-manager.1
===================================================================
--- GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-download-manager.1 2005-03-20 23:56:50 UTC (rev
468)
+++ GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-download-manager.1 2005-03-20 23:57:12 UTC (rev
469)
@@ -15,7 +15,7 @@
Other commands for the download manager include resume (resumes all
downloads), status (show status of pending downloads), killall (abort all
downloads), settings (for configuration) and help (print help text).
-gnunet\-download\-manager is a scheme script and is only installed if guile
was found by configure.
+gnunet\-download\-manager is a scheme script and is only installed if guile
was found by configure.
.SH BUGS
Report bugs by using mantis <https://gnunet.org/mantis/> or by sending
electronic mail to <address@hidden>
Modified: GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-gtk.1
===================================================================
--- GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-gtk.1 2005-03-20 23:56:50 UTC (rev 468)
+++ GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-gtk.1 2005-03-20 23:57:12 UTC (rev 469)
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
[\fIOPTIONS\fR]
.SH DESCRIPTION
.PP
-gnunet-gtk is a gtk+ based GUI for searching, downloading and inserting files
on GNUnet. It supports queries of the form foo AND bar (notice that AND must be
capitalized and that keywords are case-sensitive), just like gnunet-search. It
can also be used to create and publish content directories out of search
results and inserted files.
+gnunet-gtk is a gtk+ based GUI for searching, downloading and inserting files
on GNUnet. It supports queries of the form foo AND bar (notice that AND must be
capitalized and that keywords are case-sensitive), just like gnunet-search. It
can also be used to create and publish content directories out of search
results and inserted files.
.TP
\fB\-h\fR, \fB\-\-help\fR
print help page
Modified: GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-insert.1
===================================================================
--- GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-insert.1 2005-03-20 23:56:50 UTC (rev 468)
+++ GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-insert.1 2005-03-20 23:57:12 UTC (rev 469)
@@ -36,13 +36,13 @@
keyword), GNUnet supports namespaces. A namespace is a subset of the
searchspace into which only the holder of a certain pseudonym can add content.
Any GNUnet user can create any number of pseudonyms using
-\fBgnunet\-pseudonym\-create\fR. Pseudonyms are stored in the users GNUnet
-directory and can be additionally protected with a password. While
-pseudonyms are locally identified with an arbitrary string that
-the user selects when the pseudonym is created, the namespace is
-globally known only under the hash of the public key of the pseudonym.
-Since only the owner of the pseudonym can add content to the namespace,
-it is impossible for other users to pollute the namespace.
+\fBgnunet\-pseudonym\-create\fR. Pseudonyms are stored in the users GNUnet
+directory and can be additionally protected with a password. While
+pseudonyms are locally identified with an arbitrary string that
+the user selects when the pseudonym is created, the namespace is
+globally known only under the hash of the public key of the pseudonym.
+Since only the owner of the pseudonym can add content to the namespace,
+it is impossible for other users to pollute the namespace.
gnunet\-insert automatically inserts the top\-directory (or the only
file if only one file is specified) into the namespace if a pseudonym is
specified. If no specific namespace\-identifier is specified (option \-t),
@@ -62,7 +62,7 @@
\-u to specify the identifier of the previous version of the content that
you want to update.
.PP
-You can use automatic meta\-data extraction (based on libextractor)
+You can use automatic meta\-data extraction (based on libextractor)
or the command\-line option \-m to specify meta-data. For the \-m
option you need to use the form keyword\-type:value. For example,
use "\-m os:Linux" to specify that the operating system is Linux.
@@ -79,7 +79,7 @@
will be in plaintext and have the RIPE160MD hash of the entire file as
the filename. This makes it possible to create links to that file, if
gnunetd is running locally. Note that for indexed files a different quota
-is applied than for the normal GNUnet AFS database. Indexing is generally
+is applied than for the normal GNUnet AFS database. Indexing is generally
significantly more efficient and the default choice. In either case,
the file is slowly (depending on how often it is requested and on how much
bandwidth is available) dispersed into the network. If you insert or index
@@ -102,11 +102,11 @@
.TP
\fB\-i \fISECONDS\fR, \fB\-\-interval=\fISECONDS\fR
-Specifies the update frequency of the content in seconds. This option is only
valid together with the \-s option. If no current and next ID are specified,
the system picks some random start values for the sequence.
+Specifies the update frequency of the content in seconds. This option is only
valid together with the \-s option. If no current and next ID are specified,
the system picks some random start values for the sequence.
-Most recent update can be found by gnunet\-gtk automatically. gnunet\-search
will print all edition ids
-between the insertion time and the current time. A new search can be then
performed with one of the printed keys.
-Also, using gnunet\-insert for updating content is cumbersome, in the future
gnunet\-gtk will provide a more interactive
+Most recent update can be found by gnunet\-gtk automatically. gnunet\-search
will print all edition ids
+between the insertion time and the current time. A new search can be then
performed with one of the printed keys.
+Also, using gnunet\-insert for updating content is cumbersome, in the future
gnunet\-gtk will provide a more interactive
way to manage content updates.
.TP
@@ -133,7 +133,7 @@
.TP
\fB\-N \fIID\fR, \fB\-\-next=\fIID\fR
-Specifies the next ID of a future version of the SBlock. This option is only
valid together with the \-s option and together with either the option -b or
only a single filename on the command\-line. This option can be used to
specify what the identifier of an updated version will look like. Without the
\-i option, a one\-shot update SBlock is used (a\-periodic). With the \-i
option, the difference between the current ID (this) and the next ID is used
to compute all future IDs. Note that specifying \-i and \-N without \-t hardly
ever makes sense.
+Specifies the next ID of a future version of the SBlock. This option is only
valid together with the \-s option and together with either the option -b or
only a single filename on the command\-line. This option can be used to
specify what the identifier of an updated version will look like. Without the
\-i option, a one\-shot update SBlock is used (a\-periodic). With the \-i
option, the difference between the current ID (this) and the next ID is used
to compute all future IDs. Note that specifying \-i and \-N without \-t hardly
ever makes sense.
The ID can be given in HEX notation, otherwise the HEX code is derived by
hashing the given ID string.
@@ -145,15 +145,15 @@
.TP
\fB\-P \fINAME\fR, \fB\-\-pseudonym=\fINAME\fR
-For the top\-level directory or file, create an SBlock that places the file
into the namespace specified by the pseudonym NAME.
+For the top\-level directory or file, create an SBlock that places the file
into the namespace specified by the pseudonym NAME.
.TP
\fB\-R\fR, \fB\-\-recursive\fR
-Process directories recursively. Without this option, directories are
ignored. With this option, gnunet-insert will process files in directories
recursively.
+Process directories recursively. Without this option, directories are
ignored. With this option, gnunet-insert will process files in directories
recursively.
.TP
\fB\-S\fR, \fB\-\-sporadic\fR
-This option specifies that the file will be updated sporadically but not
periodically. It is only valid in conjunction with the \-s option. It is
implied if \-N is specified but not \-i. It cannot be used together with the
\-i option. Use \-S if you intend to publish an update at an unknown point in
the future and if you want gnunet\-insert to pick a random identifier for that
future content.
+This option specifies that the file will be updated sporadically but not
periodically. It is only valid in conjunction with the \-s option. It is
implied if \-N is specified but not \-i. It cannot be used together with the
\-i option. Use \-S if you intend to publish an update at an unknown point in
the future and if you want gnunet\-insert to pick a random identifier for that
future content.
If you use \-s but not \-S, \-N or \-i, the content will not be updateable.
@@ -168,7 +168,7 @@
\fB\-T \fITIME\fR, \fB\-\-time=\fITIME\fR
Specifies the SBlock creation time. The required format depends on your
locale.
-for TIME. This option can be used to publish past and future periodical
+for TIME. This option can be used to publish past and future periodical
SBlocks. The option works best when used together with \-e. Default time is
the current time.
.TP
@@ -203,39 +203,39 @@
\fBUsing directories\fR
-Index the files COPYING and AUTHORS with keyword \fBtest\fR and
-build a directory containing the two files.
+Index the files COPYING and AUTHORS with keyword \fBtest\fR and
+build a directory containing the two files.
Make the directory itself available under keyword \fBgnu\fR:
# gnunet\-insert \-K test \-k gnu \-b COPYING AUTHORS
Neatly publish an image gallery in \fBkittendir/\fR and its
-subdirs with keyword \fBkittens\fR for the directory but no
-keywords for the individual files or subdirs (\-Rn).
+subdirs with keyword \fBkittens\fR for the directory but no
+keywords for the individual files or subdirs (\-Rn).
Force description for all files:
# gnunet\-insert \-Rn \-m "description:Kitten collection" \-k kittens kittendir
\fBSecure publishing with namespaces\fR
-Insert file COPYING with pseudonym RIAA (\-s) and password MPAA (\-P)
+Insert file COPYING with pseudonym RIAA (\-s) and password MPAA (\-P)
with identifier \fBgpl\fR (\-t) and no updates:
# gnunet\-insert \-s RIAA \-P MPAA \-t gpl COPYING
Recursively (\-R) index /home/ogg and build a matching directory structure.
-Insert the top\-level directory into the namespace under the pseudonym
-RIAA (\-s) with password MPAA (\-P) under identifier MUSIC (\-t) and
-promise to provide an update with identifier VIDEOS (\-N) at an
-arbitrary point in the future (\-S is implied by lack of \-i
+Insert the top\-level directory into the namespace under the pseudonym
+RIAA (\-s) with password MPAA (\-P) under identifier MUSIC (\-t) and
+promise to provide an update with identifier VIDEOS (\-N) at an
+arbitrary point in the future (\-S is implied by lack of \-i
and presence of \-N):
# gnunet\-insert \-R \-s RIAA \-P MPAA \-t MUSIC \-N VIDEOS /home/ogg
Recursively (\-R) insert (\-n) /var/lib/mysql and build a matching directory
-structure, but disable the use of libextractor to extract keywords
+structure, but disable the use of libextractor to extract keywords
(\-n). Print the file identifiers (\-V) that can be used to retrieve
-the files. This will store a copy of the MySQL database in GNUnet but
+the files. This will store a copy of the MySQL database in GNUnet but
without adding any keywords to search for it. Thus only people that
have been told the secret file identifiers printed with the \-V option
can retrieve the (secret?) files:
Modified: GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-pseudonym.1
===================================================================
--- GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-pseudonym.1 2005-03-20 23:56:50 UTC (rev 468)
+++ GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-pseudonym.1 2005-03-20 23:57:12 UTC (rev 469)
@@ -2,15 +2,15 @@
.SH NAME
gnunet\-pseudonym \- create, delete or list pseudonyms
.SH SYNOPSIS
-.B gnunet\-pseudonym
+.B gnunet\-pseudonym
[options]
.SH DESCRIPTION
.PP
-gnunet\-pseudonym is a tool for managing pseudonyms and namespaces. A
pseudonym is the persona that controls a namespace. As such, it is identical
to a public\-private RSA key pair. A namespace is a collection of files that
have been signed by the corresponding private RSA key. A namespace is
typically associated with a nickname and other metadata which is kept in a
specially named file in the namespace.
+gnunet\-pseudonym is a tool for managing pseudonyms and namespaces. A
pseudonym is the persona that controls a namespace. As such, it is identical
to a public\-private RSA key pair. A namespace is a collection of files that
have been signed by the corresponding private RSA key. A namespace is
typically associated with a nickname and other metadata which is kept in a
specially named file in the namespace.
Namespaces are an important tool for providing assurances about content
integrity and authenticity in GNUnet. Since all of the content in the
namespace must have been provided by the same entity, users can form an opinion
about that entity and learn to search (or avoid) certain namespaces.
-gnunet\-pseudonym can be used to list all of the pseudonyms that were created
locally, to create new pseudonyms, to delete existing pseudonyms (the namespace
will continue to exist, but it will be impossible to add additional data to it)
and to list all of the namespaces (with their meta-data) known to the local
user. By default, gnunet\-pseudonym lists all pseudonyms created locally and
all of the namespaces that were discovered so far.
+gnunet\-pseudonym can be used to list all of the pseudonyms that were created
locally, to create new pseudonyms, to delete existing pseudonyms (the namespace
will continue to exist, but it will be impossible to add additional data to it)
and to list all of the namespaces (with their meta-data) known to the local
user. By default, gnunet\-pseudonym lists all pseudonyms created locally and
all of the namespaces that were discovered so far.
Creating a new pseudonym requires using the \-C option together with a
nickname that is to be used for the namespace. Nicknames must be unique for
each user, global uniqueness is desireable but not necessary. If two
namespaces in GNUnet use the same nickname all GNUnet tools will display the
nickname together with the unique namespace identifier (which is derived from
the public key and hence guaranteed to be unique) to avoid ambiguity.
Additional options can be passed together with the \-C option to provide
additional meta-data that describes the namespace. Possible meta-data includes
the 'realname' of the person controlling the namespace, a description, the
mime-type for content in the namespace (useful if the namespace is dedicated to
some specific type of content) and contact information. One important piece of
meta-data that can be specified is the identifier of a document root, that is
the name of a file in the namespace that is a portal to the rest of the
content. This is useful to help users find this root in the absence of
conventions. Note that all of this meta-data is optional and should never be
trusted blindly.
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
\fB\-a\fR, \fB\-\-automate\fR
Start a (new) collection. Works only in conjunction with the \-C option. A
collection is an automatically managed directory in a namespace. In essence,
after starting the collection every file that you insert into GNUnet will
automatically be placed into the collection. Other users can browse your
collection and be certain (thanks to cryptography) that all of these files were
inserted into GNUnet by the same user (they do not necessarily know who it is,
but if you specify your realname (\-r) they will be able to see that handle).
Collections are useful for establishing a reputation for your GNUnet content,
such that readers can form an opinion about quality and availability.
Namespaces can be used to achieve the same thing, but collections are automatic
and thus less work for you.
-Using collections has some security implications since it is possible for an
adversary to see that all of these files originate from the same user. This
may help a correlation attack to break anonymity. Nevertheless we encourage
using collections, they are likely to be the right choice for most users.
+Using collections has some security implications since it is possible for an
adversary to see that all of these files originate from the same user. This
may help a correlation attack to break anonymity. Nevertheless we encourage
using collections, they are likely to be the right choice for most users.
.TP
\fB\-C NAME\fR, \fB\-\-create=NAME\fR
Creates a new pseudonym with the given NAME.
Modified: GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-search.1
===================================================================
--- GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-search.1 2005-03-20 23:56:50 UTC (rev 468)
+++ GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-search.1 2005-03-20 23:57:12 UTC (rev 469)
@@ -1,17 +1,17 @@
.TH GNUNET-SEARCH "1" "15 Dec 2004" "GNUnet"
.SH NAME
-gnunet-search \- a command line interface to search for content on GNUnet
+gnunet-search \- a command line interface to search for content on GNUnet
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B gnunet\-search
[\fIOPTIONS\fR] KEYWORD [AND KEYWORD]*
.SH DESCRIPTION
.PP
-Search for content on GNUnet. The keywords are case-sensitive. gnunet\-search
can be used both for a search in the global namespace as well as for searching
a private subspace.
+Search for content on GNUnet. The keywords are case-sensitive. gnunet\-search
can be used both for a search in the global namespace as well as for searching
a private subspace.
.TP
\fB\-a \fILEVEL\fR, \fB\-\-anonymity=LEVEL\fR
The \fB-a\fR option can be used to specify additional anonymity constraints.
If set to 0, GNUnet will try to download the file as fast as possible without
any additional slowdown for anonymous routing. Note that you may still have
some amount of anonymity depending on the current network load and the power of
the adversary. Use at least 1 to force GNUnet to use anonymous routing.
-This option can be used to limit requests further than that. In particular,
you can require GNUnet to have a certain amount of cover traffic from other
peers before sending your queries. This way, you can gain very high levels of
anonymity \- at the expense of much more traffic and much higher latency. So
set this option to values beyond 1 only if you really believe you need it.
+This option can be used to limit requests further than that. In particular,
you can require GNUnet to have a certain amount of cover traffic from other
peers before sending your queries. This way, you can gain very high levels of
anonymity \- at the expense of much more traffic and much higher latency. So
set this option to values beyond 1 only if you really believe you need it.
The definition of ANONYMITY-RECEIVE is the following: If the value v is 0,
anonymous routing is not required. For 1, anonymous routing is required, but
there is no lower bound on how much cover traffic must be present. For values
> 1 and < 1000, it means that if GNUnet routes n bytes of messages from foreign
peers, it may originate n/v bytes of queries in the same time-period. The
time\-period is twice the average delay that GNUnet deferrs forwarded queries.
If the value v is >= 1000, it means that if GNUnet routes n bytes of QUERIES
from at least (v % 1000) peers, it may originate n/v/1000 bytes of queries in
the same time\-period.
@@ -34,7 +34,7 @@
Writes the encountered (unencrypted) RBlocks or SBlocks to files with name
PREFIX.XXX, where XXX is a number. This is useful to keep search results around.
.TP
\fB\-t\fR \fITIMEOUT\fR
-The \-t option specifies that the query should timeout after approximately
TIMEOUT seconds. A value of zero is interpreted as never. The default value
can be changed via the SEARCHTIMEOUT variable in the GNUnet configuration file.
+The \-t option specifies that the query should timeout after approximately
TIMEOUT seconds. A value of zero is interpreted as never. The default value
can be changed via the SEARCHTIMEOUT variable in the GNUnet configuration file.
.TP
\fB\-v\fR, \fB\-\-version\fR
print the version number
Modified: GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-tbench.1
===================================================================
--- GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-tbench.1 2005-03-20 23:56:50 UTC (rev 468)
+++ GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-tbench.1 2005-03-20 23:57:12 UTC (rev 469)
@@ -3,17 +3,17 @@
gnunet-tbench \- transport profiling tool
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B gnunet\-tbench
-[\fIOPTIONS\fR]
+[\fIOPTIONS\fR]
.SH DESCRIPTION
gnunet-tbench can be used to test the performance of the GNUnet
core (link-to-link encryption and the available transport services).
gnunet-tbench is useless to most ordinary users since its primary
-function is to test the performance and correctness
-of GNUnet transport service implementations.
+function is to test the performance and correctness
+of GNUnet transport service implementations.
.PP
gnunet-tbench sends a sequence of messages to another peer that
-has the tbench module loaded. The service then measures the
-throughput, latency and loss of the messages round-trip.
+has the tbench module loaded. The service then measures the
+throughput, latency and loss of the messages round-trip.
gnunet-tbench can only be used to test a direct peer-to-peer
connection. You must load the \fItbench\fR module (via
the configuration gnunet.conf, section GNUNETD under APPLICATIONS)
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
The two peers must know of each other and be connected (use
gnunet-stats to test for connections). Typically, gnunet-tbench
reports the time it took to sent all specified messages and the
-percentage of messages lost.
+percentage of messages lost.
.PP
\fb\-r \fIRECEIVER\fR, \fB\-\-rec=\fIRECEIVER\fR
use this option to specify the identity of the
@@ -51,12 +51,12 @@
wait TIMEOUT milli-seconds for replies to arrive before aborting
.TP
\fB\-S\fI SPACE \fB\-\-space=\fSPACE\fR
-use SPACE milli-seconds of delays between trains of messages
+use SPACE milli-seconds of delays between trains of messages
.TP
\fB\-X\fI COUNT \fB\-\-xspace=\fCOUNT\fR
-use trains of COUNT messages
+use trains of COUNT messages
\fB\-g \-\-gnuplot
-create output in two colums suitable for gnuplot.
+create output in two colums suitable for gnuplot.
When using this option, concatenate the output of multiple
runs with various options into a file 'tbench' and run
the following gnuplot script to visualize the time/loss
Modified: GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-tracekit.1
===================================================================
--- GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-tracekit.1 2005-03-20 23:56:50 UTC (rev 468)
+++ GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-tracekit.1 2005-03-20 23:57:12 UTC (rev 469)
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
gnunet\-tracekit \-\- overlay network traceing
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B gnunet\-tracekit
-[\fIOPTIONS\fR]
+[\fIOPTIONS\fR]
.SH DESCRIPTION
gnunet\-tracekit can be used to visualize the GNUnet overlay network. This
tool broadcasts a message into the network querying every peer about a list of
other connected peers. The result is then printed to the screen.
.PP
Modified: GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-transport-check.1
===================================================================
--- GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-transport-check.1 2005-03-20 23:56:50 UTC (rev
468)
+++ GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-transport-check.1 2005-03-20 23:57:12 UTC (rev
469)
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
gnunet-transport-check \- a tool to test a GNUnet transport service
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B gnunet\-transport\-check
-[\fIOPTIONS\fR]
+[\fIOPTIONS\fR]
.SH DESCRIPTION
.PP
gnunet-transport-check can be used to test or profile
@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@
normal that some peers do not respond, but if no peer responds something
is likely to be wrong. The configuration is always taken
from the configuration file. Do not run gnunetd while running
-gnunet-transport-check since the transport services cannot
+gnunet-transport-check since the transport services cannot
be used by two processes at the same time.
.PP
gnunet-transport-check will always produce an error-message for
@@ -37,7 +37,7 @@
but exactly what is supposed to happen.
.PP
Similarly, a NAT-ed peer should typically configure the TCP transport
-to use port 0 (not listen on any port). In this case,
+to use port 0 (not listen on any port). In this case,
gnunet-transport-check will print 'could not create HELO' for the
TCP transport. This is also ok. In fact, a correctly configured
peer using NAT should give just two errors (could not connect for
Modified: GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-update.1
===================================================================
--- GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-update.1 2005-03-20 23:56:50 UTC (rev 468)
+++ GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet-update.1 2005-03-20 23:57:12 UTC (rev 469)
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
gnunet-update \- a tool to update GNUnet
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B gnunet\-update
-[\fIOPTIONS\fR]
+[\fIOPTIONS\fR]
.SH DESCRIPTION
.PP
gnunet-update updates gnunets databases after software updates
Modified: GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet.conf.5
===================================================================
--- GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet.conf.5 2005-03-20 23:56:50 UTC (rev 468)
+++ GNUnet/doc/man/gnunet.conf.5 2005-03-20 23:57:12 UTC (rev 469)
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
.PP
GNUnet uses two configuation files. /etc/gnunet.conf is the default location
for the configuration file used by gnunetd, the GNUnet daemon. It contains the
network and resource configuration for the peer. A template can be found in
contrib/gnunet.root. The RPM installs the template to /etc/gnunet.conf.
.TP
-Another configuration file is used to allow users to customize GNUnet
according to their needs. It is used by all of the GNUnet tools and the
default location is ~/.gnunet/gnunet.conf. The user configuration allows the
specification of personal options, such as the nickname in the chat. A
template can be found in contrib/gnunet.user. The RPM installs a template for
this file in /etc/skel/.gnunet/gnunet.conf.
+Another configuration file is used to allow users to customize GNUnet
according to their needs. It is used by all of the GNUnet tools and the
default location is ~/.gnunet/gnunet.conf. The user configuration allows the
specification of personal options, such as the nickname in the chat. A
template can be found in contrib/gnunet.user. The RPM installs a template for
this file in /etc/skel/.gnunet/gnunet.conf.
.TP
Both configuration files use the same basic syntax. The file is split into
sections. Every section begins with [SECTIONNAME] and contains a number of
options of the form OPTION=VALUE. Empty lines and lines beginning with a # are
treated as comments. Some options are optional, in particular certain sections
are not used at all unless the corresponding service module is loaded (e.g. you
do not have to configure the SMTP transport unless you decide to use it).
.SH FILES
Modified: GNUnet/doc/man/gnunetd.1
===================================================================
--- GNUnet/doc/man/gnunetd.1 2005-03-20 23:56:50 UTC (rev 468)
+++ GNUnet/doc/man/gnunetd.1 2005-03-20 23:57:12 UTC (rev 469)
@@ -32,7 +32,7 @@
.SH FILES
.TP
/etc/gnunet.conf
-gnunetd configuration file (default location).
+gnunetd configuration file (default location).
.TP
/var/lib/GNUnet/.hostkey
Nodes GNUnet RSA private key. Keep secret.
@@ -41,7 +41,7 @@
Hostkeys. GNUnet stores contact information and public keys of other nodes
here. You may want to make this directory publically available.
.TP
/var/lib/GNUnet/data/afs/content/
-Block database for anonymous file sharing. Depending on how you compiled
GNUnet, a gdbm or tdb database or a directory is used. GNUnet will store
isolated blocks of files here.
+Block database for anonymous file sharing. Depending on how you compiled
GNUnet, a gdbm or tdb database or a directory is used. GNUnet will store
isolated blocks of files here.
.TP
/var/lib/GNUnet/data/credit/
Trust directory. GNUnet stores economic information about other nodes here,
in particular how much useful data we have received from which remote node.
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