[Git][NTPsec/ntpsec][master] Documentation typos.

Eric S. Raymond gitlab at mg.gitlab.com
Mon Aug 29 09:29:21 UTC 2016


Eric S. Raymond pushed to branch master at NTPsec / ntpsec


Commits:
c434ad06 by Matt Selsky at 2016-08-29T00:38:59-04:00
Documentation typos.

- - - - -


2 changed files:

- docs/clientstart.txt
- ntpd/ntp_loopfilter.c


Changes:

=====================================
docs/clientstart.txt
=====================================
--- a/docs/clientstart.txt
+++ b/docs/clientstart.txt
@@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ a deb or RPM file under Linux) you can use this introduction as a
 guide to reading it, but may not have to modify it at all.
 
 If you are using a typical residential setup, in which your machine
-performs DHCP to your ISP's servers and recieves a dynamic address,
+performs DHCP to your ISP's servers and receives a dynamic address,
 your ntp.conf may be altered or generated by DHCP at
 address-allocation time.
 
@@ -220,12 +220,12 @@ HOWTO].
 == Special considerations when using DHCP ==
 
 If your machine uses DHCP to get a dynamic IP address from your ISP, 
-the ISPs provide you with a list of NTP servers to use during that
+the ISP provides you with a list of NTP servers to use during that
 handshake.  Suspect this if, when you look at your ntp.conf, you
 see server domain names obviously belonging to your ISP.
 
 The way this works is that your DHCP client requests the list,
-then then restarts your +{ntpd}+ with a custom configuration file
+then it restarts your +{ntpd}+ with a custom configuration file
 generated from that list.
 
 A good thing about this is that your ISP is likely to hand you servers


=====================================
ntpd/ntp_loopfilter.c
=====================================
--- a/ntpd/ntp_loopfilter.c
+++ b/ntpd/ntp_loopfilter.c
@@ -76,7 +76,7 @@
  * entirely and the daemon discipline used instead.
  *
  * There have been three versions of the kernel discipline code. The
- * first (microkernel) now in Solaris discipilnes the microseconds. The
+ * first (microkernel) now in Solaris disciplines the microseconds. The
  * second and third (nanokernel) disciplines the clock in nanoseconds.
  * These versions are identifed if the symbol STA_PLL is present in the
  * header file /usr/include/sys/timex.h. The third and current version



View it on GitLab: https://gitlab.com/NTPsec/ntpsec/commit/c434ad06e21b8ae034a49af7cc965a5f00d52a24
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