From 02eab761d6336e890b8ff78c1a4f1257aa6753d4 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: srittau Date: Wed, 22 Aug 2001 12:52:17 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Typos fixed. Patch by Alistair Riddell . --- doc/CONFIGURE | 38 +++++++++++++++++++------------------- 1 file changed, 19 insertions(+), 19 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/CONFIGURE b/doc/CONFIGURE index c63cb65e..ee014523 100644 --- a/doc/CONFIGURE +++ b/doc/CONFIGURE @@ -6,9 +6,9 @@ These files should have been copied into the configuration directory the INSTALL file. -Netatalk supplies two different types of Appletalk servers and both -can run at the same time. Classic Appletalk requires afpd and -atalkd. Appletalk over IP only requires afpd. +Netatalk supplies two different types of AFP servers and both can run at +the same time. Classic AFP over AppleTalk requires afpd and atalkd. AFP +over IP only requires afpd. @@ -112,15 +112,14 @@ Miscellaneous: (no default, same as -l "Message" on command-line) -nodebug Switch off debugging - -tickleval Specify the tickle timeout interval (in seconds) + -ticklevel Specify the tickle timeout interval (in seconds) -icon Use the platform-specific icon. An example: "Lance" -transall -uamlist uams_dhx.so -nosavepassword -setpassword -"Lance" is the server name, I enable both TCP and DDP, -all logins via DHX (requires AppleShare 3.8.6), the users cannot save -the password with keychains and it allows the users to set their -passwords. +"Lance" is the server name, I enable both TCP and DDP, all logins via DHX +(requires AppleShare Client 3.8.6), the users cannot save the password +with keychains and it allows the users to set their passwords. With no afpd.conf the default is: @@ -137,18 +136,18 @@ Try man afpd and man afpd.conf for further details. 2. /usr/local/etc/atalkd.conf ============================= -Classic Appletalk is configured in atalkd.conf. For detailed +The AppleTalk protocol is configured in atalkd.conf. For detailed information please reference http://www.neon.com/atalk_routing.html and http://www-commeng.cso.uiuc.edu/docs/appletalk/ -The whole point of seting up atalkd is to allow appletalk routing to +The whole point of setting up atalkd is to allow AppleTalk routing to the localhost as a file and print server. The atalkd.conf file sets up -the appletalk routing by assigning Appletalk zone (or zones) +the AppleTalk routing by assigning AppleTalk zone (or zones) information to the networks it is attached to. -Within appletalk there are three different types of routers: seed, +Within AppleTalk there are three different types of routers: seed, nonseed and soft seed. Seed publishes the network and zone information to the network. In the @@ -165,24 +164,25 @@ conflict. Any missing configurations will be filled from the network. Appletalk phases are of two types. The unused, unsupported, obsolete phase 1, or the new useful phase 2. -Phase 1 was Apples original protocol for Appletalk over Ethernet. It -treated an entire network segment as one appletalk network capable of -holding 254 nodes. Don't use this. +Phase 1 was Apple's original protocol for Appletalk over LocalTalk. It +treated an entire network segment as one AppleTalk network capable of +holding 254 nodes. Don't use this unless you are directly connected to a +LocalTalk network (unlikely these days). Phase 2 is the new version. It allows a configurable network range between the numbers 1 and 65279, each network capable of hosting 253 -nodes for a total of 16,515,587 Appletalk interfaces. That's a lot +nodes for a total of 16,515,587 AppleTalk interfaces. That's a lot of iMacs. :-) -Within an Appletalk network addressing is a Network:Node:Socket -triplet. The socket number is general dropped because nothing uses the +Within an AppleTalk network addressing is a Network:Node:Socket +triplet. The socket number is generally dropped because nothing uses the information. Using ethernet and phase 2 the network number can be singular, '1' or a range, '1-20'. Node assignment is the responsibility of the clients so you don't have to worry about it. The range of 65280-65534 is called the startup range and is used by the Mac when it is on a network -without any routers, you probably shouldn't publish a network withing +without any routers, you probably shouldn't publish a network within this range. If you're publishing to a LocalTalk network segment (Hello? Welcome to Y2K. :) your maximum network range is _one_ network. -- 2.39.2