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[pkgsrc/trunk]: pkgsrc/doc/guide/files Wording cleanup.



details:   https://anonhg.NetBSD.org/pkgsrc/rev/0899a2085bb1
branches:  trunk
changeset: 349549:0899a2085bb1
user:      rillig <rillig%pkgsrc.org@localhost>
date:      Sun Jul 10 07:43:23 2016 +0000

description:
Wording cleanup.

diffstat:

 doc/guide/files/binary.xml      |  10 +++++-----
 doc/guide/files/bulk.xml        |  26 ++++++++++++--------------
 doc/guide/files/configuring.xml |  16 +++++-----------
 3 files changed, 22 insertions(+), 30 deletions(-)

diffs (149 lines):

diff -r dfa26c126355 -r 0899a2085bb1 doc/guide/files/binary.xml
--- a/doc/guide/files/binary.xml        Sun Jul 10 07:08:21 2016 +0000
+++ b/doc/guide/files/binary.xml        Sun Jul 10 07:43:23 2016 +0000
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-<!-- $NetBSD: binary.xml,v 1.34 2007/09/18 08:17:21 rillig Exp $ -->
+<!-- $NetBSD: binary.xml,v 1.35 2016/07/10 07:43:23 rillig Exp $ -->
 
 <chapter id="binary">
   <title>Creating binary packages</title>
@@ -17,10 +17,10 @@
     directory in pkgsrc, and run <command>make
     package</command>:</para>
 
-    <screen>
-&rprompt; <userinput>cd misc/figlet</userinput>
-&rprompt; <userinput>make package</userinput>
-    </screen>
+<screen>
+&uprompt; <userinput>cd misc/figlet</userinput>
+&uprompt; <userinput>make package</userinput>
+</screen>
 
     <para>This will build and install your package (if not already done),
     and then build a binary package from what was installed. You can
diff -r dfa26c126355 -r 0899a2085bb1 doc/guide/files/bulk.xml
--- a/doc/guide/files/bulk.xml  Sun Jul 10 07:08:21 2016 +0000
+++ b/doc/guide/files/bulk.xml  Sun Jul 10 07:43:23 2016 +0000
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-<!-- $NetBSD: bulk.xml,v 1.21 2014/07/27 08:28:28 wiz Exp $ -->
+<!-- $NetBSD: bulk.xml,v 1.22 2016/07/10 07:43:23 rillig Exp $ -->
 
 <chapter id="bulk">
 <title>Creating binary packages for everything in pkgsrc (bulk
@@ -11,9 +11,8 @@
 Or you may want to build a list of packages you want and check them before
 deploying onto production system.
 There is a way of getting a set of binary packages:
-The bulk build system, or pbulk ("p" stands for "parallel).
-This chapter describes how to set it up so that the packages
-are most likely to be usable later.</para>
+The bulk build system, or pbulk ("p" stands for "parallel").
+This chapter describes how to set it up.</para>
 
 <sect1 id="bulk.pre">
 <title>Preparations</title>
@@ -25,13 +24,13 @@
 interesting to a wide audience.
 <!-- approximate resource consumption for full bulk build is given in section <put a reference here/> -->
 For a limited bulk builds you need to make a list of packages you want to build.
-Note, that all their dependencies will be built, so you don't need to track them manually.
+Note that all their dependencies will be built, so you don't need to track them manually.
 </para>
 
 <para>During bulk builds various packages are installed and deinstalled
 in <filename>/usr/pkg</filename> (or whatever <filename>LOCALBASE</filename> is),
 so make sure that you don't need any package during the builds.
-Essentially, you should provide fresh system, either a chroot environment
+Essentially, you should provide a fresh system, either a chroot environment
 or something even more restrictive, depending on what the operating system provides,
 or dedicate the whole physical machine.
 As a useful side effect this makes sure that bulk builds cannot
@@ -87,11 +86,11 @@
 <sect2 id="bulk.pbulk.conf">
 <title>Configuration</title>
 
-<para>To simplify configuration we provide helper script <filename>mk/pbulk/pbulk.sh</filename>.</para>
+<para>To simplify configuration, we provide the helper script <filename>mk/pbulk/pbulk.sh</filename>.</para>
 
 <para>In order to use it, prepare a clear system (real one, chroot environment, jail, zone, virtual machine).
 Configure network access to fetch distribution files.
-Create user with name "pbulk".</para>
+Create a user with name "pbulk".</para>
 
 <para>Fetch and extract pkgsrc. Use a command like one of these:</para>
 
@@ -116,23 +115,22 @@
 apply to packages you build. For instance,</para>
 
 <programlisting>
-PKG_DEVELOPER=         yes             # perform more checks
-X11_TYPE=              modular         # use pkgsrc X11
-SKIP_LICENSE_CHECK=    yes             # accept all licences (useful when building all packages)
+PKG_DEVELOPER=         yes     # perform more checks
+X11_TYPE=              modular # use pkgsrc X11
+SKIP_LICENSE_CHECK=    yes     # accept all licences (useful
+                               # when building all packages)
 </programlisting>
 </note>
 <!-- Think how to merge this or maintain short reference of useful settings.
 <itemizedlist>
-<listitem><para><literal><varname>PKG_DEVELOPER</varname>=yes</literal>, to enable many consistency checks,</para></listitem>
 <listitem><para><literal><varname>WRKOBJDIR</varname>=/tmp/pbulk-outer</literal>, to keep <filename>/usr/pkgsrc</filename> free from any modifications,</para></listitem>
 <listitem><para><literal><varname>DISTDIR</varname>=/distfiles</literal>, to have only one directory in which all distfiles (for the infrastructure and for the actual packages) are 
downloaded,</para></listitem>
 <listitem><para><literal><varname>ACCEPTABLE_LICENSES</varname>+=...</literal>, to select some licenses additional to the usual Free/Open Source licenses that are acceptable to you,</para></listitem>
-<listitem><para><literal><varname>SKIP_LICENSE_CHECK</varname>=yes</literal>, to bypass the license checks.</para></listitem>
 </itemizedlist>
 -->
 
 <para>If configured for limited list, replace the list in <filename>/usr/pbulk/etc/pbulk.list</filename>
-with your list of packages one per line without empty lines or comments. E.g.:</para>
+with your list of packages, one per line without empty lines or comments. E.g.:</para>
 
 <programlisting>
 www/firefox
diff -r dfa26c126355 -r 0899a2085bb1 doc/guide/files/configuring.xml
--- a/doc/guide/files/configuring.xml   Sun Jul 10 07:08:21 2016 +0000
+++ b/doc/guide/files/configuring.xml   Sun Jul 10 07:43:23 2016 +0000
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-<!-- $NetBSD: configuring.xml,v 1.49 2016/06/11 14:58:26 rillig Exp $ -->
+<!-- $NetBSD: configuring.xml,v 1.50 2016/07/10 07:43:23 rillig Exp $ -->
 
 <chapter id="configuring">
   <title>Configuring pkgsrc</title>
@@ -13,22 +13,16 @@
 <literal>${PREFIX}/etc/</literal>, depending on where you told the
 bootstrap program to install the binary packages.</para>
 
-<para>During the bootstrap, an example configuration file is created. To
-use that, you have to create the directory
-<filename>${PREFIX}/etc</filename> and copy the example file
-there.</para>
-
 <para>The format of the configuration file is that of the usual
 BSD-style <filename>Makefile</filename>s. The whole pkgsrc configuration
 is done by setting variables in this file. Note that you can define all
 kinds of variables, and no special error checking (for example for
-spelling mistakes) takes place, so you have to try it out to see if it
-works.</para>
+spelling mistakes) takes place.</para>
 
   <sect1 id="general-configuration">
     <title>General configuration</title>
 
-    <para>In this section, you can find some variables that apply to all
+    <para>The following variables apply to all
     pkgsrc packages. A complete list of the variables that can be
     configured by the user is available in
     <filename>mk/defaults/mk.conf</filename>, together with some
@@ -366,8 +360,8 @@
        (normal, default, quiet operation); the value 1 will display
        all shell commands before their invocation, and the value 2
        will display both the shell commands before their invocation,
-       and their actual execution progress with <command>set
-       -x</command> will be displayed.</para></listitem>
+       as well as their actual execution progress with <command>set
+       -x</command>.</para></listitem>
       </itemizedlist>
     </para>
   </sect1>



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