RR used in DNS to perform a kind of atomic locking.
</p>
<p>ISC DHCP adoped early versions of these documents, and has not
- yet synched up with the final standards versions.
+ yet synced up with the final standards versions.
</p>
<p>For RFCs 4702 and 4704, the 'N' bit is not yet supported. The
result is that it is always set zero, and is ignored if set.
of atomic locking.
ISC DHCP adoped early versions of these documents, and has not yet
- synched up with the final standards versions.
+ synced up with the final standards versions.
For RFCs 4702 and 4704, the 'N' bit is not yet supported. The result
is that it is always set zero, and is ignored if set.
<?xml version='1.0' ?>
-<!-- $Id: References.xml,v 1.5 2011/05/20 13:48:33 tomasz Exp $ -->
+<!-- $Id: References.xml,v 1.6 2011/07/01 18:37:09 sar Exp $ -->
<?rfc private="ISC-DHCP-REFERENCES" ?>
RR used in DNS to perform a kind of atomic locking.</t>
<t>ISC DHCP adoped early versions of these documents, and has not
- yet synched up with the final standards versions.</t>
+ yet synced up with the final standards versions.</t>
<t>For RFCs 4702 and 4704, the 'N' bit is not yet supported. The
result is that it is always set zero, and is ignored if set.</t>