From: Yoshiki Hayashi Date: Thu, 7 Jun 2001 05:14:13 +0000 (+0000) Subject: Port typo fix from 1.3. X-Git-Tag: 2.0.19~127 X-Git-Url: http://git.ipfire.org/cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi?a=commitdiff_plain;h=54666fc1790460f13ff26791a47221121bdccff8;p=thirdparty%2Fapache%2Fhttpd.git Port typo fix from 1.3. git-svn-id: https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/httpd/httpd/trunk@89287 13f79535-47bb-0310-9956-ffa450edef68 --- diff --git a/docs/manual/mod/mod_so.html b/docs/manual/mod/mod_so.html index 5850c7b2a89..aef279aeec1 100644 --- a/docs/manual/mod/mod_so.html +++ b/docs/manual/mod/mod_so.html @@ -150,7 +150,7 @@ two modules into a single module for all operating systems. The LoadFile directive links in the named object files or libraries when the server is started or restarted; this is used to load additional code which may be required for some module to -work. Filename is either and absolute path or relative to Filename is either an absolute path or relative to ServerRoot.


LoadModule directive

diff --git a/docs/manual/mod/mod_unique_id.html b/docs/manual/mod/mod_unique_id.html index 9ee0d7adc41..ffd14826a80 100644 --- a/docs/manual/mod/mod_unique_id.html +++ b/docs/manual/mod/mod_unique_id.html @@ -138,7 +138,7 @@ it with the time because time, at least at one second resolution, has repeated itself). This is not a perfect defense.

-How good a defense is it? Well suppose that one of your machines serves +How good a defense is it? We'll suppose that one of your machines serves at most 500 requests per second (which is a very reasonable upper bound at this writing, because systems generally do more than just shovel out static files). To do that it will require a number of children which @@ -164,7 +164,7 @@ very shortly after reboot.

The UNIQUE_ID environment variable is constructed by encoding the 112-bit (32-bit IP address, 32 bit pid, 32 bit time stamp, -16 bit counter) quadruple using the alphabet [A-Za-z0-9@-] +16 bit counter quadruple) using the alphabet [A-Za-z0-9@-] in a manner similar to MIME base64 encoding, producing 19 characters. The MIME base64 alphabet is actually [A-Za-z0-9+/] however + and / need to be specially encoded in URLs,