From: Andrew Dinh Date: Fri, 2 Aug 2024 13:54:13 +0000 (+0700) Subject: Fix some small typos X-Git-Tag: openssl-3.3.2~37 X-Git-Url: http://git.ipfire.org/cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi?a=commitdiff_plain;h=c55b947a38ee7986294963016cfc4b00bf7186f5;p=thirdparty%2Fopenssl.git Fix some small typos Reviewed-by: Neil Horman Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell (Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/25073) (cherry picked from commit d0a49eea4a8bb50f7d2269bac390a0ce2cddeb1f) --- diff --git a/INSTALL.md b/INSTALL.md index b486ee1556a..50a8baac463 100644 --- a/INSTALL.md +++ b/INSTALL.md @@ -1291,7 +1291,7 @@ Configure OpenSSL ### Automatic Configuration In previous version, the `config` script determined the platform type and -compiler and then called `Configure`. Starting with this release, they are +compiler and then called `Configure`. Starting with version 3.0, they are the same. #### Unix / Linux / macOS @@ -1746,7 +1746,7 @@ More about our support resources can be found in the [SUPPORT] file. ### Configuration Errors -If the `./Configure` or `./Configure` command fails with an error message, +If the `./config` or `./Configure` command fails with an error message, read the error message carefully and try to figure out whether you made a mistake (e.g., by providing a wrong option), or whether the script is working incorrectly. If you think you encountered a bug, please diff --git a/doc/HOWTO/certificates.txt b/doc/HOWTO/certificates.txt index 78ab97b4192..82ce502a1d3 100644 --- a/doc/HOWTO/certificates.txt +++ b/doc/HOWTO/certificates.txt @@ -89,7 +89,7 @@ was kind enough, your certificate is a raw DER thing in PEM format. Your key most definitely is if you have followed the examples above. However, some (most?) certificate authorities will encode them with things like PKCS7 or PKCS12, or something else. Depending on your -applications, this may be perfectly OK, it all depends on what they +applications, this may be perfectly OK. It all depends on what they know how to decode. If not, there are a number of OpenSSL tools to convert between some (most?) formats.