r170 - mdadm/trunk/debian
madduck at users.alioth.debian.org
madduck at users.alioth.debian.org
Sat Sep 16 09:22:35 UTC 2006
Author: madduck
Date: 2006-09-16 09:22:35 +0000 (Sat, 16 Sep 2006)
New Revision: 170
Modified:
mdadm/trunk/debian/FAQ
mdadm/trunk/debian/mdadm.templates
Log:
multiple instead of multi
Modified: mdadm/trunk/debian/FAQ
===================================================================
--- mdadm/trunk/debian/FAQ 2006-09-13 19:19:06 UTC (rev 169)
+++ mdadm/trunk/debian/FAQ 2006-09-16 09:22:35 UTC (rev 170)
@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@
0. What does MD stand for?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-MD is an abbreviation for "multi device". The Linux MD implementation
+MD is an abbreviation for "multiple device". The Linux MD implementation
implements various strategies for combining multiple physical devices into
single logical ones. The most common use case is commonly known as "Software
RAID". Linux supports RAID levels 1, 5, 6, and 10, as well as the
Modified: mdadm/trunk/debian/mdadm.templates
===================================================================
--- mdadm/trunk/debian/mdadm.templates 2006-09-13 19:19:06 UTC (rev 169)
+++ mdadm/trunk/debian/mdadm.templates 2006-09-16 09:22:35 UTC (rev 170)
@@ -67,7 +67,7 @@
_Description: Do you want to start MD arrays automatically?
Once the base system has come up, mdadm can start all MD arrays (RAIDs)
specified in /etc/mdadm/mdadm.conf, which have not yet been started. Unless
- you have compiled multi-device (MD) support into the kernel and marked all
+ you have compiled multiple device (MD) support into the kernel and marked all
partitions part of MD arrays with type 0xfd (as those and only those will be
started automatically by the kernel), this is probably what you want.
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