Merge pull request #78 from Gumnos/patch-1

Fix spelling error
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Peter Bieringer 2019-07-21 06:57:55 +02:00 committed by GitHub
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1 changed files with 7 additions and 7 deletions

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@ -380,7 +380,7 @@ when configuring your kernel. If you also want your Linux box to act as a
multicast router (mrouter) you also need to enable multicast routing in the
kernel by selecting "<em>IP: forwarding/gatewaying</em>", "<em/IP: multicast routing/"
and "<em/IP: tunneling/", the latter because new versions of <tt/mrouted/
relay on IP tunneling to send multicast datagrams encapsulated into unicast
rely on IP tunneling to send multicast datagrams encapsulated into unicast
ones. This is necessary when establishing tunnels
between multicast hosts separated by unicast-only networks and routers.
(The <tt/mrouted/ is a daemon that implements the multicast routing algorithm
@ -1442,7 +1442,7 @@ for more information.
I feel grateful to. So, I'm afraid this is going to be a large section... It
is, in any case, the most important one of this paper (for me, at least...).
First, I want to thank Elena Apolinario Fernández de Sousa (yes, Elena is
First, I want to thank Elena Apolinario Fernández de Sousa (yes, Elena is
the first name; the REST is THE surname ;-) ). I tried to reflect
in this Howto all the knowledge I collected while working with her in connecting
our Department to the MBone and debugging problems with locally generated
@ -1470,7 +1470,7 @@ entirely from his books (well, the latter also from his programs...).
Thanks for all, Pablo.
In my first course at the University that "primary source of documentation"
moved to Pepe Mañas. He was teaching then Computer Programming there, and
moved to Pepe Mañas. He was teaching then Computer Programming there, and
soon I became addict to his bookshelf. He lent me his books lots of times
without asking for a minimum sign that could assure that I was going
to return them back to him, not even my name! My first approach to TCP/IP
@ -1481,13 +1481,13 @@ That book influenced me a lot, and TCP/IP has become one of my primary
fields of interest since that summer.
If there are two persons I must thank most, these are (in alphabetic
order ;-) ), José Manuel and Paco Moya. Nobody I asked more things more
order ;-) ), José Manuel and Paco Moya. Nobody I asked more things more
times (C, C++, Linux, security, Web, OSs, signals &amp; systems,
electronics, ... anything!) and, despite my persistence, I always got throughly
and friendly responses and help. If I'm using GNU/Linux now, this is, again,
thanks to them. I feel particularly lucky with friends like them. THANKS.
Iñigo Mascaraque also helped (from him I got my first System Administration
Iñigo Mascaraque also helped (from him I got my first System Administration
book) and encouraged me in my beginnings, but never stopped reminding me
that, although this was a fascinating world and an important part of my
career, I should not forget the other, less-interesting, parts. (I don't
@ -1497,9 +1497,9 @@ As I am on the topic, I'd like to thank my parents, too. They always
tried to make the best opportunities available for me. Many thanks for
all.
I also feel grateful to Joaquín Seoane, the first who trusted me enough
I also feel grateful to Joaquín Seoane, the first who trusted me enough
to give me a root password in the time I was learning system administration
by myself, and Santiago Pavón, the one who gave me my first opportunity
by myself, and Santiago Pavón, the one who gave me my first opportunity
here at DIT.
W. Richard Stevens' books have been a real revelation for me (it's a pity