diff options
author | Eduardo Chappa <chappa@washington.edu> | 2020-01-15 21:41:39 -0700 |
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committer | Eduardo Chappa <chappa@washington.edu> | 2020-01-15 21:41:39 -0700 |
commit | 06c6ab430b223f6923fe74a4b8d11f3e626848a8 (patch) | |
tree | 2b483acf3ec2da573992c20b766a480e22f4c45a /imap/docs/FAQ.html | |
parent | 9822842646bc2b940d4b98a260ee4e3ac26fce57 (diff) | |
download | alpine-06c6ab430b223f6923fe74a4b8d11f3e626848a8.tar.xz |
* Fix a number of misspellings in the source code of Alpine. I hav only
fixed those that belong to the source code of Alpine and do not come
from an external source. List contributed by Jens Schleusener.
Diffstat (limited to 'imap/docs/FAQ.html')
-rw-r--r-- | imap/docs/FAQ.html | 16 |
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/imap/docs/FAQ.html b/imap/docs/FAQ.html index 27d42aa4..f2496b99 100644 --- a/imap/docs/FAQ.html +++ b/imap/docs/FAQ.html @@ -322,7 +322,7 @@ <ul> <li><a href="#5.1">5.1 I see that the IMAP server allows access to - arbitary files on the system, including /etc/passwd! How do I disable + arbitrary files on the system, including /etc/passwd! How do I disable this?</a></li> <li><a href="#5.2">5.2 I've heard that IMAP servers are insecure. Is @@ -1411,7 +1411,7 @@ <p>SSL is supported via undocumented Microsoft interfaces in Windows 9x and NT4; and via standard interfaces in Windows 2000, Windows - Millenium, and Windows XP.</p> + Millennium, and Windows XP.</p> </dd> </dl> @@ -1468,7 +1468,7 @@ make lnp EXTRAAUTHENTICATORS=gss </pre> - <p>To build with Kerberos V5 on Windows 9x, Windows Millenium, and NT4, + <p>To build with Kerberos V5 on Windows 9x, Windows Millennium, and NT4, use the "makefile.ntk" file instead of "makefile.nt":</p> <pre> @@ -2061,7 +2061,7 @@ mtest.c:515: the `gets' function is dangerous and should not be used. <hr> <p><a name="5.1"><strong>5.1 I see that the IMAP server allows access to - arbitary files on the system, including /etc/passwd! How do I disable + arbitrary files on the system, including /etc/passwd! How do I disable this?</strong></a></p> <dl> @@ -2251,7 +2251,7 @@ for better performance. <p>Coaxing software that uses autoconfig to build properly on platforms which were not specifically considered by that software wastes an inordinate amount of time. When (not if) autoconfig fails to do the - right thing, the result is an inpenetrable morass to untangle in order + right thing, the result is an impenetrable morass to untangle in order to find the problem and fix it.</p> <p>The concept behind autoconfig is good, but the execution is flawed. @@ -3162,7 +3162,7 @@ looking something like: <pre> dd-mmm-yyyy hh:mm:ss +zzzz,ssss;ffffffffFFFF-UUUUUUUU </pre>The only thing that is variable is the "ssss" field, it can be as many -digits as needed. All other fields (inluding the "dd") are fixed width. So, +digits as needed. All other fields (including the "dd") are fixed width. So, the easiest thing to do is to look forward in the file for the next internal header, and delete everything from the error point to that internal header. @@ -3520,7 +3520,7 @@ his home directory. <dl> <dd> - There are two common occurances of this problem: + There are two common occurrences of this problem: <ul> <li>You are running a system (e.g. certain versions of Linux) which @@ -4147,7 +4147,7 @@ that the text part in a 334 response be a BASE64 encoded string; in other words, it is a protocol syntax error. <p>In the case of AUTH=PLAIN, RFC 4422 (page 7) requires that the - encoded string have no data. In other words, the appropropiate + encoded string have no data. In other words, the appropriate standards-compliant server response is "334" followed by a SPACE and a CRLF.</p> |