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Date:      Thu, 17 Dec 2015 01:52:33 +0000 (UTC)
From:      Warren Block <wblock@FreeBSD.org>
To:        doc-committers@freebsd.org, svn-doc-all@freebsd.org, svn-doc-head@freebsd.org
Subject:   svn commit: r47878 - head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/porters-handbook/porting-dads
Message-ID:  <201512170152.tBH1qYFg061345@repo.freebsd.org>

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Author: wblock
Date: Thu Dec 17 01:52:33 2015
New Revision: 47878
URL: https://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/doc/47878

Log:
  Whitespace-only fixes, translators please ignore.

Modified:
  head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/porters-handbook/porting-dads/chapter.xml

Modified: head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/porters-handbook/porting-dads/chapter.xml
==============================================================================
--- head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/porters-handbook/porting-dads/chapter.xml	Thu Dec 17 01:46:51 2015	(r47877)
+++ head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/porters-handbook/porting-dads/chapter.xml	Thu Dec 17 01:52:33 2015	(r47878)
@@ -132,8 +132,9 @@
 	<tbody>
 	  <row>
 	    <entry><varname>ARCH</varname></entry>
-	    <entry>The architecture as returned by <command>uname
-		-m</command> (for example, <literal>i386</literal>)</entry>
+	    <entry>The architecture as returned by
+	      <command>uname -m</command> (for example,
+	      <literal>i386</literal>)</entry>
 	  </row>
 
 	  <row>
@@ -159,8 +160,8 @@
 
 	  <row>
 	    <entry><varname>LOCALBASE</varname></entry>
-	    <entry>The base of the <quote>local</quote> tree (for example,
-	      <literal>/usr/local</literal>)</entry>
+	    <entry>The base of the <quote>local</quote> tree (for
+	      example, <literal>/usr/local</literal>)</entry>
 	  </row>
 
 	  <row>
@@ -216,9 +217,9 @@ exec %%LOCALBASE%%/bin/java -jar %%DATAD
     <title>Do Things Rationally</title>
 
     <para>The <filename>Makefile</filename> should do things in a
-      simple and reasonable manner.  Making it a couple of lines shorter or
-      more readable is always better.  Examples include using a make
-      <literal>.if</literal> construct instead of a shell
+      simple and reasonable manner.  Making it a couple of lines
+      shorter or more readable is always better.  Examples include
+      using a make <literal>.if</literal> construct instead of a shell
       <literal>if</literal> construct, not redefining
       <buildtarget>do-extract</buildtarget> if redefining
       <varname>EXTRACT*</varname> is enough, and using
@@ -228,10 +229,10 @@ exec %%LOCALBASE%%/bin/java -jar %%DATAD
 
     <para>If a lot of new code is needed to do something, there may
       already be an implementation of it in
-      <filename>bsd.port.mk</filename>.  While
-      hard to read, there are a great many seemingly-hard problems for
-      which <filename>bsd.port.mk</filename> already provides a
-      shorthand solution.</para>
+      <filename>bsd.port.mk</filename>.  While hard to read, there are
+      a great many seemingly-hard problems for which
+      <filename>bsd.port.mk</filename> already provides a shorthand
+      solution.</para>
   </sect1>
 
   <sect1 xml:id="dads-cc">
@@ -250,9 +251,9 @@ exec %%LOCALBASE%%/bin/java -jar %%DATAD
       <literal>NO_PACKAGE=ignores either cc or cxx</literal> to the
       <filename>Makefile</filename>.</para>
 
-    <para>Here is an example of a <filename>Makefile</filename> respecting
-      both <varname>CC</varname> and <varname>CXX</varname>.
-      Note the <literal>?=</literal>:</para>
+    <para>Here is an example of a <filename>Makefile</filename>
+      respecting both <varname>CC</varname> and
+      <varname>CXX</varname>.  Note the <literal>?=</literal>:</para>
 
     <programlisting>CC?= gcc</programlisting>
 
@@ -288,8 +289,8 @@ exec %%LOCALBASE%%/bin/java -jar %%DATAD
       <literal>NO_PACKAGE=ignores cflags</literal> to the
       <filename>Makefile</filename>.</para>
 
-    <para>Here is an example of a <filename>Makefile</filename> respecting
-      <varname>CFLAGS</varname>.  Note the
+    <para>Here is an example of a <filename>Makefile</filename>
+      respecting <varname>CFLAGS</varname>.  Note the
       <literal>+=</literal>:</para>
 
     <programlisting>CFLAGS+= -Wall -Werror</programlisting>
@@ -421,19 +422,18 @@ exec %%LOCALBASE%%/bin/java -jar %%DATAD
 	  <para><varname>FORBIDDEN</varname> is used for ports that
 	    contain a security vulnerability or induce grave concern
 	    regarding the security of a &os; system with a given port
-	    installed (for example, a reputably insecure program or a program
-	    that provides easily exploitable services).  Mark ports
-	    as <varname>FORBIDDEN</varname> as soon as a
+	    installed (for example, a reputably insecure program or a
+	    program that provides easily exploitable services).  Mark
+	    ports as <varname>FORBIDDEN</varname> as soon as a
 	    particular piece of software has a vulnerability and there
-	    is no released upgrade.  Ideally upgrade ports
-	    as soon as possible when a security vulnerability is
-	    discovered so as to reduce the number of vulnerable &os;
-	    hosts (we like being known for being secure), however
-	    sometimes there is a noticeable time gap between
-	    disclosure of a vulnerability and an updated release of
-	    the vulnerable software.  Do not mark a port
-	    <varname>FORBIDDEN</varname> for any reason other than
-	    security.</para>
+	    is no released upgrade.  Ideally upgrade ports as soon as
+	    possible when a security vulnerability is discovered so as
+	    to reduce the number of vulnerable &os; hosts (we like
+	    being known for being secure), however sometimes there is
+	    a noticeable time gap between disclosure of a
+	    vulnerability and an updated release of the vulnerable
+	    software.  Do not mark a port <varname>FORBIDDEN</varname>
+	    for any reason other than security.</para>
 	</listitem>
 
 	<listitem>
@@ -684,10 +684,10 @@ exec %%LOCALBASE%%/bin/java -jar %%DATAD
 	xlink:href="https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DashAsBinSh">here</link>.</para>;
 
     <para>Check that headers are included in the
-      <acronym>POSIX</acronym> or man page recommended way.  For example,
-      <filename>sys/types.h</filename> is often forgotten, which is
-      not as much of a problem for &linux; as it is for &os;.</para>
-
+      <acronym>POSIX</acronym> or man page recommended way.  For
+      example, <filename>sys/types.h</filename> is often forgotten,
+      which is not as much of a problem for &linux; as it is for
+      &os;.</para>
   </sect1>
 
   <sect1 xml:id="dads-misc">



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