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Date:      Thu, 11 Jun 1998 13:05:23 +0200 (CEST)
From:      Stefan Eggers <seggers@semyam.dinoco.de>
To:        FreeBSD-gnats-submit@FreeBSD.ORG
Cc:        seggers@semyam.dinoco.de
Subject:   docs/6912: opie.4 has doubled word in man page
Message-ID:  <199806111105.NAA08251@semyam.dinoco.de>

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>Number:         6912
>Category:       docs
>Synopsis:       opie.4 has doubled word in man page
>Confidential:   no
>Severity:       non-critical
>Priority:       low
>Responsible:    freebsd-doc
>State:          open
>Quarter:
>Keywords:
>Date-Required:
>Class:          doc-bug
>Submitter-Id:   current-users
>Arrival-Date:   Thu Jun 11 07:30:01 PDT 1998
>Last-Modified:
>Originator:     Stefan Eggers
>Organization:
none
>Release:        FreeBSD 2.2.6-STABLE i386
>Environment:

	not applicable

>Description:

	The description of the S/KEY algorithm on this man page has a
sentence starting with "They They" in it.

>How-To-Repeat:

	Read opie(4).

>Fix:
	
*** opie.4.ORIG	Tue Aug 26 22:56:14 1997
--- opie.4	Thu Jun 11 12:59:06 1998
***************
*** 138,144 ****
  
  A solution to this whole problem was invented by Lamport in 1981. This
  technique was implemented by Haller, Karn, and Walden at Bellcore. They
! They created a free software package called "S/Key" that used an algorithm
  called a cryptographic checksum. A cryptographic checksum is a strong one-way
  function such that, knowing the result of such a function, an attacker still
  cannot feasably determine the input. Further, unlike cyclic redundancy
--- 138,144 ----
  
  A solution to this whole problem was invented by Lamport in 1981. This
  technique was implemented by Haller, Karn, and Walden at Bellcore. They
! created a free software package called "S/Key" that used an algorithm
  called a cryptographic checksum. A cryptographic checksum is a strong one-way
  function such that, knowing the result of such a function, an attacker still
  cannot feasably determine the input. Further, unlike cyclic redundancy

>Audit-Trail:
>Unformatted:

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