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Date:      Mon, 12 May 2014 15:15:44 +0000 (UTC)
From:      Dru Lavigne <dru@FreeBSD.org>
To:        doc-committers@freebsd.org, svn-doc-all@freebsd.org, svn-doc-head@freebsd.org
Subject:   svn commit: r44816 - head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/faq
Message-ID:  <201405121515.s4CFFi6q085143@svn.freebsd.org>

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Author: dru
Date: Mon May 12 15:15:44 2014
New Revision: 44816
URL: http://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/doc/44816

Log:
  White space fix only. Translators can ignore.
  
  Sponsored by:	iXsystems

Modified:
  head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/faq/book.xml

Modified: head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/faq/book.xml
==============================================================================
--- head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/faq/book.xml	Mon May 12 14:41:45 2014	(r44815)
+++ head/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/faq/book.xml	Mon May 12 15:15:44 2014	(r44816)
@@ -1090,7 +1090,8 @@
   </chapter>
 
   <chapter xml:id="install">
-    <info><title>Installation</title>
+    <info>
+    <title>Installation</title>
 
       <author><personname><firstname>Nik</firstname><surname>Clayton</surname></personname><affiliation>
 	  <address><email>nik@FreeBSD.org</email></address>
@@ -1409,12 +1410,14 @@
 	<answer>
 	  <para>Memory limits depend on the platform used.  On a
 	    standard &i386; install, the limit is 4&nbsp;GB but more
-	    memory can be supported through &man.pae.4;.  See <link linkend="memory-i386-over-4gb">instructions for using 4&nbsp;GB or more memory on &i386;</link>.</para>
+	    memory can be supported through &man.pae.4;.  See <link
+	      linkend="memory-i386-over-4gb">instructions for using
+	      4&nbsp;GB or more memory on &i386;</link>.</para>
 
 	  <para>&os;/pc98 has a limit of 4&nbsp;GB memory, and PAE can
-	    not be used with it.  Other architectures supported by &os;
-	    have much higher theoretical limits on maximum memory (many
-	    terabytes).</para>
+	    not be used with it.  Other architectures supported by
+	    &os; have much higher theoretical limits on maximum memory
+	    (many terabytes).</para>
 	</answer>
       </qandaentry>
 
@@ -1424,44 +1427,47 @@
 	</question>
 
 	<answer>
-	  <para>For FFS file systems, the largest file system is practically
-	    limited by the amount of memory required to &man.fsck.8; the file
-	    system.  &man.fsck.8; requires one bit per fragment, which with
-	    the default fragment size of 4&nbsp;KB equates to 32&nbsp;MB
-	    of memory per TB of disk.  This does mean that on architectures
-	    which limit userland processes to 2&nbsp;GB (e.g., &i386;),
-	    the maximum &man.fsck.8;'able filesystem is ~60&nbsp;TB.</para>
-
-	  <para>If there was not a &man.fsck.8; memory limit the maximum
-	    filesystem size would be 2&nbsp;^&nbsp;64 (blocks) * 32&nbsp;KB
-	    => 16 Exa * 32&nbsp;KB => 512 ZettaBytes.</para>
+	  <para>For FFS file systems, the largest file system is
+	    practically limited by the amount of memory required to
+	    &man.fsck.8; the file system.  &man.fsck.8; requires one
+	    bit per fragment, which with the default fragment size of
+	    4&nbsp;KB equates to 32&nbsp;MB of memory per TB of disk.
+	    This does mean that on architectures which limit userland
+	    processes to 2&nbsp;GB (e.g., &i386;), the maximum
+	    &man.fsck.8;'able filesystem is ~60&nbsp;TB.</para>
+
+	  <para>If there was not a &man.fsck.8; memory limit the
+	    maximum filesystem size would be 2&nbsp;^&nbsp;64 (blocks)
+	    * 32&nbsp;KB => 16 Exa * 32&nbsp;KB => 512
+	    ZettaBytes.</para>
 
 	  <para>The maximum size of a single FFS file is approximately
 	    2&nbsp;PB with the default block size of 32&nbsp;KB.  Each
 	    32&nbsp;KB block can point to 4096 blocks.  With triple
 	    indirect blocks, the calculation is 32&nbsp;KB * 12 +
 	    32&nbsp;KB * 4096 + 32&nbsp;KB * 4096^2 + 32&nbsp;KB *
-	    4096^3.  Increasing the block size to 64&nbsp;KB will increase
-	    the max file size by a factor of 16.</para>
+	    4096^3.  Increasing the block size to 64&nbsp;KB will
+	    increase the max file size by a factor of 16.</para>
 	</answer>
       </qandaentry>
 
       <qandaentry>
 	<question xml:id="archsw-readin-failed-error">
-	  <para>Why do I get an error message,
-	    <errorname>readin failed</errorname> after compiling
-	    and booting a new kernel?</para>
+	  <para>Why do I get an error message, <errorname>readin
+	      failed</errorname> after compiling and booting a new
+	    kernel?</para>
 	</question>
 
 	<answer>
-	  <para>Because your world and kernel are out of sync.  This is
-	    not supported.  Be sure you use <command>make buildworld</command>
-	    and <command>make buildkernel</command>
-	    to update your kernel.</para>
+	  <para>Because your world and kernel are out of sync.  This
+	    is not supported.  Be sure you use <command>make
+	      buildworld</command> and <command>make
+	      buildkernel</command> to update your kernel.</para>
 
 	  <para>You can boot by specifying the kernel directly at the
-	    second stage, pressing any key when the <literal>|</literal>
-	    shows up before loader is started.</para>
+	    second stage, pressing any key when the
+	    <literal>|</literal> shows up before loader is
+	    started.</para>
 	</answer>
       </qandaentry>
 
@@ -1491,8 +1497,8 @@
       <qandaset>
 	<qandaentry>
 	  <question xml:id="which-hardware-to-get">
-	    <para>I want to get a piece of hardware for my &os; system.
-	      Which model/brand/type is best?</para>
+	    <para>I want to get a piece of hardware for my &os;
+	      system.  Which model/brand/type is best?</para>
 	  </question>
 
 	  <answer>
@@ -1500,36 +1506,41 @@
 	      lists.  Since hardware changes so quickly, however, we
 	      expect this.  We <emphasis>still</emphasis> strongly
 	      recommend that you read through the Hardware&nbsp;Notes
-	      for &os; <link xlink:href="&rel.current.hardware;">&rel.current;</link> or
-	      <link xlink:href="&rel2.current.hardware;">&rel2.current;</link> and
-	      search the mailing list <link xlink:href="http://www.FreeBSD.org/search/#mailinglists">archives</link>;
+	      for &os; <link
+		xlink:href="&rel.current.hardware;">&rel.current;</link>
+	      or <link
+		xlink:href="&rel2.current.hardware;">&rel2.current;</link>
+	      and search the mailing list <link
+		xlink:href="http://www.FreeBSD.org/search/#mailinglists">archives</link>;
 	      before asking about the latest and greatest hardware.
 	      Chances are a discussion about the type of hardware you
 	      are looking for took place just last week.</para>
 
-	    <para>If you are looking for a laptop, check the &a.mobile;
-	      archives.  Otherwise, you probably want the archives for
-	      the &a.questions;, or possibly a specific mailing list for
-	      a particular hardware type.</para>
+	    <para>If you are looking for a laptop, check the
+	      &a.mobile; archives.  Otherwise, you probably want the
+	      archives for the &a.questions;, or possibly a specific
+	      mailing list for a particular hardware type.</para>
 	  </answer>
 	</qandaentry>
 
 	<qandaentry>
 	  <question xml:id="memory-upper-limitation">
-	    <para>Does &os; support more than 4&nbsp;GB of memory (RAM)?
-	      More than 16&nbsp;GB?  More than 48&nbsp;GB?</para>
+	    <para>Does &os; support more than 4&nbsp;GB of memory
+	      (RAM)?  More than 16&nbsp;GB?  More than
+	      48&nbsp;GB?</para>
 	  </question>
 
 	  <answer>
 	    <para>Yes.  &os; as an operating system generally supports
-	      as much physical memory (RAM) as the platform it is running
-	      on does.  Keep in mind that different platforms have
-	      different limits for memory; for example &i386; without
-	      <acronym>PAE</acronym> supports at most 4&nbsp;GB of
-	      memory (and usually less than that because of PCI address
-	      space) and &i386; with PAE supports at most 64&nbsp;GB
-	      memory.  AMD64 platforms currently deployed support up to
-	      1&nbsp;TB of physical memory.</para>
+	      as much physical memory (RAM) as the platform it is
+	      running on does.  Keep in mind that different platforms
+	      have different limits for memory; for example &i386;
+	      without <acronym>PAE</acronym> supports at most
+	      4&nbsp;GB of memory (and usually less than that because
+	      of PCI address space) and &i386; with PAE supports at
+	      most 64&nbsp;GB memory.  AMD64 platforms currently
+	      deployed support up to 1&nbsp;TB of physical
+	      memory.</para>
 	  </answer>
 	</qandaentry>
 
@@ -1540,53 +1551,55 @@
 	  </question>
 
 	  <answer>
-	    <para>The total address space on &i386; machines is 32-bit,
-	      meaning that at most 4&nbsp;GB of memory is addressable (can
-	      be accessed).  Furthermore, some addresses in this range
-	      are reserved by hardware for different purposes, for
-	      example for using and controlling PCI devices, for
-	      accessing video memory, and so on.  Therefore, the total
-	      amount of memory usable by the operating system for its
-	      kernel and applications is limited to significantly less
-	      than 4&nbsp;GB.  Usually, 3.2&nbsp;GB to 3.7&nbsp;GB is
-	      the maximum usable physical memory in this
-	      configuration.</para>
+	    <para>The total address space on &i386; machines is
+	      32-bit, meaning that at most 4&nbsp;GB of memory is
+	      addressable (can be accessed).  Furthermore, some
+	      addresses in this range are reserved by hardware for
+	      different purposes, for example for using and
+	      controlling PCI devices, for accessing video memory, and
+	      so on.  Therefore, the total amount of memory usable by
+	      the operating system for its kernel and applications is
+	      limited to significantly less than 4&nbsp;GB.  Usually,
+	      3.2&nbsp;GB to 3.7&nbsp;GB is the maximum usable
+	      physical memory in this configuration.</para>
 
 	    <para>To access more than 3.2&nbsp;GB to 3.7&nbsp;GB of
-	      installed memory (meaning up to 4&nbsp;GB but also more than
-	      4&nbsp;GB), a special tweak called <acronym>PAE</acronym>
-	      must be used.  PAE stands for Physical Address Extension
-	      and is a way for 32-bit x86 CPUs to address more than
-	      4&nbsp;GB of memory.  It remaps the memory that would
-	      otherwise be overlaid by address reservations for
-	      hardware devices above the 4&nbsp;GB range and uses it as
-	      additional physical memory (see &man.pae.4;).  Using PAE
-	      has some drawbacks; this mode of memory access is a little
-	      bit slower than the normal (without PAE) mode and loadable
-	      modules (see &man.kld.4;) are not supported.  This means
-	      all drivers must be compiled into the kernel.</para>
+	      installed memory (meaning up to 4&nbsp;GB but also more
+	      than 4&nbsp;GB), a special tweak called
+	      <acronym>PAE</acronym> must be used.  PAE stands for
+	      Physical Address Extension and is a way for 32-bit x86
+	      CPUs to address more than 4&nbsp;GB of memory.  It
+	      remaps the memory that would otherwise be overlaid by
+	      address reservations for hardware devices above the
+	      4&nbsp;GB range and uses it as additional physical
+	      memory (see &man.pae.4;).  Using PAE has some drawbacks;
+	      this mode of memory access is a little bit slower than
+	      the normal (without PAE) mode and loadable modules (see
+	      &man.kld.4;) are not supported.  This means all drivers
+	      must be compiled into the kernel.</para>
 
 	    <para>The most common way to enable PAE is to build a new
-	      kernel with the special ready-provided kernel configuration
-	      file called <filename>PAE</filename>, which is already
-	      configured to build a safe kernel.  Note that some entries
-	      in this kernel configuration file are too conservative and
-	      some drivers marked as unready to be used with PAE are
-	      actually usable.  A rule of thumb is that if the driver is
-	      usable on 64-bit architectures (like AMD64), it is also
-	      usable with PAE.  If you wish to create your own kernel
-	      configuration file, you can enable PAE by adding the
-	      following line to your configuration:</para>
+	      kernel with the special ready-provided kernel
+	      configuration file called <filename>PAE</filename>,
+	      which is already configured to build a safe kernel.
+	      Note that some entries in this kernel configuration file
+	      are too conservative and some drivers marked as unready
+	      to be used with PAE are actually usable.  A rule of
+	      thumb is that if the driver is usable on 64-bit
+	      architectures (like AMD64), it is also usable with PAE.
+	      If you wish to create your own kernel configuration
+	      file, you can enable PAE by adding the following line to
+	      your configuration:</para>
 
 	    <programlisting>options       PAE</programlisting>
 
 	    <para>PAE is not much used nowadays because most new x86
 	      hardware also supports running in 64-bit mode, known as
 	      AMD64 or &intel;&nbsp;64.  It has a much larger address
-	      space and does not need such tweaks.  &os; supports AMD64
-	      and it is recommended that this version of &os; be used
-	      instead of the &i386; version if 4&nbsp;GB or more memory
-	      is required.</para>
+	      space and does not need such tweaks.  &os; supports
+	      AMD64 and it is recommended that this version of &os; be
+	      used instead of the &i386; version if 4&nbsp;GB or more
+	      memory is required.</para>
 	  </answer>
 	</qandaentry>
       </qandaset>
@@ -1604,15 +1617,17 @@
 
 	  <answer>
 	    <para>Yes.  &os; divides support into multiple tiers.
-	      Tier 1 architectures, such as i386 or amd64; are
-	      fully supported.  Tiers 2 and 3 are supported on an
+	      Tier 1 architectures, such as i386 or amd64; are fully
+	      supported.  Tiers 2 and 3 are supported on an
 	      if-possible basis.  A full explanation of the tier
-	      system is available in the
-	      <link xlink:href="&url.articles.committers-guide;/archs.html">Committer's Guide.</link></para>
+	      system is available in the <link
+		xlink:href="&url.articles.committers-guide;/archs.html">Committer's
+		Guide.</link></para>
 
 	    <para>A complete  list of supported architectures can be
-	      found on the
-	      <link xlink:href="http://www.FreeBSD.org/platforms/">platforms page.</link></para>
+	      found on the <link
+		xlink:href="http://www.FreeBSD.org/platforms/">platforms
+		page.</link></para>
 	  </answer>
 	</qandaentry>
 
@@ -1625,11 +1640,11 @@
 	  <answer>
 	    <para>&os; supports symmetric multi-processor (SMP) on all
 	      non-embedded platforms (e.g, &arch.i386;, &arch.amd64;,
-	      etc.).  SMP is also
-	      supported in arm and MIPS kernels, although some CPUs
-	      may not support this.  &os;'s SMP implementation uses
-	      fine-grained locking, and performance scales nearly
-	      linearly with number of CPUs.</para>
+	      etc.).  SMP is also supported in arm and MIPS kernels,
+	      although some CPUs may not support this.  &os;'s SMP
+	      implementation uses fine-grained locking, and
+	      performance scales nearly linearly with number of
+	      CPUs.</para>
 
 	    <para>&man.smp.4; has more details.</para>
 	  </answer>
@@ -1644,10 +1659,12 @@
 	  <answer>
 	    <para>Microcode is a method of programmatically
 	      implementing hardware level instructions.  This allows
-	      for CPU bugs to be fixed without replacing the on board chip.</para>
+	      for CPU bugs to be fixed without replacing the on board
+	      chip.</para>
 
 	    <para>Install <package>sysutils/devcpu-data</package>,
 	      then add:</para>
+
 	    <programlisting>microcode_update_enable="YES"</programlisting>
 
 	    <para>to <filename>/etc/rc.conf</filename></para>
@@ -1666,12 +1683,13 @@
 	  </question>
 
 	  <answer>
-	    <para>&os; supports EIDE, SATA, SCSI, and SAS drives (with a
-	      compatible controller; see the next section), and all
+	    <para>&os; supports EIDE, SATA, SCSI, and SAS drives (with
+	      a compatible controller; see the next section), and all
 	      drives using the original <quote>Western Digital</quote>
-	      interface (MFM, RLL, ESDI, and of course IDE).  A few ESDI
-	      controllers that use proprietary interfaces may not work:
-	      stick to WD1002/3/6/7 interfaces and clones.</para>
+	      interface (MFM, RLL, ESDI, and of course IDE).  A few
+	      ESDI controllers that use proprietary interfaces may not
+	      work: stick to WD1002/3/6/7 interfaces and
+	      clones.</para>
 	  </answer>
 	</qandaentry>
 
@@ -1682,8 +1700,10 @@
 
 	  <answer>
 	    <para>See the complete list in the Hardware Notes for &os;
-	      <link xlink:href="&rel.current.hardware;">&rel.current;</link>
-	      or <link xlink:href="&rel2.current.hardware;">&rel2.current;</link>.</para>
+	      <link
+		xlink:href="&rel.current.hardware;">&rel.current;</link>
+	      or <link
+		xlink:href="&rel2.current.hardware;">&rel2.current;</link>.</para>
 	  </answer>
 	</qandaentry>
 
@@ -1693,7 +1713,8 @@
 	  </question>
 
 	  <answer>
-	    <para>&os; supports all standard SCSI tape interfaces.</para>
+	    <para>&os; supports all standard SCSI tape
+	      interfaces.</para>
 	  </answer>
 	</qandaentry>
 
@@ -1703,17 +1724,18 @@
 	  </question>
 
 	  <answer>
-	    <para>&os; supports SCSI changers using the &man.ch.4; device
-	      and the &man.chio.1; command.  The details of how you
-	      actually control the changer can be found in the
+	    <para>&os; supports SCSI changers using the &man.ch.4;
+	      device and the &man.chio.1; command.  The details of how
+	      you actually control the changer can be found in the
 	      &man.chio.1; manual page.</para>
 
-	    <para>If you are not using <application>AMANDA</application>
-	      or some other product that already understands changers,
-	      remember that they only know how to move a tape from one
-	      point to another, so you need to keep track of which slot a
-	      tape is in, and which slot the tape currently in the drive
-	      needs to go back to.</para>
+	    <para>If you are not using
+	      <application>AMANDA</application> or some other product
+	      that already understands changers, remember that they
+	      only know how to move a tape from one point to another,
+	      so you need to keep track of which slot a tape is in,
+	      and which slot the tape currently in the drive needs to
+	      go back to.</para>
 	  </answer>
 	</qandaentry>
 
@@ -1723,8 +1745,8 @@
 	  </question>
 
 	  <answer>
-	    <para>Any SCSI drive connected to a supported controller is
-	      supported.  Most ATAPI compatible IDE CD-ROMs are
+	    <para>Any SCSI drive connected to a supported controller
+	      is supported.  Most ATAPI compatible IDE CD-ROMs are
 	      supported.</para>
 	  </answer>
 	</qandaentry>
@@ -1739,10 +1761,10 @@
 	      drive.  See &man.burncd.8; for details.</para>
 
 	    <para>&os; also supports any SCSI CD-R or CD-RW drives.
-	      Install and use <command>cdrecord</command>
-	      from the ports or packages system, and make sure that you
-	      have the <filename>pass</filename> device compiled in
-	      your kernel.</para>
+	      Install and use <command>cdrecord</command> from the
+	      ports or packages system, and make sure that you have
+	      the <filename>pass</filename> device compiled in your
+	      kernel.</para>
 	  </answer>
 	</qandaentry>
       </qandaset>
@@ -1754,8 +1776,8 @@
       <qandaset>
 	<qandaentry>
 	  <question xml:id="moused">
-	    <para>Is it possible to use a mouse in any way outside the X
-	      Window system?</para>
+	    <para>Is it possible to use a mouse in any way outside the
+	      X Window system?</para>
 	  </question>
 
 	  <answer>
@@ -1774,8 +1796,8 @@
 	      automatically determine the protocol type of most mice,
 	      except old serial mice.  Specify the
 	      <literal>auto</literal> protocol to invoke automatic
-	      detection.  If automatic detection does not work, see the
-	      &man.moused.8; manual page for a list of supported
+	      detection.  If automatic detection does not work, see
+	      the &man.moused.8; manual page for a list of supported
 	      protocol types.</para>
 
 	    <para>If you have a PS/2 mouse, just add
@@ -1783,14 +1805,15 @@
 	      <filename>/etc/rc.conf</filename> to start the mouse
 	      daemon at boot-time.  Additionally, if you would like to
 	      use the mouse daemon on all virtual terminals instead of
-	      just the console, add
-	      <literal>allscreens_flags="-m on"</literal> to
+	      just the console, add <literal>allscreens_flags="-m
+		on"</literal> to
 	      <filename>/etc/rc.conf</filename>.</para>
 
-	    <para>When the mouse daemon is running, access to the mouse
-	      must be coordinated between the mouse daemon and other
-	      programs such as X Windows.  Refer to the FAQ <link linkend="x-and-moused">Why does my mouse not work with X?</link>
-	      for more details on this issue.</para>
+	    <para>When the mouse daemon is running, access to the
+	      mouse must be coordinated between the mouse daemon and
+	      other programs such as X Windows.  Refer to the FAQ
+	      <link linkend="x-and-moused">Why does my mouse not work
+		with X?</link> for more details on this issue.</para>
 	  </answer>
 	</qandaentry>
 
@@ -1804,14 +1827,13 @@
 	    <para>It is not possible to remove data using the mouse.
 	      However, it is possible to <quote>copy and
 		paste</quote>.
-	      Once you get the mouse daemon running (see the
-	      <link linkend="moused">previous question</link>)
-	      hold down
-	      button 1 (left button) and move the mouse to select a region
-	      of text.  Then, press button 2 (middle button) to paste
-	      it at the text cursor.  Pressing button 3 (right button)
-	      will <quote>extend</quote> the selected region of
-	      text.</para>
+	      Once you get the mouse daemon running (see the <link
+		linkend="moused">previous question</link>) hold down
+	      button 1 (left button) and move the mouse to select a
+	      region of text.  Then, press button 2 (middle button) to
+	      paste it at the text cursor.  Pressing button 3 (right
+	      button) will <quote>extend</quote> the selected region
+	      of text.</para>
 
 	    <para>If your mouse does not have a middle button, you may
 	      wish to emulate one or remap buttons using mouse daemon
@@ -1835,7 +1857,8 @@
 	      two, or three button mouse.</para>
 
 	    <para>For the possible usage of wheels in the X Window
-	      environment, refer to <link linkend="x-and-wheel">that section</link>.</para>
+	      environment, refer to <link
+		linkend="x-and-wheel">that section</link>.</para>
 	  </answer>
 	</qandaentry>
 
@@ -1847,20 +1870,22 @@
 
 	  <answer>
 	    <para>For the <application>Bourne Shell</application>, add
-	      the following lines to your <filename>.shrc</filename>.  See
-	      &man.sh.1; and &man.editrc.5;.</para>
+	      the following lines to your <filename>.shrc</filename>.
+	      See &man.sh.1; and &man.editrc.5;.</para>
 
 	    <programlisting>bind ^? ed-delete-next-char # for console
 bind ^[[3~ ed-delete-next-char # for xterm</programlisting>
 
 	    <para>For the <application>C Shell</application>, add the
-	      following lines to your <filename>.cshrc</filename>.  See
-	      &man.csh.1;.</para>
+	      following lines to your <filename>.cshrc</filename>.
+	      See &man.csh.1;.</para>
 
 	    <programlisting>bindkey ^? delete-char # for console
 bindkey ^[[3~ delete-char # for xterm</programlisting>
 
-	    <para>For more information, see <link xlink:href="http://www.ibb.net/~anne/keyboard.html">this page</link>.</para>
+	    <para>For more information, see <link
+		xlink:href="http://www.ibb.net/~anne/keyboard.html">this
+		page</link>.</para>
 	  </answer>
 	</qandaentry>
       </qandaset>
@@ -1877,9 +1902,9 @@ bindkey ^[[3~ delete-char # for xterm</p
 	  </question>
 
 	  <answer>
-	    <para>Some sound cards set their output volume to 0 at every
-	      boot.  Run the following command every time the machine
-	      boots:</para>
+	    <para>Some sound cards set their output volume to 0 at
+	      every boot.  Run the following command every time the
+	      machine boots:</para>
 
 	    <screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>mixer pcm 100 vol 100 cd 100</userinput></screen>
 	  </answer>
@@ -1892,9 +1917,9 @@ bindkey ^[[3~ delete-char # for xterm</p
 	  </question>
 
 	  <answer>
-	    <para>&os; supports the <acronym>ACPI</acronym>
-	      features found in modern hardware.  Further
-	      information can be found in &man.acpi.4;.</para>
+	    <para>&os; supports the <acronym>ACPI</acronym> features
+	      found in modern hardware.  Further information can be
+	      found in &man.acpi.4;.</para>
 	  </answer>
 	</qandaentry>
       </qandaset>
@@ -1907,44 +1932,47 @@ bindkey ^[[3~ delete-char # for xterm</p
     <qandaset>
       <qandaentry>
 	<question xml:id="pae">
-	  <para>Why is &os; finding the wrong amount of memory on &i386;
-	    hardware?</para>
+	  <para>Why is &os; finding the wrong amount of memory on
+	    &i386; hardware?</para>
 	</question>
 
 	<answer>
 	  <para>The most likely reason is the difference between
 	    physical memory addresses and virtual addresses.</para>
 
-	  <para>The convention for most PC hardware is to use the memory
-	    area between 3.5&nbsp;GB and 4&nbsp;GB for a special purpose
-	    (usually for PCI).  This address space is used to access PCI
-	    hardware.  As a result real, physical memory can not be
-	    accessed by that address space.</para>
+	  <para>The convention for most PC hardware is to use the
+	    memory area between 3.5&nbsp;GB and 4&nbsp;GB for a
+	    special purpose (usually for PCI).  This address space is
+	    used to access PCI hardware.  As a result real, physical
+	    memory can not be accessed by that address space.</para>
 
 	  <para>What happens to the memory that should appear in that
-	    location is dependent on your hardware.  Unfortunately, some
-	    hardware does nothing and the ability to use that last
-	    500&nbsp;MB of RAM is entirely lost.</para>
+	    location is dependent on your hardware.  Unfortunately,
+	    some hardware does nothing and the ability to use that
+	    last 500&nbsp;MB of RAM is entirely lost.</para>
 
 	  <para>Luckily, most hardware remaps the memory to a higher
 	    location so that it can still be used.  However, this can
-	    cause some confusion if you watch the boot messages.</para>
+	    cause some confusion if you watch the boot
+	    messages.</para>
 
-	  <para>On a 32-bit version of &os;, the memory appears
-	    lost, since it will be remapped above 4&nbsp;GB, which a
-	    32-bit kernel is unable to access.  In this case, the
-	    solution is to build a PAE enabled kernel.  See <link linkend="memory-limits">the entry on memory limits</link>
-	    and <link linkend="memory-upper-limitation">about different
-	    memory limits on different platforms</link> for more
+	  <para>On a 32-bit version of &os;, the memory appears lost,
+	    since it will be remapped above 4&nbsp;GB, which a 32-bit
+	    kernel is unable to access.  In this case, the solution is
+	    to build a PAE enabled kernel.  See <link
+	      linkend="memory-limits">the entry on memory
+	      limits</link> and <link
+	      linkend="memory-upper-limitation">about different memory
+	    limits on different platforms</link> for more
 	    information.</para>
 
 	  <para>On a 64-bit version of &os;, or when running a
-	    PAE-enabled kernel, &os; will correctly detect and remap the
-	    memory so it is usable.  During boot, however, it may seem
-	    as if &os; is detecting more memory than the system really
-	    has, due to the described remapping.  This is normal and the
-	    available memory will be corrected as the boot process
-	    completes.</para>
+	    PAE-enabled kernel, &os; will correctly detect and remap
+	    the memory so it is usable.  During boot, however, it may
+	    seem as if &os; is detecting more memory than the system
+	    really has, due to the described remapping.  This is
+	    normal and the available memory will be corrected as the
+	    boot process completes.</para>
 	</answer>
       </qandaentry>
 
@@ -1956,10 +1984,10 @@ bindkey ^[[3~ delete-char # for xterm</p
 
 	<answer>
 	  <para>Signal 11 errors are caused when your process has
-	    attempted to access memory which the operating system has not
-	    granted it access to.  If something like this is happening
-	    at seemingly random intervals then you need to start
-	    investigating things very carefully.</para>
+	    attempted to access memory which the operating system has
+	    not granted it access to.  If something like this is
+	    happening at seemingly random intervals then you need to
+	    start investigating things very carefully.</para>
 
 	  <para>These problems can usually be attributed to
 	    either:</para>
@@ -1973,34 +2001,34 @@ bindkey ^[[3~ delete-char # for xterm</p
 
 	    <listitem>
 	      <para>If it is a problem with part of the base &os;
-		system, it may also be buggy code, but more often than not
-		these problems are found and fixed long before us
-		general FAQ readers get to use these bits of code (that
-		is what -CURRENT is for).</para>
+		system, it may also be buggy code, but more often than
+		not these problems are found and fixed long before us
+		general FAQ readers get to use these bits of code
+		(that is what -CURRENT is for).</para>
 	    </listitem>
 	  </orderedlist>
 
 	  <para>In particular, a dead giveaway that this is
 	    <emphasis>not</emphasis> a &os; bug is if you see the
 	    problem when you are compiling a program, but the activity
-	    that the compiler is carrying out changes each time.</para>
+	    that the compiler is carrying out changes each
+	    time.</para>
 
-	  <para>For example, suppose you are running
-	    <command>make buildworld</command>,
-	    and the compile fails while trying to compile
-	    <filename>ls.c</filename> into <filename>ls.o</filename>.
-	    If you then run
-	    <command>make buildworld</command>
-	    again, and the compile fails in the same place then this is
-	    a broken build &mdash; try updating your sources and try
-	    again.  If the compile fails elsewhere then this is almost
-	    certainly hardware.</para>
+	  <para>For example, suppose you are running <command>make
+	      buildworld</command>, and the compile fails while trying
+	    to compile <filename>ls.c</filename> into
+	    <filename>ls.o</filename>.  If you then run <command>make
+	      buildworld</command> again, and the compile fails in the
+	    same place then this is a broken build &mdash; try
+	    updating your sources and try again.  If the compile fails
+	    elsewhere then this is almost certainly hardware.</para>
 
 	  <para>What you should do:</para>
 
 	  <para>In the first case you can use a debugger e.g.,
 	    &man.gdb.1; to find the point in the program which is
-	    attempting to access a bogus address and then fix it.</para>
+	    attempting to access a bogus address and then fix
+	    it.</para>
 
 	  <para>In the second case you need to verify that it is not
 	    your hardware at fault.</para>
@@ -2009,76 +2037,81 @@ bindkey ^[[3~ delete-char # for xterm</p
 
 	  <orderedlist>
 	    <listitem>
-	      <para>Your hard disks might be overheating: Check the fans
-		in your case are still working, as your disk (and perhaps
-		other hardware might be overheating).</para>
+	      <para>Your hard disks might be overheating: Check the
+		fans in your case are still working, as your disk (and
+		perhaps other hardware might be overheating).</para>
 	    </listitem>
 
 	    <listitem>
-	      <para>The processor running is overheating: This might be
-		because the processor has been overclocked, or the fan
-		on the processor might have died.  In either case you
-		need to ensure that you have hardware running at what it
-		is specified to run at, at least while trying to solve
-		this problem (in other words, clock it back to the default
-		settings.)</para>
+	      <para>The processor running is overheating: This might
+		be because the processor has been overclocked, or the
+		fan on the processor might have died.  In either case
+		you need to ensure that you have hardware running at
+		what it is specified to run at, at least while trying
+		to solve this problem (in other words, clock it back
+		to the default settings.)</para>
 
 	      <para>If you are overclocking then note that it is far
 		cheaper to have a slow system than a fried system that
-		needs replacing!  Also the wider community is not often
-		sympathetic to problems on overclocked systems, whether
-		you believe it is safe or not.</para>
+		needs replacing!  Also the wider community is not
+		often sympathetic to problems on overclocked systems,
+		whether you believe it is safe or not.</para>
 	    </listitem>
 
 	    <listitem>
 	      <para>Dodgy memory: If you have multiple memory
 		SIMMS/DIMMS installed then pull them all out and try
-		running the machine with each SIMM or DIMM individually
-		and narrow the problem down to either the problematic
-		DIMM/SIMM or perhaps even a combination.</para>
+		running the machine with each SIMM or DIMM
+		individually and narrow the problem down to either the
+		problematic DIMM/SIMM or perhaps even a
+		combination.</para>
 	    </listitem>
 
 	    <listitem>
 	      <para>Over-optimistic Motherboard settings: In your BIOS
-		settings, and some motherboard jumpers you have options
-		to set various timings, mostly the defaults will be
-		sufficient, but sometimes, setting the wait states on
-		RAM too low, or setting the <quote>RAM Speed:
-		Turbo</quote> option, or similar in the BIOS will cause
-		strange behavior.  A possible idea is to set to BIOS
-		defaults, but it might be worth noting down your
-		settings first!</para>
+		settings, and some motherboard jumpers you have
+		options to set various timings, mostly the defaults
+		will be sufficient, but sometimes, setting the wait
+		states on RAM too low, or setting the <quote>RAM
+		  Speed: Turbo</quote> option, or similar in the BIOS
+		will cause strange behavior.  A possible idea is to
+		set to BIOS defaults, but it might be worth noting
+		down your settings first!</para>
 	    </listitem>
 
 	    <listitem>
 	      <para>Unclean or insufficient power to the motherboard.
-		If you have any unused I/O boards, hard disks, or CD-ROMs
-		in your system, try temporarily removing them or
-		disconnecting the power cable from them, to see if your
-		power supply can manage a smaller load.  Or try another
-		power supply, preferably one with a little more power
-		(for instance, if your current power supply is rated at
-		250&nbsp;Watts try one rated at 300&nbsp;Watts).</para>
+		If you have any unused I/O boards, hard disks, or
+		CD-ROMs in your system, try temporarily removing them
+		or disconnecting the power cable from them, to see if
+		your power supply can manage a smaller load.  Or try
+		another power supply, preferably one with a little
+		more power (for instance, if your current power supply
+		is rated at 250&nbsp;Watts try one rated at
+		300&nbsp;Watts).</para>
 	    </listitem>
 	  </orderedlist>
 
-	  <para>You should also read the SIG11 FAQ (listed below) which
-	    has excellent explanations of all these problems, albeit from
-	    a &linux; viewpoint.  It also discusses how memory testing
-	    software or hardware can still pass faulty memory.</para>
-
-	  <para>Finally, if none of this has helped it is possible that
-	    you have just found a bug in &os;, and you should follow the
-	    instructions to send a problem report.</para>
-
-	  <para>There is an extensive FAQ on this at <link xlink:href="http://www.bitwizard.nl/sig11/">the SIG11 problem FAQ</link>.</para>
+	  <para>You should also read the SIG11 FAQ (listed below)
+	    which has excellent explanations of all these problems,
+	    albeit from a &linux; viewpoint.  It also discusses how
+	    memory testing software or hardware can still pass faulty
+	    memory.</para>
+
+	  <para>Finally, if none of this has helped it is possible
+	    that you have just found a bug in &os;, and you should
+	    follow the instructions to send a problem report.</para>
+
+	  <para>There is an extensive FAQ on this at <link
+	      xlink:href="http://www.bitwizard.nl/sig11/">the SIG11
+	      problem FAQ</link>.</para>
 	</answer>
       </qandaentry>
 
       <qandaentry>
 	<question xml:id="trap-12-panic">
-	  <para>My system crashes with either <errorname>Fatal trap 12:
-	      page fault in kernel mode</errorname>, or
+	  <para>My system crashes with either <errorname>Fatal trap
+	      12: page fault in kernel mode</errorname>, or
 	    <errorname>panic:</errorname>, and spits out a bunch of
 	    information.  What should I do?</para>
 	</question>
@@ -2087,10 +2120,12 @@ bindkey ^[[3~ delete-char # for xterm</p
 	  <para>The &os; developers are very interested in these
 	    errors, but need some more information than just the error
 	    you see.  Copy your full crash message.  Then consult the
-	    FAQ section on <link linkend="kernel-panic-troubleshooting">kernel panics</link>,
-	    build a debugging kernel, and get a backtrace.  This might
-	    sound difficult, but you do not need any programming skills;
-	    you just have to follow the instructions.</para>
+	    FAQ section on <link
+	      linkend="kernel-panic-troubleshooting">kernel
+	      panics</link>, build a debugging kernel, and get a
+	    backtrace.  This might sound difficult, but you do not
+	    need any programming skills; you just have to follow the
+	    instructions.</para>
 	</answer>
       </qandaentry>
 
@@ -2103,19 +2138,21 @@ bindkey ^[[3~ delete-char # for xterm</p
 
 	<answer>
 	  <para>The &os; kernel will only allow a certain number of
-	    processes to exist at one time.  The number is based on the
-	    <varname>kern.maxusers</varname> &man.sysctl.8; variable.
-	    <varname>kern.maxusers</varname> also affects various other
-	    in-kernel limits, such as network buffers.
-	    If your machine is heavily loaded, you probably
-	    want to increase <varname>kern.maxusers</varname>.  This
-	    will increase these other system limits in addition to the
+	    processes to exist at one time.  The number is based on
+	    the <varname>kern.maxusers</varname> &man.sysctl.8;
+	    variable.  <varname>kern.maxusers</varname> also affects
+	    various other in-kernel limits, such as network buffers.
+	    If your machine is heavily loaded, you probably want to
+	    increase <varname>kern.maxusers</varname>.  This will
+	    increase these other system limits in addition to the
 	    maximum number of processes.</para>
 
 	  <para>To adjust your <varname>kern.maxusers</varname> value,
-	    see the <link xlink:href="&url.books.handbook;/configtuning-kernel-limits.html#kern-maxfiles">File/Process Limits</link>
-	    section of the Handbook.  (While that section refers to open
-	    files, the same limits apply to processes.)</para>
+	    see the <link
+	      xlink:href="&url.books.handbook;/configtuning-kernel-limits.html#kern-maxfiles">File/Process
+	      Limits</link> section of the Handbook.  (While that
+	    section refers to open files, the same limits apply to
+	    processes.)</para>
 
 	  <para>If your machine is lightly loaded, and you are simply
 	    running a very large number of processes, you can adjust
@@ -2124,25 +2161,25 @@ bindkey ^[[3~ delete-char # for xterm</p
 	    <filename>/boot/loader.conf</filename>.  The tunable will
 	    not get adjusted until the system is rebooted.  For more
 	    information about tuning tunables, see
-	    &man.loader.conf.5;.
-	    If these processes are being run by a single user, you will
-	    also need to adjust <varname>kern.maxprocperuid</varname> to
-	    be one less than your new <varname>kern.maxproc</varname>
-	    value.  (It must be at least one less because one system
-	    program, &man.init.8;, must always be running.)</para>
+	    &man.loader.conf.5;.  If these processes are being run by
+	    a single user, you will also need to adjust
+	    <varname>kern.maxprocperuid</varname> to be one less than
+	    your new <varname>kern.maxproc</varname> value.  (It must
+	    be at least one less because one system program,
+	    &man.init.8;, must always be running.)</para>
 	</answer>
       </qandaentry>
 
       <qandaentry>
 	<question xml:id="mail-loopback">
-	  <para>Why does <application>sendmail</application> give me an
-	    error reading <errorname>mail loops back to
+	  <para>Why does <application>sendmail</application> give me
+	    an error reading <errorname>mail loops back to
 	      myself</errorname>?</para>
 	</question>
 
 	<answer>
 	  <para>This is answered in the <link
-	    xlink:href="http://www.sendmail.org/faq/">Sendmail
+	      xlink:href="http://www.sendmail.org/faq/">Sendmail
 	      FAQ</link> as follows.  This FAQ is recommended reading
 	    when <quote>tweaking</quote> the mail setup.</para>
 
@@ -2170,9 +2207,9 @@ to /etc/mail/sendmail.cf.</programlistin
 	</question>
 
 	<answer>
-	  <para>The remote machine may be setting your terminal type to
-	    something other than the <literal>cons25</literal> terminal
-	    type required by the &os; console.</para>
+	  <para>The remote machine may be setting your terminal type
+	    to something other than the <literal>cons25</literal>
+	    terminal type required by the &os; console.</para>
 
 	  <para>There are a number of possible work-arounds for this
 	    problem:</para>
@@ -2207,11 +2244,12 @@ to /etc/mail/sendmail.cf.</programlistin
 	    </listitem>
 
 	    <listitem>
-	      <para>Fire up an X server at the &os; end and login to the
-		remote machine using an X based terminal emulator such
-		as <command>xterm</command> or <command>rxvt</command>.
-		The <envar>TERM</envar> variable at the remote host
-		should be set to <literal>xterm</literal> or
+	      <para>Fire up an X server at the &os; end and login to
+		the remote machine using an X based terminal emulator
+		such as <command>xterm</command> or
+		<command>rxvt</command>.  The <envar>TERM</envar>
+		variable at the remote host should be set to
+		<literal>xterm</literal> or
 		<literal>vt100</literal>.</para>
 	    </listitem>
 	  </itemizedlist>
@@ -2221,46 +2259,48 @@ to /etc/mail/sendmail.cf.</programlistin
       <qandaentry>
 	<question xml:id="connection-delay">
 	  <para>Why does it take so long to connect to my computer via
-	    <command>ssh</command> or <command>telnet</command>?</para>
+	    <command>ssh</command> or
+	    <command>telnet</command>?</para>
 	</question>
 
 	<answer>
-	  <para>The symptom: there is a long delay between the time the
-	    TCP connection is established and the time when the client
-	    software asks for a password (or, in &man.telnet.1;'s case,
-	    when a login prompt appears).</para>
+	  <para>The symptom: there is a long delay between the time
+	    the TCP connection is established and the time when the
+	    client software asks for a password (or, in
+	    &man.telnet.1;'s case, when a login prompt
+	    appears).</para>
 
 	  <para>The problem: more likely than not, the delay is caused
 	    by the server software trying to resolve the client's IP
 	    address into a hostname.  Many servers, including the
 	    <application>Telnet</application> and
-	    <application>SSH</application> servers that come with &os;,
-	    do this to store the hostname
-	    in a log file for future reference by the
-	    administrator.</para>
+	    <application>SSH</application> servers that come with
+	    &os;, do this to store the hostname in a log file for
+	    future reference by the administrator.</para>
 
 	  <para>The remedy: if the problem occurs whenever you connect
-	    from your computer (the client) to any server, the problem is
-	    with the client; likewise, if the problem only occurs when
-	    someone connects to your computer (the server) the problem
-	    is with the server.</para>
-
-	  <para>If the problem is with the client, the only remedy is to
-	    fix the DNS so the server can resolve it.  If this is on a
-	    local network, consider it a server problem and keep
-	    reading; conversely, if this is on the global Internet, you
-	    will most likely need to contact your ISP and ask them to
-	    fix it for you.</para>
+	    from your computer (the client) to any server, the problem
+	    is with the client; likewise, if the problem only occurs
+	    when someone connects to your computer (the server) the
+	    problem is with the server.</para>
+
+	  <para>If the problem is with the client, the only remedy is
+	    to fix the DNS so the server can resolve it.  If this is
+	    on a local network, consider it a server problem and keep
+	    reading; conversely, if this is on the global Internet,
+	    you will most likely need to contact your ISP and ask them
+	    to fix it for you.</para>
 
 	  <para>If the problem is with the server, and this is on a
-	    local network, you need to configure the server to be able to
-	    resolve address-to-hostname queries for your local address
-	    range.  See the &man.hosts.5; and &man.named.8; manual pages
-	    for more information.  If this is on the global Internet,
-	    the problem may be that your server's resolver is not
-	    functioning correctly.  To check, try to look up another
-	    host &mdash; say, <systemitem>www.yahoo.com</systemitem>.  If it
-	    does not work, that is your problem.</para>
+	    local network, you need to configure the server to be able
+	    to resolve address-to-hostname queries for your local
+	    address range.  See the &man.hosts.5; and &man.named.8;
+	    manual pages for more information.  If this is on the
+	    global Internet, the problem may be that your server's
+	    resolver is not functioning correctly.  To check, try to
+	    look up another host &mdash; say,
+	    <systemitem>www.yahoo.com</systemitem>.  If it does not
+	    work, that is your problem.</para>
 
 	  <para>Following a fresh install of &os;, it is also possible
 	    that domain and name server information is missing from
@@ -2268,10 +2308,10 @@ to /etc/mail/sendmail.cf.</programlistin

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