fixed typos found by topy in all Markdown files

Topy is available at https://github.com/intgr/topy.
This commit is contained in:
Christian Berendt 2014-05-01 16:22:05 +02:00
parent ddc6853a4c
commit b05e506031
12 changed files with 18 additions and 18 deletions

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@ -1696,7 +1696,7 @@ Note: 0.8.3 and 0.8.4 was yanked due to RubyGems encoding issue.
- Checking guest addition versions now ignores OSE. [GH-438]
- Chef solo from a remote URL fixed. [GH-431]
- Arch linux support: host only networks and changing the host name. [GH-439] [GH-448]
- Chef solo `roles_path` and `data_bags_path` can only be be single paths. [GH-446]
- Chef solo `roles_path` and `data_bags_path` can only be single paths. [GH-446]
- Fix `virtualbox_not_detected` error message to require 4.1.x. [GH-458]
- Add shortname (`hostname -s`) for hostname setting on RHEL systems. [GH-456]
- `vagrant ssh -c` output no longer has a prefix and respects newlines

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@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ Each component is explained below:
* **type** is the type of machine-readable message being outputted. There are
a set of standard types which are covered later.
* **data** is zero or more comma-seperated values associated with the prior
* **data** is zero or more comma-separated values associated with the prior
type. The exact amount and meaning of this data is type-dependent, so you
must read the documentation associated with the type to understand fully.
@ -109,7 +109,7 @@ with the machine-readable output.
<tr>
<td>error-exit</td>
<td>
An error occured that caused Vagrant to exit. This contains that
An error occurred that caused Vagrant to exit. This contains that
error. Contains two data elements: type of error, error message.
</td>
</tr>
@ -118,7 +118,7 @@ with the machine-readable output.
<td>provider-name</td>
<td>
The provider name of the target machine.
<span class="label">targetted</span>
<span class="label">targeted</span>
</td>
</tr>
@ -126,7 +126,7 @@ with the machine-readable output.
<td>state</td>
<td>
The state ID of the target machine.
<span class="label">targetted</span>
<span class="label">targeted</span>
</td>
</tr>
@ -135,7 +135,7 @@ with the machine-readable output.
<td>
Human-readable description of the state of the machine. This is the
long version, and may be a paragraph or longer.
<span class="label">targetted</span>
<span class="label">targeted</span>
</td>
</tr>
@ -144,7 +144,7 @@ with the machine-readable output.
<td>
Human-readable description of the state of the machine. This is the
short version, limited to at most a sentence.
<span class="label">targetted</span>
<span class="label">targeted</span>
</td>
</tr>

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@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ is available below.
when SSH sharing is enabled.
* `--ssh-port PORT` - The port of the SSH server running in the Vagrant
enviroment. By default, Vagrant will attempt to find this for you.
environment. By default, Vagrant will attempt to find this for you.
* `--ssh-once` - Allows SSH access only once. After the first attempt to
connect via SSH to the Vagrant environment, the generated keypair is

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@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ slashes, it assumes you're using a regular expression.
## Communication Between Machines
In order to faciliate communication within machines in a multi-machine setup,
In order to facilitate communication within machines in a multi-machine setup,
the various [networking](/v2/networking/index.html) options should be used.
In particular, the [private network](/v2/networking/private_network.html) can
be used to make a private network between multiple machines and the host.

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@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
end
```
This will allow acessing port 80 on the guest via port 8080 on the host.
This will allow accessing port 80 on the guest via port 8080 on the host.
## Options Reference

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@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ Providers can also override non-provider specific configuration, such
as `config.vm.box` and any other Vagrant configuration. This is done by
specifying a second argument to `config.vm.provider`. This argument is
just like the normal `config`, so set any settings you want, and they will
be overriden only for that provider.
be overridden only for that provider.
Example:

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@ -110,7 +110,7 @@ has been bootstrapped.
## Full Alphabetical List of Configuration Options
- `am_policy_hub` (boolean, default `false`) determines whether the VM will be
configured as a CFEngine policy hub (automaticaly bootstrapped to
configured as a CFEngine policy hub (automatically bootstrapped to
its own IP address). You can combine it with `policy_server_address`
if the VM has multiple network interfaces and you want to bootstrap
to a specific one.

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@ -83,7 +83,7 @@ end
## Additional Options
Puppet supports a lot of command-line flags. Basically any setting can
be overriden on the command line. To give you the most power and flexibility
be overridden on the command line. To give you the most power and flexibility
possible with Puppet, Vagrant allows you to specify custom command line
flags to use:

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@ -178,7 +178,7 @@ guest.
## Additional Options
Puppet supports a lot of command-line flags. Basically any setting can
be overriden on the command line. To give you the most power and flexibility
be overridden on the command line. To give you the most power and flexibility
possible with Puppet, Vagrant allows you to specify custom command line
flags to use:

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@ -10,8 +10,8 @@ page_title: "About Vagrant"
Vagrant is a tool for building complete development environments. With an easy-to-use workflow and focus on automation, Vagrant lowers development environment setup time, increases development/production parity, and makes the "works on my machine" excuse a relic of the past.
Vagrant was started in January 2010 by [Mitchell Hashimoto](http://twitter.com/mitchellh). For almost three years, Vagrant was a side-project for Mitchell, a project that he worked on in his free hours after his full time job. During this time, Vagrant grew to be trusted and used by a range of individuals to entire development teams in large companies.
Vagrant was started in January 2010 by [Mitchell Hashimoto](http://twitter.com/mitchellh). For almost three years, Vagrant was a side-project for Mitchell, a project that he worked on in his free hours after his full-time job. During this time, Vagrant grew to be trusted and used by a range of individuals to entire development teams in large companies.
In November 2012, [HashiCorp](http://www.hashicorp.com) was formed by Mitchell to back the development of Vagrant full time. HashiCorp builds commercial additions and provides professional support and training for Vagrant.
In November 2012, [HashiCorp](http://www.hashicorp.com) was formed by Mitchell to back the development of Vagrant full-time. HashiCorp builds commercial additions and provides professional support and training for Vagrant.
Vagrant remains and always will be a liberally licensed open source project. Each release of Vagrant is the work of hundreds of individuals' contributions to the [open source project](http://github.com/mitchellh/vagrant).

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@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ READMORE
The box system that is in place in Vagrant 1.4 and earlier has been
mostly untouched since the first release of Vagrant. While the format
of boxes and commands were modified slightly for Vagrant 1.1 to accomodate
of boxes and commands were modified slightly for Vagrant 1.1 to accommodate
multiple providers, the general use has not changed at all in over four years.
During this time, we've learned a lot about how people use Vagrant and

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@ -74,7 +74,7 @@ $ vagrant share
Once the share is created, a relatively obscure URL is outputted. This URL
will route directly to your Vagrant environment; it doesn't matter if you
or accessing party is behing a firewall or NAT.
or accessing party is behind a firewall or NAT.
Currently, HTTP access is restricted through obscure URLs. We'll be adding
more ACLs and audit logs for this in the future.