diff options
author | Frans Pop <elendil@planet.nl> | 2006-08-03 11:14:42 +0000 |
---|---|---|
committer | Frans Pop <elendil@planet.nl> | 2006-08-03 11:14:42 +0000 |
commit | 9b1ad47c62e36d8d0fef69f7cc51782bd666d505 (patch) | |
tree | 98a7dcad1df2f3c7d889acdf95e227d544354cc5 | |
parent | 36b7671031dd059e7fa2b95da4ef7ddb1c279f81 (diff) | |
download | installation-guide-9b1ad47c62e36d8d0fef69f7cc51782bd666d505.zip |
Fix broken English and improve text
-rw-r--r-- | en/appendix/files.xml | 18 |
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/en/appendix/files.xml b/en/appendix/files.xml index a4ec9d2bd..c2da77fcb 100644 --- a/en/appendix/files.xml +++ b/en/appendix/files.xml @@ -5,14 +5,14 @@ <sect1 id="linuxdevices"><title>Linux Devices</title> <para> -In Linux you have various special files in -<filename>/dev</filename>. These files are called device files. In -the Unix world accessing hardware is different. There you have a -special file which actually runs a driver which in turn accesses the -hardware. The device file is an interface to the actual system -component. Files under <filename>/dev</filename> also behave -differently than ordinary files. Below are the most important device -files listed. +In Linux various special files can be found under the directory +<filename>/dev</filename>. These files are called device files and +behave unlike ordinary files. The most common types of device files +are for block devices and character devices. These files are an +interface to the actual driver (part of the Linux kernel) which in +turn accesses the hardware. Another, less common, type of device file +is the named <firstterm>pipe</firstterm>. +The most important device files are listed in the tables below. </para><para> @@ -106,7 +106,7 @@ files listed. <informaltable><tgroup cols="2"><tbody> <row> <entry><filename>null</filename></entry> - <entry>Everything pointed to this device will disappear</entry> + <entry>Anything written to this device will disappear</entry> </row><row> <entry><filename>zero</filename></entry> <entry>One can endlessly read zeros out of this device</entry> |