From 501c2bb053a8e7bb9dd1c0ee0210ebcc5b48112a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Nozomu KURASAWA Date: Wed, 29 Dec 2010 14:40:26 +0000 Subject: Update pot files and Japanese Translation (based r66154). --- po/pot/partitioning.pot | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) (limited to 'po/pot/partitioning.pot') diff --git a/po/pot/partitioning.pot b/po/pot/partitioning.pot index 14afa179f..3b0a2b363 100644 --- a/po/pot/partitioning.pot +++ b/po/pot/partitioning.pot @@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ msgid "" msgstr "" "Project-Id-Version: PACKAGE VERSION\n" "Report-Msgid-Bugs-To: debian-boot@lists.debian.org\n" -"POT-Creation-Date: 2010-10-10 12:35+0000\n" +"POT-Creation-Date: 2010-12-29 12:07+0000\n" "PO-Revision-Date: YEAR-MO-DA HO:MI+ZONE\n" "Last-Translator: FULL NAME \n" "Language-Team: LANGUAGE \n" @@ -353,7 +353,7 @@ msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: partitioning.xml:268 #, no-c-format -msgid "On 32-bit architectures (i386, m68k, 32-bit SPARC, and PowerPC), the maximum size of a swap partition is 2GB. That should be enough for nearly any installation. However, if your swap requirements are this high, you should probably try to spread the swap across different disks (also called spindles) and, if possible, different SCSI or IDE channels. The kernel will balance swap usage between multiple swap partitions, giving better performance." +msgid "On some 32-bit architectures (m68k and PowerPC), the maximum size of a swap partition is 2GB. That should be enough for nearly any installation. However, if your swap requirements are this high, you should probably try to spread the swap across different disks (also called spindles) and, if possible, different SCSI or IDE channels. The kernel will balance swap usage between multiple swap partitions, giving better performance." msgstr "" #. Tag: para -- cgit v1.2.3