fortune/freebsd-tips: Remove errant spaces

I noticed these errant spaces while removing a bogus fortune, and
decided I might as well fix them.

While here, reflow a line to it within 80 columns
This commit is contained in:
Daniel Ebdrup Jensen 2021-03-30 19:05:05 +02:00
parent 968ad154ce
commit 5478176319

View File

@ -336,7 +336,7 @@ write
This won't work if you don't have write permissions to the directory
and probably won't be suitable if you're editing through a symbolic link.
If you have sudo(8) installed and permissions to use it, type
If you have sudo(8) installed and permissions to use it, type
``<ESC>w ! sudo tee %'' to force a write.
%
You can adjust the volume of various parts of the sound system in your
@ -563,7 +563,7 @@ sysctl(8) tell you with the following command:
sysctl hw.realmem
The realmem value is memory before the kernel and modules are loaded, whereas
hw.physmem is what is left after they were loaded.
hw.physmem is what is left after they were loaded.
The number of active CPUs is displayed using this command:
@ -573,7 +573,7 @@ sysctl hw.ncpu
%
When using ZFS as the file system the "df" command is reporting the pool size
and not file system sizes. It also does not know about descendent ZFS
datasets, snapshots, quotas, and reservations with their individual space usage.
datasets, snapshots, quotas, and reservations with their individual space usage.
Use the built-in "zfs list" command to get a better overview of space usage:
zfs list -o space
@ -604,7 +604,7 @@ The zfs userspace command can display the quota and current space usage:
# zfs userspace pool/home/foo
To unset a quota, assign "none" as the value.
To unset a quota, assign "none" as the value.
-- Benedict Reuschling <bcr@FreeBSD.org>
%
ZFS can display I/O statistics for a given pool using the iostat subcommand.
@ -688,7 +688,7 @@ zfs list -H
Another helpful option for script writers is -p, which displays the numbers
in non-rounded, exact values:
zfs list -p
zfs list -p
-- Benedict Reuschling <bcr@FreeBSD.org>
%
@ -705,7 +705,7 @@ parameter to execute the destroy operation.
-- Benedict Reuschling <bcr@FreeBSD.org>
%
You can delete a range of ZFS snapshots (a-z) in multiple ways.
The following will delete d and all earlier snapshots:
The following will delete d and all earlier snapshots:
zfs destroy mypool/data@%d
@ -718,8 +718,8 @@ To delete all dataset snapshots:
zfs destroy mypool/data@%
Make sure to let ZFS perform a dry run (-n option) first and display (-v) what
it would do to confirm that the delete operation is removing exactly what you
intended.
it would do to confirm that the delete operation is removing exactly what you
intended.
-- Benedict Reuschling <bcr@FreeBSD.org>
%
To set a custom ZFS property on the mypool pool, you need to provide it
@ -796,7 +796,8 @@ always have space left this way.
-- Benedict Reuschling <bcr@FreeBSD.org>
%
Sometimes a single slow HDD can cripple the performance of your entire system. You can spot one like this:
Sometimes a single slow HDD can cripple the performance of your entire system.
You can spot one like this:
# gstat -I5s | sort -rn -k9 | head