Nits fixed.

Pointed out by: Daniel Harris
This commit is contained in:
Tim Kientzle 2004-05-20 06:22:42 +00:00
parent 147110cb2d
commit 5aedc78012

View File

@ -34,7 +34,7 @@
The
.Nm
archive format collects any number of files, directories, and other
filesystem objects (symbolic links, device nodes, etc.) into a single
filesystem objects (symbolic links, device nodes, etc.) into a single
stream of bytes.
The format was originally designed to be used with
tape drives that operate with fixed-size blocks, but is widely used as
@ -517,7 +517,7 @@ The data for this entry is a long linkname for the following regular entry.
The data for this entry is a long pathname for the following regular entry.
.It "M"
This is a continuation of the last file on the previous volume.
GNU multi-volume archives gaurantee that each volume begins with a valid
GNU multi-volume archives guarantee that each volume begins with a valid
entry header.
To ensure this, a file may be split, with part stored at the end of one volume,
and part stored at the beginning of the next volume.
@ -541,7 +541,7 @@ When extracting, GNU tar checks that the header file name is the one it is
expecting, that the header offset is in the correct sequence, and that
the sum of offset and size is equal to realsize.
FreeBSD's version of GNU tar does not handle the corner case of an
archive being continued in the middle of a long name or other
archive's being continued in the middle of a long name or other
extension header.
.It "N"
Type "N" records are no longer generated by GNU tar. They contained a
@ -578,7 +578,7 @@ followed by a space.
Note that POSIX ustar archives have a trailing null.
.It Va version
The version field holds a space character followed by a null.
Note that POSIX ustar archive use two copies of the ASCII digit
Note that POSIX ustar archives use two copies of the ASCII digit
.Dq 0 .
.It Va atime , Va ctime
The time the file was last accessed and the time of