Mercurial > hg > chronicle
changeset 220:79f30bca8489
Ran through ispell
author | Steve Kemp <steve@steve.org.uk> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 16 Apr 2008 19:07:39 +0100 |
parents | 52326e71a41e |
children | eded23ae8288 |
files | COMMENTS |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 8 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/COMMENTS Wed Apr 16 19:04:45 2008 +0100 +++ b/COMMENTS Wed Apr 16 19:07:39 2008 +0100 @@ -15,13 +15,13 @@ There are two ways this software is typically used: Single Machine - The blog input is stored upon your webserver and you generate + The blog input is stored upon your web-server and you generate the output directly to a http-accessible directory upon that machine. Multiple Machines The blog input lives upon one machine, and once you've generated - the output you copy it over to a remote webserver where it may + the output you copy it over to a remote web-server where it may be viewed. Depending upon which of these ways you use the software the @@ -32,14 +32,14 @@ Common Setup ------------ - Install the included file cgi-bin/comments.cgi upon the webserver + Install the included file cgi-bin/comments.cgi upon the web-server which hosts the blog, and adjust the settings at the start of that file to specify: 1. The local directory to save the comments within. - 2. The source and destination email addresses to use for notication - purposes. + 2. The source and destination email addresses to use for + notification purposes. @@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ comments/ A directory to contain the comments. - NOTE: You will need to ensure your webserver has the permissions + NOTE: You will need to ensure your web-server has the permissions to save files to this directory. data/ @@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ chronicle --input=./date/ --comments=./comments/ --output=/var/www/blog/ - This will ensure that the comments saved by your webserver into the + This will ensure that the comments saved by your web-server into the comments directory are included in the (re)generated blog. @@ -78,7 +78,7 @@ hosted blog upon the machine "remote" then you will run into problems: - 1. The comments are saved by your webserver to a local directory + 1. The comments are saved by your web-server to a local directory upon the machine "remote". 2. To rebuild the blog upon your local machine, "local", you must