A few more spelling fixes. Released the .xz spec 1.0.3.

This commit is contained in:
Lasse Collin 2009-06-05 13:46:26 +03:00
parent 8ed156ce89
commit 1735d31ea3
1 changed files with 7 additions and 5 deletions

View File

@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
The .xz File Format
===================
Version 1.0.2 (2009-06-04)
Version 1.0.3 (2009-06-05)
0. Preface
@ -93,6 +93,8 @@ Version 1.0.2 (2009-06-04)
Version Date Description
1.0.3 2009-06-05 Spelling fixes in Sections 5.1 and 5.4
1.0.2 2009-06-04 Typo fixes in Sections 4 and 5.3.1
1.0.1 2009-06-01 Typo fix in Section 0.3 and minor
@ -760,13 +762,13 @@ Version 1.0.2 (2009-06-04)
Some filters, for example LZMA2, can be configured to take
advantage of specified alignment of input data. Note that
taking advantage of aligned input can be benefical also when
taking advantage of aligned input can be beneficial also when
a filter is not the first filter in the chain. For example,
if you compress PowerPC executables, you may want to use the
PowerPC filter and chain that with the LZMA2 filter. Because
not only the input but also the output alignment of the PowerPC
filter is four bytes, it is now benefical to set LZMA2 settings
so that the LZMA2 encoder can take advantage of its
filter is four bytes, it is now beneficial to set LZMA2
settings so that the LZMA2 encoder can take advantage of its
four-byte-aligned input data.
The output of the last filter in the chain is stored to the
@ -987,7 +989,7 @@ Version 1.0.2 (2009-06-04)
The second choice is to generate a 40-bit random integer,
which the developer can use as his personal Developer ID.
To minimalize the risk of collisions, Developer ID has to be
To minimize the risk of collisions, Developer ID has to be
a randomly generated integer, not manually selected "hex word".
The following command, which works on many free operating
systems, can be used to generate Developer ID: