Change explicitely to explicitly throughout.
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@ -1,3 +1,7 @@
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2009-05-26 Christopher Faylor <me+cygwin@cgf.cx>
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Change explicitely to explicitly throughout.
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2009-05-15 Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
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2009-05-15 Corinna Vinschen <corinna@vinschen.de>
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* setup2.sgml (setup-locale-console): Disable section for now.
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* setup2.sgml (setup-locale-console): Disable section for now.
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@ -91,7 +91,7 @@
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Force logging to stderr. This is the default if stderr is connected to
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Force logging to stderr. This is the default if stderr is connected to
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a tty. Otherwise, the default is logging to the system log. By using
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a tty. Otherwise, the default is logging to the system log. By using
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the -e, -E, -y, -Y options (or the appropriate settings in the
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the -e, -E, -y, -Y options (or the appropriate settings in the
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configuration file), you can explicitely set the logging output as you
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configuration file), you can explicitly set the logging output as you
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like, even to both, stderr and syslog.
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like, even to both, stderr and syslog.
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Configuration file option: kern.log.stderr
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Configuration file option: kern.log.stderr
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</para>
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</para>
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@ -165,7 +165,7 @@ below.</para>
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<listitem>
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<listitem>
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<para><envar>(no)binmode</envar> - This option has been removed because
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<para><envar>(no)binmode</envar> - This option has been removed because
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all file opens default to binary mode, unless the open mode has been specified
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all file opens default to binary mode, unless the open mode has been specified
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explicitely in the open(2) call.
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explicitly in the open(2) call.
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</para>
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</para>
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</listitem>
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</listitem>
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@ -641,7 +641,7 @@ Unfortunately that's too simple. Using <command>NtCreateToken</command>
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has a few drawbacks.</para>
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has a few drawbacks.</para>
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<para>First of all, beginning with Windows Server 2003,
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<para>First of all, beginning with Windows Server 2003,
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the permission "Create a token object" gets explicitely removed from
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the permission "Create a token object" gets explicitly removed from
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the SYSTEM user's access token, when starting services under that
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the SYSTEM user's access token, when starting services under that
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account. That requires us to create a new account with this specific
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account. That requires us to create a new account with this specific
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permission just to run this kind of services. But that's a minor
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permission just to run this kind of services. But that's a minor
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@ -266,7 +266,7 @@ point. For instance this:</para>
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</screen>
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</screen>
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<para>will not make file access using the /mnt/d path prefix suddenly using
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<para>will not make file access using the /mnt/d path prefix suddenly using
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textmode. If you want to mount any drive explicitely in another mode than
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textmode. If you want to mount any drive explicitly in another mode than
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the cygdrive prefix, use a distinct path prefix:</para>
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the cygdrive prefix, use a distinct path prefix:</para>
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<screen>
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<screen>
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@ -501,7 +501,7 @@ case-sensitivity on the <filename>/cygdrive</filename> prefix, your shell
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might claim that it can't find Windows commands like <command>attrib</command>
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might claim that it can't find Windows commands like <command>attrib</command>
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or <command>net</command>. To ease the pain, the <filename>/cygdrive</filename>
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or <command>net</command>. To ease the pain, the <filename>/cygdrive</filename>
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path is case-insensitive by default and you have to use the "posix=1" setting
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path is case-insensitive by default and you have to use the "posix=1" setting
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explicitely in <filename>/etc/fstab</filename> or
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explicitly in <filename>/etc/fstab</filename> or
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<filename>/etc/fstab.d/$USER</filename> to switch it to case-sensitivity,
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<filename>/etc/fstab.d/$USER</filename> to switch it to case-sensitivity,
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or you have to make sure that the native Win32 %PATH% environment variable
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or you have to make sure that the native Win32 %PATH% environment variable
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is using the correct case for all paths throughout.</para>
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is using the correct case for all paths throughout.</para>
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@ -222,7 +222,7 @@ supports all relevant default ANSI codepages...</para>
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<listitem><para>
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<listitem><para>
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You don't want to use the default Windows codepage as character set?
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You don't want to use the default Windows codepage as character set?
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In that case you have to specify the charset explicitely. For instance,
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In that case you have to specify the charset explicitly. For instance,
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assume you're from Italy and don't want to use the default Windows codepage
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assume you're from Italy and don't want to use the default Windows codepage
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1252, but the more portable ISO-8859-15 character set. What you can do is
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1252, but the more portable ISO-8859-15 character set. What you can do is
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to set the <envar>LANG</envar> variable in the
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to set the <envar>LANG</envar> variable in the
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@ -271,7 +271,7 @@ used for in- and output, the Windows console hasn't such a way, since it's
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not an application in its own right.</para>
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not an application in its own right.</para>
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<para>This problem is solved in Cygwin as follows. When the first Cygwin
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<para>This problem is solved in Cygwin as follows. When the first Cygwin
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process is started in a Windows console (either explicitely from cmd.exe,
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process is started in a Windows console (either explicitly from cmd.exe,
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or implicitly by, for instance, clicking on the Cygwin desktop icon, or
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or implicitly by, for instance, clicking on the Cygwin desktop icon, or
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running the Cygwin.bat file), the Console character set is determined by the
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running the Cygwin.bat file), the Console character set is determined by the
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setting of the aforementioned internationalization environment variables,
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setting of the aforementioned internationalization environment variables,
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