Skip to content

Commit 2e6963f

Browse files
Review dictionary for extraneous words (#1508)
* Review dictionary for extraneous words * Correct modified by date
1 parent c1e8fc9 commit 2e6963f

22 files changed

+42
-72
lines changed

ci/vale/dictionary.txt

Lines changed: 1 addition & 27 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -5,7 +5,6 @@ adc
55
addon
66
addons
77
addr
8-
addressfield
98
adduser
109
adminpack
1110
adodb
@@ -79,8 +78,6 @@ backtick
7978
backticks
8079
bak
8180
bampton
82-
bandwdith
83-
bandwith
8481
barcode
8582
baremetal
8683
base64
@@ -102,7 +99,6 @@ bootups
10299
bounceback
103100
brackley
104101
bram
105-
broswer
106102
bs4
107103
bugtracker
108104
bukkit
@@ -111,7 +107,6 @@ bungeecord
111107
burndown
112108
byrequests
113109
bzip2
114-
bzip2
115110
bzrtools
116111
c2s
117112
cabd
@@ -159,7 +154,6 @@ clickjacking
159154
client1
160155
client2
161156
clojure
162-
clonefrom
163157
clozure
164158
cls
165159
cluebringer
@@ -171,22 +165,19 @@ cmdmod
171165
cmusieve
172166
cnf
173167
codebase
174-
codeblock
175168
codec
176169
com2sec
177170
comodo
178171
conda
179172
config
180173
configs
181174
configtest
182-
confluece
183175
convolutional
184176
coose
185177
copyfrom
186178
copyto
187179
coreutils
188180
corporateclean
189-
couldn
190181
cpanminus
191182
cpu
192183
cqlsh
@@ -216,8 +207,6 @@ cyberduck
216207
cyg
217208
cygwin
218209
cz
219-
d39a
220-
d693
221210
daemonization
222211
daemonize
223212
daemonized
@@ -259,7 +248,6 @@ df
259248
dhclient
260249
dialogs
261250
diavel
262-
didn
263251
diffie
264252
digium
265253
diplays
@@ -304,7 +292,6 @@ dshield
304292
dsn
305293
ducati
306294
dust2
307-
dust2
308295
dvcs
309296
e2fsck
310297
ea04
@@ -329,8 +316,6 @@ epel
329316
erb
330317
erlang
331318
esc
332-
essage
333-
estart
334319
etcd
335320
etcd0
336321
eth0
@@ -368,15 +353,13 @@ fb4c
368353
fcgi
369354
fcgiwrap
370355
fcrontab
371-
fd86
372356
fdisk
373357
fdriver
374358
fe70
375359
fedf
376360
fetchmail
377361
fetchmailrc
378362
ff02
379-
fi
380363
fiiiile
381364
file1
382365
filebeat
@@ -461,7 +444,6 @@ guarisma
461444
gui
462445
gunicorn
463446
gz
464-
gzio
465447
gzip
466448
gzipped
467449
gzipping
@@ -490,7 +472,6 @@ hoc
490472
homebrew
491473
host1
492474
host2
493-
hostames
494475
hostname
495476
hostnames
496477
hotspots
@@ -854,11 +835,9 @@ oftc
854835
ohai
855836
ok
856837
oldstable
857-
ommand
858838
oneof
859839
onone
860840
ons
861-
ontinue
862841
opencart
863842
opendkim
864843
openfire
@@ -884,7 +863,6 @@ owncloud
884863
pacman
885864
pagent
886865
pagespeed
887-
pakages
888866
pandoc
889867
param
890868
paramiko
@@ -1024,7 +1002,6 @@ remotehost
10241002
replset
10251003
repo
10261004
repos
1027-
repositoryformatversion
10281005
resharding
10291006
resilvering
10301007
resolv
@@ -1275,7 +1252,7 @@ ui
12751252
uidl
12761253
un
12771254
unban
1278-
Unbans
1255+
unbans
12791256
unbilled
12801257
unbundle
12811258
uncheck
@@ -1284,17 +1261,14 @@ uncomment
12841261
uncommented
12851262
uncommenting
12861263
uncompress
1287-
unecrypted
12881264
unencrypted
12891265
unformatted
1290-
unforseen
12911266
unicast
12921267
unintuitive
12931268
uniq
12941269
unmerged
12951270
unmount
12961271
unmounting
1297-
unncessary
12981272
unoptimized
12991273
unpatched
13001274
unregister

docs/applications/big-data/how-to-install-and-configure-a-redis-cluster-on-ubuntu-1604.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ og_description: 'Learn to set up a Redis cluster using three Linode servers and
77
keywords: ["redis cluster installation", "data store", "cache", "sharding"]
88
license: '[CC BY-ND 4.0](http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0)'
99
aliases: ['applications/big-data/redis-cluster']
10-
modified: 2018-08-14
10+
modified: 2018-02-11
1111
modified_by:
1212
name: Sam Foo
1313
published: 2017-08-14

docs/applications/media-servers/install-subsonic-media-server-on-ubuntu-or-debian.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -117,7 +117,7 @@ If you have a firewall set up on your Linode, be sure to edit the permissions to
117117
mkdir /var/music
118118
chown subsonic:subsonic /var/music
119119

120-
2. Open Subsonic in your broswer by navigating to the Linode's IP address or domain name. Be sure to append a colon and the port number after the address. If you've configured subsonic to use SSL, be sure to prepend `https` to the address.
120+
2. Open Subsonic in your browser by navigating to the Linode's IP address or domain name. Be sure to append a colon and the port number after the address. If you've configured subsonic to use SSL, be sure to prepend `https` to the address.
121121

122122
If you’re using Subsonic’s default SSL certificate, you’ll see a message like the following. You can safely "proceed anyway":
123123

docs/applications/voip/install-and-configure-mumble-on-debian.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -88,7 +88,7 @@ For Debian 7 or earlier:
8888
| welcometext | Set the text that shows in the text chat log when you login. |
8989
| port | Set the port you wish to bind to and have your users connect to. |
9090
| serverpassword | Set a password that users will have to use to login. This is not the same as the SuperUser password and therefore, should be different. |
91-
| bandwidth | Set the maximum bandwith (in bits per second) each user can use. |
91+
| bandwidth | Set the maximum bandwidth (in bits per second) each user can use. |
9292
| users | Set the maximum number of users that can connect to the server at once. |
9393

9494

docs/databases/elasticsearch/monitor-nginx-web-server-logs-using-filebeat-elastic-stack-centos-7.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -348,7 +348,7 @@ include /etc/nginx/default.d/*.conf;
348348

349349
{{< /file-excerpt >}}
350350

351-
2. estart nginx:
351+
2. Restart nginx:
352352

353353
sudo systemctl restart nginx
354354

docs/databases/mariadb/set-up-mariadb-clusters-with-galera-debian-and-ubuntu.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ external_resources:
1818
MariaDB replication with Galera adds redundancy for a site's database. With database replication, multiple servers act as a database cluster. Database clustering is particularly useful for high availability website configurations. This guide uses three separate Linodes to configure database replication, each with private IPv4 addresses on Debian and Ubuntu.
1919

2020
{{< note >}}
21-
Communication between nodes are unecrypted. This guide assumes that your Linodes are each configured with a [Private IP Address](/docs/networking/remote-access#adding-private-ip-addresses) and located within the same data center.
21+
Communication between nodes are unencrypted. This guide assumes that your Linodes are each configured with a [Private IP Address](/docs/networking/remote-access#adding-private-ip-addresses) and located within the same data center.
2222
{{< /note >}}
2323

2424
Additionally:

docs/development/ror/ruby-on-rails-with-apache-on-ubuntu-9-04-jaunty.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ Before we get started there are a number of system-level dependencies that you w
3939

4040
apt-get install make build-essential
4141

42-
We going to add a repository to our `/etc/apt/sources.list` to install pakages of Passenger from Ubuntu's "universe" repository. Add the following lines to your `sources.list` with the text editor of your choice:
42+
We going to add a repository to our `/etc/apt/sources.list` to install packages of Passenger from Ubuntu's "universe" repository. Add the following lines to your `sources.list` with the text editor of your choice:
4343

4444
{{< file "/etc/apt/sources.list" >}}
4545
deb http://us.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ jaunty universe

docs/networking/dns/previewing-websites-without-dns.md

Lines changed: 2 additions & 2 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -73,11 +73,11 @@ Next, you'll need your Linode's IP address.
7373
3. Select your Linode.
7474
4. Click the **Remote Access** tab. The webpage shown below appears.
7575

76-
[![Select a data center.](/docs/assets/1534-linode-manager-6-1-small.png)](/docs/assets/1535-linode-manager-6-1.png)
76+
[![Select a data center.](/docs/assets/1534-linode-manager-6-1-small.png)](/docs/assets/1535-linode-manager-6-1.png)
7777

7878
5. Copy the addresses in the Public IPs section.
7979

80-
In this example, the Linode's IPv4 address is 96.126.108.183 and its IPv6 address is 2600:3c03::f03c:91ff:fedf:d693. Unless your Internet service provider supports IPv6, you'll want to the use the IPv4 address.
80+
In this example, the Linode's IPv4 address is 96.126.108.183 and its IPv6 address is `2600:3c03::f03c:91ff:fedf:d693`. Unless your Internet service provider supports IPv6, you'll want to the use the IPv4 address.
8181

8282
## Updating the Hosts File
8383

docs/networking/ssh/setting-up-an-ssh-tunnel-with-your-linode-for-safe-browsing.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ external_resources:
1919

2020
![SSH Tunnel for Safe Browsing](/docs/assets/ssh-tunnel/Setting_up_an_SSH_Tunnel_with_Your_Linode_for_Safe_Browsing_smg.jpg)
2121

22-
Often you may need to browse the web from a public Wi-Fi access point, such as a coffee shop or library, where you do not know the security measures taken by the administrator. Your communications could be snooped on by a malicious user or even by the network owner.
22+
Often you may need to browse the web from a public WiFi access point, such as a coffee shop or library, where you do not know the security measures taken by the administrator. Your communications could be snooped on by a malicious user or even by the network owner.
2323

2424
This guide will show you how to establish a secure connection for browsing the web through a tunnel between your computer and your Linode. With this method, you will set up a tunnel between your computer and your Linode. All your web traffic will be encrypted and forwarded from your Linode on to its final destination.
2525

docs/networking/vpn/set-up-wireguard-vpn-on-ubuntu.md

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -105,7 +105,7 @@ PostDown = iptables -D FORWARD -i wg0 -j ACCEPT; iptables -t nat -D POSTROUTING
105105
SaveConfig = true
106106
{{< /file >}}
107107

108-
**Address** defines the private IPv4 and IPv6 addresses for the WireGuard server. Each peer in the VPN network should have a unique value for this field. This guide will use the 192.168.2.0/24 address block for IPv4 and the fd86:ea04:1115::0/64 block for IPv6.
108+
**Address** defines the private IPv4 and IPv6 addresses for the WireGuard server. Each peer in the VPN network should have a unique value for this field. This guide will use the 192.168.2.0/24 address block for IPv4 and the `fd86:ea04:1115::0/64` block for IPv6.
109109

110110
**ListenPort** specifies the port that WireGuard will use for incoming connections.
111111

0 commit comments

Comments
 (0)