I think this is correct fix but I'm not really comfortable with my English. :-) Could someone review this change?
Index: mod_so.html =================================================================== RCS file: /home/cvspublic/httpd-docs-1.3/htdocs/manual/mod/mod_so.html,v retrieving revision 1.9 diff -u -r1.9 mod_so.html --- mod_so.html 2000/12/20 23:48:34 1.9 +++ mod_so.html 2001/05/28 10:39:51 @@ -139,7 +139,7 @@ The LoadFile directive links in the named object files or libraries when the server is started or restarted; this is used to load additional code which may be required for some module to -work. <EM>Filename</EM> is either and absolute path or relative to <A +work. <EM>Filename</EM> is either an absolute path or relative to <A HREF="core.html#serverroot">ServerRoot</A>.<P><HR> <H2><A NAME="loadmodule">LoadModule</A> directive</H2> @@ -182,7 +182,7 @@ <P>Win32 Apache modules are often distributed with the old style names, or even a name such as libfoo.dll. Whatever the name of the module, -it must be the LoadModule directive requires the exact filename, no +the LoadModule directive requires the exact filename, no assumption is made about the filename extension.</P> <!--#include virtual="footer.html" --> Index: mod_unique_id.html =================================================================== RCS file: /home/cvspublic/httpd-docs-1.3/htdocs/manual/mod/mod_unique_id.html,v retrieving revision 1.5 diff -u -r1.5 mod_unique_id.html --- mod_unique_id.html 2000/09/28 16:54:39 1.5 +++ mod_unique_id.html 2001/05/28 10:39:52 @@ -138,7 +138,7 @@ repeated itself). This is not a perfect defense. <P> -How good a defense is it? Well suppose that one of your machines serves +How good a defense is it? We'll suppose that one of your machines serves at most 500 requests per second (which is a very reasonable upper bound at this writing, because systems generally do more than just shovel out static files). To do that it will require a number of children which @@ -164,7 +164,7 @@ <P> The <CODE>UNIQUE_ID</CODE> environment variable is constructed by encoding the 112-bit (32-bit IP address, 32 bit pid, 32 bit time stamp, -16 bit counter) quadruple using the alphabet <CODE>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</CODE> +16 bit counter quadruple) using the alphabet <CODE>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</CODE> in a manner similar to MIME base64 encoding, producing 19 characters. The MIME base64 alphabet is actually <CODE>[A-Za-z0-9+/]</CODE> however <CODE>+</CODE> and <CODE>/</CODE> need to be specially encoded in URLs, -- Yoshiki Hayashi --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]