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authorJohn Terpstra <jht@samba.org>2003-05-28 22:15:44 +0000
committerJohn Terpstra <jht@samba.org>2003-05-28 22:15:44 +0000
commit3d1c9c75812aa47c60d6d912e97a76d6b7e7895d (patch)
tree88218cef276c251f17e072ca0ee64128e531c4d5 /docs/docbook/projdoc
parent24497516cb115b62c5161a053f9025a9c711b114 (diff)
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Fix typos.
(This used to be commit 3ea0fc830f3c85d6e820bb9aa66e72305b3f273f)
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/docbook/projdoc')
-rw-r--r--docs/docbook/projdoc/ServerType.xml4
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/docs/docbook/projdoc/ServerType.xml b/docs/docbook/projdoc/ServerType.xml
index 0ccff8c702..a1a52b2545 100644
--- a/docs/docbook/projdoc/ServerType.xml
+++ b/docs/docbook/projdoc/ServerType.xml
@@ -136,7 +136,7 @@ There are in the SMB/CIFS networking world only two types of security: <emphasis
and <emphasis>SHARE Level</emphasis>. We refer to these collectively as <emphasis>security levels</emphasis>. In implementing these two <emphasis>security levels</emphasis> samba provides flexibilities
that are not available with Microsoft Windows NT4 / 200x servers. Samba knows of five (5)
ways that allow the security levels to be implemented. In actual fact, Samba implements
-<emphasis>SHARE Level</emphasis> security only one way, but has for ways of implementing
+<emphasis>SHARE Level</emphasis> security only one way, but has four ways of implementing
<emphasis>USER Level</emphasis> security. Collectively, we call the samba implementations
<emphasis>Security Modes</emphasis>. These are: <emphasis>SHARE</emphasis>, <emphasis>USER</emphasis>, <emphasis>DOMAIN</emphasis>,
<emphasis>ADS</emphasis>, and <emphasis>SERVER</emphasis>
@@ -158,7 +158,7 @@ available and whether an action is allowed.
<title>User Level Security</title>
<para>
-We will describe<parameter>user level</parameter> security first, as its simpler.
+We will describe <parameter>user level</parameter> security first, as its simpler.
In <emphasis>user level</emphasis> security the client will send a
<emphasis>session setup</emphasis> command directly after the protocol negotiation.
This contains a username and password. The server can either accept or reject that