diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/misc/tramp.texi')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/misc/tramp.texi | 34 |
1 files changed, 17 insertions, 17 deletions
diff --git a/doc/misc/tramp.texi b/doc/misc/tramp.texi index 346354b3170..8bcce244f9d 100644 --- a/doc/misc/tramp.texi +++ b/doc/misc/tramp.texi @@ -369,13 +369,12 @@ behind the scenes when you open a file with @value{tramp}. @cindex obtaining Tramp @value{tramp} is freely available on the Internet and the latest -release may be downloaded from -@uref{ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/tramp/}. This release includes the full -documentation and code for @value{tramp}, suitable for installation. -But GNU Emacs (22 or later) includes @value{tramp} already, and there -is a @value{tramp} package for XEmacs, as well. So maybe it is easier -to just use those. But if you want the bleeding edge, read -on@dots{...} +release may be downloaded from @uref{ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/tramp/}. +This release includes the full documentation and code for +@value{tramp}, suitable for installation. But Emacs (22 or later) +includes @value{tramp} already, and there is a @value{tramp} package +for XEmacs, as well. So maybe it is easier to just use those. But if +you want the bleeding edge, read on@dots{...} For the especially brave, @value{tramp} is available from CVS. The CVS version is the latest version of the code and may contain incomplete @@ -445,10 +444,10 @@ GVFS integration started in February 2009. @end ifset In December 2001, @value{tramp} has been added to the XEmacs package -repository. Being part of the GNU Emacs repository happened in June -2002, the first release including @value{tramp} was GNU Emacs 22.1. +repository. Being part of the Emacs repository happened in June 2002, +the first release including @value{tramp} was Emacs 22.1. -@value{tramp} is also a GNU/Linux Debian package since February 2001. +@value{tramp} is also a Debian GNU/Linux package since February 2001. @c Installation chapter is necessary only in case of standalone @@ -1704,9 +1703,10 @@ By default, this is set to a reasonable set of defaults for most machines. The symbol @code{tramp-default-remote-path} is a place holder, it is replaced by the list of directories received via the command @command{getconf PATH} on your remote machine. For example, -on GNU Debian this is @file{/bin:/usr/bin}, whereas on Solaris this is -@file{/usr/xpg4/bin:/usr/ccs/bin:/usr/bin:/opt/SUNWspro/bin}. It is -recommended to apply this symbol on top of @code{tramp-remote-path}. +on Debian GNU/Linux this is @file{/bin:/usr/bin}, whereas on Solaris +this is @file{/usr/xpg4/bin:/usr/ccs/bin:/usr/bin:/opt/SUNWspro/bin}. +It is recommended to apply this symbol on top of +@code{tramp-remote-path}. It is possible, however, that your local (or remote ;) system administrator has put the tools you want in some obscure local @@ -2740,8 +2740,8 @@ There is also a Savannah project page. @item Which systems does it work on? -The package has been used successfully on GNU Emacs 22, GNU Emacs 23, -XEmacs 21 (starting with 21.4), and SXEmacs 22. +The package has been used successfully on Emacs 22, Emacs 23, XEmacs +21 (starting with 21.4), and SXEmacs 22. The package was intended to work on Unix, and it really expects a Unix-like system on the remote end (except the @option{smb} method), @@ -3583,9 +3583,9 @@ printed and deleted. But I have decided that this is too fragile to reliably work, so on some systems you'll have to do without the uuencode methods. -@item The @value{tramp} filename syntax differs between GNU Emacs and XEmacs. +@item The @value{tramp} filename syntax differs between Emacs and XEmacs. -The GNU Emacs maintainers wish to use a unified filename syntax for +The Emacs maintainers wish to use a unified filename syntax for Ange-FTP and @value{tramp} so that users don't have to learn a new syntax. It is sufficient to learn some extensions to the old syntax. |