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-rw-r--r--lib/sasl/doc/src/release_handler.xml21
1 files changed, 11 insertions, 10 deletions
diff --git a/lib/sasl/doc/src/release_handler.xml b/lib/sasl/doc/src/release_handler.xml
index bd4a513750..e3438ede41 100644
--- a/lib/sasl/doc/src/release_handler.xml
+++ b/lib/sasl/doc/src/release_handler.xml
@@ -64,10 +64,10 @@
downgraded to the specified version by evaluating the instructions
in <c>relup</c>. An installed release can be made
<em>permanent</em>. There can only be one permanent release in
- the system, and this is the release that is used if the system is
- restarted. An installed release, except the permanent one, can be
- <em>removed</em>. When a release is removed, all files that
- belong to that release only are deleted.</p>
+ the system, and this is the release that is used if the system
+ is restarted. An installed release, except the permanent one,
+ can be <em>removed</em>. When a release is removed, all files
+ that belong to that release only are deleted.</p>
<p>Each version of the release has a status. The status can be
<c>unpacked</c>, <c>current</c>, <c>permanent</c>, or <c>old</c>.
There is always one latest release which either has status
@@ -107,16 +107,17 @@ old reboot_old permanent
restarted. This is taken care of automatically if Erlang is
started as an embedded system. Read about this in <em>Embedded System</em>. In this case, the system configuration file
<c>sys.config</c> is mandatory.</p>
- <p>A new release may restart the system. Which program to use is
- specified by the SASL configuration parameter <c>start_prg</c>
- which defaults to <c>$ROOT/bin/start</c>.</p>
+ <p>The installation of a new release may restart the system. Which
+ program to use is specified by the SASL configuration
+ parameter <c>start_prg</c> which defaults
+ to <c>$ROOT/bin/start</c>.</p>
<p>The emulator restart on Windows NT expects that the system is
started using the <c>erlsrv</c> program (as a service).
Furthermore the release handler expects that the service is named
<em>NodeName</em>_<em>Release</em>, where <em>NodeName</em> is
the first part of the Erlang nodename (up to, but not including
- the "@") and <em>Release</em> is the current release of
- the application. The release handler furthermore expects that a
+ the "@") and <em>Release</em> is the current version of
+ the release. The release handler furthermore expects that a
program like <c>start_erl.exe</c> is specified as "machine" to
<c>erlsrv</c>. During upgrading with restart, a new service will
be registered and started. The new service will be set to
@@ -484,7 +485,7 @@ release_handler:set_unpacked(RelFile, [{myapp,"1.0","/home/user"},...]).
<c>release_handler</c> to end up in an inconsistent state.</p>
<p>No persistent information is updated, why these functions can
be used on any Erlang node, embedded or not. Also, using these
- functions does not effect which code will be loaded in case of
+ functions does not affect which code will be loaded in case of
a reboot.</p>
<p>If the upgrade or downgrade fails, the application may end up
in an inconsistent state.</p>