diff --git a/doc/rrdcached.html b/doc/rrdcached.html
index 717be17ef38ce967e2c5f135a3527a9264351b43..1ad399ac6f643f751ecc133be2c43f43cccf7e02 100644 (file)
--- a/doc/rrdcached.html
+++ b/doc/rrdcached.html
work with up-to-date data.</p>
<p>The daemon was written with big setups in mind. Those setups usually run into
IO related problems sooner or later for reasons that are beyond the scope
-of this document. Check the wiki at the RRDTool homepage for details. Also
+of this document. Check the wiki at the RRDtool homepage for details. Also
check <a href="#security_considerations">SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS</a> below before using this daemon! A detailed
description of how the daemon operates can be found in the <a href="#how_it_works">HOW IT WORKS</a>
section below.</p>
<p>Tells the daemon to bind to <em>address</em> and accept incoming connections on that
socket. If <em>address</em> begins with <code>unix:</code>, everything following that prefix is
interpreted as the path to a UNIX domain socket. Otherwise the address or node
-name are resolved using <em>getaddrinfo</em>.</p>
+name are resolved using getaddrinfo.</p>
<p>For network sockets, a port may be specified by using the form
<code>[address]:port</code>. If the address is an IPv4 address or a fully
qualified domain name (i. e. the address contains at least one dot
<h1><a name="affected_rrdtool_commands">AFFECTED RRDTOOL COMMANDS</a></h1>
<p>The following commands may be made aware of the <strong>rrdcached</strong> using the command
line argument <strong>--daemon</strong> or the environment variable <strong>RRDCACHED_ADDRESS</strong>:</p>
-<dl>
-<dt><strong><a name="dump" class="item"><strong>dump</strong></a></strong></dt>
-
-<dt><strong><a name="fetch" class="item"><strong>fetch</strong></a></strong></dt>
-
-<dt><strong><a name="flush" class="item"><strong>flush</strong></a></strong></dt>
-
-<dt><strong><a name="graph" class="item"><strong>graph</strong></a></strong></dt>
-
-<dt><strong><a name="graphv" class="item"><strong>graphv</strong></a></strong></dt>
-
-<dt><strong><a name="info" class="item"><strong>info</strong></a></strong></dt>
-
-<dt><strong><a name="last" class="item"><strong>last</strong></a></strong></dt>
-
-<dt><strong><a name="lastupdate" class="item"><strong>lastupdate</strong></a></strong></dt>
-
-<dt><strong><a name="update" class="item"><strong>update</strong></a></strong></dt>
-
-<dt><strong><a name="xport" class="item"><strong>xport</strong></a></strong></dt>
-
-</dl>
+<ul>
+<li>
+<p>dump</p>
+</li>
+<li>
+<p>fetch</p>
+</li>
+<li>
+<p>flush</p>
+</li>
+<li>
+<p>graph</p>
+</li>
+<li>
+<p>graphv</p>
+</li>
+<li>
+<p>info</p>
+</li>
+<li>
+<p>last</p>
+</li>
+<li>
+<p>lastupdate</p>
+</li>
+<li>
+<p>update</p>
+</li>
+<li>
+<p>xport</p>
+</li>
+</ul>
<p>The <strong>update</strong> command can send values to the daemon instead of writing them to
the disk itself. All other commands can send a <strong>FLUSH</strong> command (see below) to
the daemon before accessing the files, so they work with up-to-date data even
are printed to <code>STDERR</code>. One of the steps when starting up is to fork to the
background and closing <code>STDERR</code> - after this writing directly to the user is
no longer possible. Once this has happened, the daemon will send log messages
-to the system logging daemon using <em>syslog(3)</em>. The facility used is
+to the system logging daemon using <code>syslog(3)</code>. The facility used is
<code>LOG_DAEMON</code>.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>When appending a value to a tree node, it is checked whether it's time to write
the values to disk. Values are written to disk if
<code>now() - First >= timeout</code>, where <code>timeout</code> is the timeout specified
-using the <strong>-w</strong> option, see <em>OPTIONS</em>. If the values are "old enough" they
+using the <strong>-w</strong> option, see <a href="#options">OPTIONS</a>. If the values are "old enough" they
will be enqueued in the "update queue", i. e. they will be appended to
the linked list shown below. Because the tree nodes and the elements of the
linked list are the same data structures in memory, any update to a file that
<h1><a name="protocol">PROTOCOL</a></h1>
<p>The daemon communicates with clients using a line based ASCII protocol which is
easy to read and easy to type. This makes it easy for scripts to implement the
-protocol and possible for users to use <em>telnet</em> to connect to the daemon
+protocol and possible for users to use telnet to connect to the daemon
and test stuff "by hand".</p>
<p>The protocol is line based, this means that each record consists of one or more
lines. A line is terminated by the line feed character <code>0x0A</code>, commonly
</p>
<hr />
<h1><a name="author">AUTHOR</a></h1>
-<p><strong>rrdcached</strong> and this manual page have been written by Florian Forster
-<octo at verplant.org>.</p>
+<p>Florian Forster <octo at verplant.org></p>
+<p>Both <strong>rrdcached</strong> and this manual page have been written by Florian.</p>
<p>
</p>
<hr />