diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/guix.texi | 16 |
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/doc/guix.texi b/doc/guix.texi index 0a7857f0ea..717ca146dc 100644 --- a/doc/guix.texi +++ b/doc/guix.texi @@ -260,7 +260,7 @@ Programming Interface * Derivations:: Low-level interface to package derivations. * The Store Monad:: Purely functional interface to the store. * G-Expressions:: Manipulating build expressions. -* Invoking guix repl:: Programming Guix in Guile +* Invoking guix repl:: Programming Guix in Guile. Defining Packages @@ -4423,7 +4423,7 @@ Scheme code that evaluates to a list of channel objects. @end table As for @command{guix pull}, the absence of any options means that the -the latest commit on the master branch will be used. The command +latest commit on the master branch will be used. The command @example guix time-machine -- build hello @@ -5499,7 +5499,7 @@ Another typical use case for containers is to run security-sensitive applications such as a web browser. To run Eolie, we must expose and share some files and directories; we include @code{nss-certs} and expose @file{/etc/ssl/certs/} for HTTPS authentication; finally we preserve the -the @env{DISPLAY} environment variable since containerized graphical +@env{DISPLAY} environment variable since containerized graphical applications won't display without it. @example @@ -28733,8 +28733,8 @@ The configuration rules that will be used to generate @file{/etc/security/pam_mount.conf.xml}. The configuration rules are SXML elements (@pxref{SXML,,, guile, GNU -Guile Reference Manual}), and the the default ones don't mount anything -for anyone at login: +Guile Reference Manual}), and the default ones don't mount anything for +anyone at login: @lisp `((debug (@@ (enable "0"))) @@ -31158,7 +31158,7 @@ decompress with @command{xz -d}, and then you can pass it to an emulator such as QEMU (see below for details). This image boots the Xfce graphical environment and it contains some -commonly-used tools. You can install more software in the image by running +commonly used tools. You can install more software in the image by running @command{guix package} in a terminal (@pxref{Invoking guix package}). You can also reconfigure the system based on its initial configuration file available as @file{/run/current-system/configuration.scm} (@pxref{Using the @@ -31218,8 +31218,8 @@ better performance than if it were emulating a complete disk drive. See the QEMU and KVM documentation for more info. @item -drive if=none,file=/tmp/qemu-image,id=myhd -Use our QCOW image, the @file{/tmp/qemu-image} file, as the backing store the -the ``myhd'' drive. +Use our QCOW image, the @file{/tmp/qemu-image} file, as the backing +store of the ``myhd'' drive. @end table The default @command{run-vm.sh} script that is returned by an invocation of |