# Minor documentation changes # # Patch by Steve McIntyre and Britton Leo Kerin diff -Nur doc/cvsclient.texi doc/cvsclient.texi --- doc/cvsclient.texi 2005-07-20 18:39:59.000000000 +0800 +++ doc/cvsclient.texi 2006-02-26 22:39:20.000000000 +0800 @@ -3,9 +3,10 @@ @setfilename cvsclient.info @include version-client.texi -@dircategory Programming +@dircategory Development @direntry -* cvsclient: (cvsclient). The CVS client/server protocol. +* CVS client/server: (cvsclient). Describes the client/server protocol + used by CVS. @end direntry @node Top diff -Nur doc/cvs.texinfo doc/cvs.texinfo --- doc/cvs.texinfo 2006-02-26 22:39:19.000000000 +0800 +++ doc/cvs.texinfo 2006-02-26 22:39:20.000000000 +0800 @@ -97,7 +97,7 @@ @end macro @end ifhtml -@dircategory GNU Packages +@dircategory Development @direntry * CVS: (cvs). Concurrent Versions System @end direntry @@ -2385,13 +2385,16 @@ There are two access methods that you use in @code{CVSROOT} for rsh. @code{:server:} specifies an internal rsh client, which is supported only by some @sc{cvs} ports. +This is not supported on most Unix-style systems, +including Debian. @code{:ext:} specifies an external rsh program. By default this is @code{rsh} (unless otherwise specified by the @file{--with-rsh} flag to configure) but you may set the @code{CVS_RSH} environment variable to invoke another program which can access the remote server (for example, @code{remsh} on HP-UX 9 because @code{rsh} is -something different). It must be a program which can +something different, or @code{ssh} to allow the use of +secure and/or compressed connections). It must be a program which can transmit data to and from the server without modifying it; for example the Windows NT @code{rsh} is not suitable since it by default translates between CRLF @@ -12711,7 +12714,7 @@ @item @var{mname} [ options ] @var{dir} [ @var{files}@dots{} ] In the simplest case, this form of module definition reduces to @samp{@var{mname} @var{dir}}. This defines -all the files in directory @var{dir} as module mname. +all the files in directory @var{dir} as module @var{mname}. @var{dir} is a relative path (from @code{$CVSROOT}) to a directory of source in the source repository. In this case, on checkout, a single directory called