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authorjmmv <jmmv@pkgsrc.org>2003-05-06 17:40:18 +0000
committerjmmv <jmmv@pkgsrc.org>2003-05-06 17:40:18 +0000
commitf1446ddf2bf8118f432b3ac74c88db3d832669a8 (patch)
tree37ae7d212f46ef8018a7bd8c13edba7da1a47ed9 /net/whatmask
parent37170ce899bdf394cca1d0769b2215d84b15a7ee (diff)
downloadpkgsrc-f1446ddf2bf8118f432b3ac74c88db3d832669a8.tar.gz
Drop trailing whitespace. Ok'ed by wiz.
Diffstat (limited to 'net/whatmask')
-rw-r--r--net/whatmask/DESCR4
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/net/whatmask/DESCR b/net/whatmask/DESCR
index b8e6c158a5b..46cb75297c8 100644
--- a/net/whatmask/DESCR
+++ b/net/whatmask/DESCR
@@ -12,10 +12,10 @@ Notations supported:
The above notations are all identical. CIDR notation commonly has a "/" in
front of the number (representing the number of bits). Whatmask can accept
these notations with or without a slash. This notation is used more and more
-recently. A lot of popular routers and software support this notation.
+recently. A lot of popular routers and software support this notation.
Netmask notation is pretty much the standard old-school way of doing it. It is
-supported by most systems (Un*x, Win, Mac, etc.).
+supported by most systems (Un*x, Win, Mac, etc.).
Wilcard bits are similar to the netmask, but they are the logical not of the
netmask. This notation is used by a number of popular routers.