Conventions Used in This Book
The following typographic conventions are used in this book:
Italic is used to indicate new terms and for
comments in code sections. It is also used for URLs, FTP sites,
filenames, and directory names. Some code sections begin with a line
of italicized text, which usually specifies the file that the code
belongs in.
Constant width is used for code sections and
program names.
Constant width italic is used to indicate
replaceable parts of code.
Constant width bold is used to
indicate text typed by the user in code sections.
We capitalize the names of software packages or protocols, such as
Tripwire or FTP, in contrast to their associated programs, denoted
tripwire and ftp.
We use the following standards for shell prompts, so
it's clear if a command must be run by a particular
user or on a particular machine:
$ |
Ordinary user prompt
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# |
Root shell prompt
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myhost$ |
Shell prompt on host myhost
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myhost# |
Root prompt on host myhost
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myname$ |
Shell prompt for user myname
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myname@myhost$ |
Shell prompt for user myname on host myhost
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This icon indicates a tip, suggestion, or general note.
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This icon indicates a warning or caution.
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