doc: fix minor spelling and tense errors

* doc/{gpg,gpgsm,wks}.texi: minor orthographic cleanup.

Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
This commit is contained in:
Daniel Kahn Gillmor 2019-08-20 15:14:39 -04:00
parent cba6e1bd72
commit b7793c3af3
3 changed files with 6 additions and 6 deletions

View File

@ -1091,7 +1091,7 @@ Directly sign a key from the passphrase without any further user
interaction. The @var{fpr} must be the verified primary fingerprint
of a key in the local keyring. If no @var{names} are given, all
useful user ids are signed; with given [@var{names}] only useful user
ids matching one of theses names are signed. By default, or if a name
ids matching one of these names are signed. By default, or if a name
is prefixed with a '*', a case insensitive substring match is used.
If a name is prefixed with a '=' a case sensitive exact match is done.
@ -3655,7 +3655,7 @@ files; They all live in the current home directory (@pxref{option
certificates. The file name corresponds to the OpenPGP fingerprint of
the respective key. It is suggested to backup those certificates and
if the primary private key is not stored on the disk to move them to
an external storage device. Anyone who can access theses files is
an external storage device. Anyone who can access these files is
able to revoke the corresponding key. You may want to print them out.
You should backup all files in this directory and take care to keep
this backup closed away.

View File

@ -224,7 +224,7 @@ mainly for debugging.
@item --keydb-clear-some-cert-flags
@opindex keydb-clear-some-cert-flags
This is a debugging aid to reset certain flags in the key database
which are used to cache certain certificate stati. It is especially
which are used to cache certain certificate statuses. It is especially
useful if a bad CRL or a weird running OCSP responder did accidentally
revoke certificate. There is no security issue with this command
because @command{gpgsm} always make sure that the validity of a certificate is

View File

@ -260,7 +260,7 @@ Display a brief help page and exit.
@end ifset
@mansect description
The @command{gpg-wks-server} is a server site implementation of the
The @command{gpg-wks-server} is a server side implementation of the
Web Key Service. It receives requests for publication, sends
confirmation requests, receives confirmations, and published the key.
It also has features to ease the setup and maintenance of a Web Key
@ -268,7 +268,7 @@ Directory.
When used with the command @option{--receive} a single Web Key Service
mail is processed. Commonly this command is used with the option
@option{--send} to directly send the crerated mails back. See below
@option{--send} to directly send the created mails back. See below
for an installation example.
The command @option{--cron} is used for regular cleanup tasks. For
@ -400,7 +400,7 @@ be the same address for all configured domains, for example:
$ echo key-submission@@example.net >submission-address
@end example
The protocol requires that the key to be published is send with an
The protocol requires that the key to be published is sent with an
encrypted mail to the service. Thus you need to create a key for
the submission address: