From 50be261f393e22042a963de953ac1bd068db1308 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Markus Birth Date: Sun, 29 Mar 2015 22:11:15 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] Fixed more missing backticks. Renamed a few posts. --- .../software/linux/_posts/2008-08-07-partition-numbering.md | 2 +- .../_posts/{2008-08-13-wol.md => 2008-08-13-wake-on-lan.md} | 2 +- .../_posts/{2008-08-21-wins.md => 2008-08-21-netbios-wins.md} | 0 ...{2008-08-23-optimizing.md => 2008-08-23-optimizing-linux.md} | 0 4 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) rename know-how/software/linux/_posts/{2008-08-13-wol.md => 2008-08-13-wake-on-lan.md} (96%) rename know-how/software/linux/_posts/{2008-08-21-wins.md => 2008-08-21-netbios-wins.md} (100%) rename know-how/software/linux/_posts/{2008-08-23-optimizing.md => 2008-08-23-optimizing-linux.md} (100%) diff --git a/know-how/software/linux/_posts/2008-08-07-partition-numbering.md b/know-how/software/linux/_posts/2008-08-07-partition-numbering.md index 9a6edc2..09e2f8f 100644 --- a/know-how/software/linux/_posts/2008-08-07-partition-numbering.md +++ b/know-how/software/linux/_posts/2008-08-07-partition-numbering.md @@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ tags: - partitioning --- After removal of the first primary partition, you might notice, that the names of the remaining partitions didn't -change. `/dev/sda2` stays `/dev/sda2`. To renumber the partition, use ˋfdiskˋ and create a new primary partition no. 1 +change. `/dev/sda2` stays `/dev/sda2`. To renumber the partition, use `fdisk` and create a new primary partition no. 1 which is located behind `sda2`. You might want to delete your swap partition, create a new one in partition slot no. 1. Now enter the expert menu of fdisk and type f to fix the partition table. The partitions will be renumbered diff --git a/know-how/software/linux/_posts/2008-08-13-wol.md b/know-how/software/linux/_posts/2008-08-13-wake-on-lan.md similarity index 96% rename from know-how/software/linux/_posts/2008-08-13-wol.md rename to know-how/software/linux/_posts/2008-08-13-wake-on-lan.md index c63d06a..34de0a7 100644 --- a/know-how/software/linux/_posts/2008-08-13-wol.md +++ b/know-how/software/linux/_posts/2008-08-13-wake-on-lan.md @@ -53,7 +53,7 @@ be back to disabled then. You might want to create a startup script. Waking remote PCs ================= -The simple way is to use ˋwakeonlanˋ which only supports MagicPacket™. +The simple way is to use `wakeonlan` which only supports MagicPacket™. For a PC in a Class C network, use a call like this: diff --git a/know-how/software/linux/_posts/2008-08-21-wins.md b/know-how/software/linux/_posts/2008-08-21-netbios-wins.md similarity index 100% rename from know-how/software/linux/_posts/2008-08-21-wins.md rename to know-how/software/linux/_posts/2008-08-21-netbios-wins.md diff --git a/know-how/software/linux/_posts/2008-08-23-optimizing.md b/know-how/software/linux/_posts/2008-08-23-optimizing-linux.md similarity index 100% rename from know-how/software/linux/_posts/2008-08-23-optimizing.md rename to know-how/software/linux/_posts/2008-08-23-optimizing-linux.md