Check-in [f74837eecc]
Overview
Comment:Made wording slightly more clear
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SHA1: f74837eecc5d45ae46e0edc353f66382ee753df7
User & Date: rkeene on 2014-07-23 07:53:03
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Context
2014-08-31
18:07
Updated to use a fallback mime.types file if specified one is unavailable check-in: 862bf6f56b user: rkeene tags: trunk
2014-07-23
07:53
Made wording slightly more clear check-in: f74837eecc user: rkeene tags: trunk
2014-06-20
04:45
Explicitly ignore the return value of read() for random data check-in: 6ab9a334b8 user: rkeene tags: trunk
Changes

Modified README from [15c37ea3f2] to [ec4fc9a30e].

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	desirable to use your own mapping rather than the default one.  This
	can be done by specifying the MIMETYPES macro to "make".  If no
	mapping is desired, "/dev/null" may be specified.

Log Files
---------
Because "filed" relies on chroot(2) and setuid(2), log files cannot reliably
be re-opened.  If you need log rotation a second process, which can close and
re-open log files, must be used.  Any process may be used for writing logs to
but if the process does not support log rotation it will not provide that
benefit.  For example, if you wish to write logs to syslogd(8) you can use
logger(1), such as:
	# ./filed --root /www --user nobody --log '|logger -t filed' --daemon







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	desirable to use your own mapping rather than the default one.  This
	can be done by specifying the MIMETYPES macro to "make".  If no
	mapping is desired, "/dev/null" may be specified.

Log Files
---------
Because "filed" relies on chroot(2) and setuid(2), log files cannot reliably
be re-opened.  If you need log rotation then a second process, which can close
and re-open log files, must be used.  Any process may be used for writing logs
but if the process does not support log rotation then it will not provide that
benefit.  For example, if you wish to write logs to syslogd(8) you can use
logger(1), such as:
	# ./filed --root /www --user nobody --log '|logger -t filed' --daemon