From: Zooko O'Whielacronx Date: Wed, 24 Dec 2008 22:16:14 +0000 (-0700) Subject: doc: use the term "filesystem" rather than "virtual drive" in CLI.txt X-Git-Url: https://git.rkrishnan.org/components/com_hotproperty/%22doc.html/%3C?a=commitdiff_plain;h=e00319f0511db5f6dbe0c9f4ab5ef62c164a1c4c;p=tahoe-lafs%2Ftahoe-lafs.git doc: use the term "filesystem" rather than "virtual drive" in CLI.txt --- diff --git a/docs/CLI.txt b/docs/CLI.txt index 9d52373b..3b42f862 100644 --- a/docs/CLI.txt +++ b/docs/CLI.txt @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ = The Tahoe CLI commands = Tahoe provides a single executable named "tahoe", which can be used to create -and manage client/server nodes, manipulate the virtual drive, and perform +and manage client/server nodes, manipulate the filesystem, and perform several debugging/maintenance tasks. This executable lives in the source tree at "bin/tahoe". Once you've done a @@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ PYTHONPATH search paths to find the tahoe code and other libraries. The "tahoe" tool provides access to three categories of commands. * node management: create a client/server node, start/stop/restart it - * vdrive manipulation: list files, upload, download, delete, rename + * filesystem manipulation: list files, upload, download, delete, rename * debugging: unpack cap-strings, examine share files To get a list of all commands, just run "tahoe" with no additional arguments. @@ -75,14 +75,14 @@ start using their changes. == Virtual Drive Manipulation == -These commands let you exmaine a Tahoe virtual drive, providing basic +These commands let you exmaine a Tahoe filesystem, providing basic list/upload/download/delete/rename/mkdir functionality. They can be used as primitives by other scripts. Most of these commands are fairly thin wrappers around webapi calls. -By default, all vdrive-manipulation commands look in ~/.tahoe/ to figure out -which Tahoe node they should use. When the CLI command uses webapi calls, it -will use ~/.tahoe/node.url for this purpose: a running Tahoe node that +By default, all filesystem-manipulation commands look in ~/.tahoe/ to figure +out which Tahoe node they should use. When the CLI command uses webapi calls, +it will use ~/.tahoe/node.url for this purpose: a running Tahoe node that provides a webapi port will write its URL into this file. If you want to use a node on some other host, just create ~/.tahoe/ and copy that node's webapi URL into this file, and the CLI commands will contact that node instead of a