commit 226bda9245f984946617bac77006ab35904f8aca
Author: Eric Christensen <eric(a)christensenplace.us>
Date: Fri Sep 9 11:59:54 2011 -0400
Fixed XML errors
en-US/BoxGrinder.xml | 10 +++-------
en-US/Cloudstack.xml | 2 +-
en-US/Openshift.xml | 5 ++---
3 files changed, 6 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-)
---
diff --git a/en-US/BoxGrinder.xml b/en-US/BoxGrinder.xml
index 90dff1b..3bf412a 100644
--- a/en-US/BoxGrinder.xml
+++ b/en-US/BoxGrinder.xml
@@ -7,17 +7,13 @@
<title>BoxGrinder</title>
<para><package>BoxGrinder</package> creates appliances (virtual
machines) from simple plain text appliance definition files for various virtual platforms.
There are effectively three types of transactions that BoxGrinder performs. The first is
to create an operating system image (or in BoxGrinder terminology, build). The second
operation is to convert the image to the target hypervisor. E.g. this takes the raw disk
image and converts it to an EC2 AMI, a XenServer VHD, or qemu QCOW2 file. The final
operation is to push the freshly converted image to the destination hypervisor or cloud
platform.</para>
<section id="sect-cloud-guide-BoxGrinder-install">
+ <title>Installing BoxGrinder</title>
<para>Installation of Boxgrinder is quite easy using yum.</para>
- <para><screen><prompt>#</prompt><command>yum</command>
install rubygem-boxgrinder-build</screen></para>
+ <para><screen><command>yum install
rubygem-boxgrinder-build</command></screen></para>
</section>
<section id="sect-cloud-guide-BoxGrinder-firstimage">
- <section id="sect-cloud-guide-BoxGrinder-firstimage-writingappl">
+ <title>Building your first image</title>
<para>Images built by BoxGrinder are generally done via an appliance definition
file, though BoxGrinder also supports kickstart files. Below is a very simple appliance
file that installs Fe Below is a very simple appliance file that installs Fedora 15.
</para>
- </section>
- <section id="sect-cloud-guide-BoxGrinder-firstimage-build">
<para>Building the image now that you have a definition file is quite
easy.</para>
- </section>
</section>
-
-
</section>
diff --git a/en-US/Cloudstack.xml b/en-US/Cloudstack.xml
index 16182dc..3757128 100644
--- a/en-US/Cloudstack.xml
+++ b/en-US/Cloudstack.xml
@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@
<para><application>CloudStack</application> is an open source cloud
computing platform for creating and maintaining IaaS clouds. Supporting several
hypervisors and network configurations, <application>CloudStack</application>
makes building a IaaS cloud with ease.</para>
<section id="sect-cloud-guide-CloudStack-Installing">
<title>Installing CloudStack</title>
- <para><application>CloudStack</application> is not currently
available in the Fedora or EPEL repositories. Binaries and source can be found at
<
ulink>http://cloudstack.org/download.html</ulink>. Downloading the
appropriate binary and installing it via the GUI or CLI is quite easy.</para>
+ <para><application>CloudStack</application> is not currently
available in the Fedora or EPEL repositories. Binaries and source can be found at
<ulink
url="http://cloudstack.org/download.html"></ulink>.
Downloading the appropriate binary and installing it via the GUI or CLI is quite
easy.</para>
<para>Open a terminal and go to the directory where your binary file is
located...</para>
</section>
</section>
diff --git a/en-US/Openshift.xml b/en-US/Openshift.xml
index e359143..a094878 100644
--- a/en-US/Openshift.xml
+++ b/en-US/Openshift.xml
@@ -4,7 +4,6 @@
%BOOK_ENTITIES;
]>
<section id="sect-cloud-guide-Openshift">
-PaaS
-
-
+ <title>What is OpenShift?</title>
+ <para>OpenShift is a PaaS management solution</para>
</section>