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authorChristophe Fergeau <cfergeau@redhat.com>2013-09-24 15:46:52 +0200
committerChristophe Fergeau <cfergeau@redhat.com>2013-09-24 15:46:52 +0200
commitc531a59f115af877e522ada92c30ac4116431896 (patch)
treee0a5de78b7b47938831fa5e07e21505b17faed42
parente6f5b36c4f30d1c3d69f424b08283c5dc6758b0e (diff)
Start updating SpiceUserManual-Basics.xml
For now I just refreshed the introduction, as I'll be doing more heavy changes in the next parts.
-rw-r--r--books/docbook/SpiceUserManual-Basics.xml20
1 files changed, 13 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/books/docbook/SpiceUserManual-Basics.xml b/books/docbook/SpiceUserManual-Basics.xml
index b445ede..270a008 100644
--- a/books/docbook/SpiceUserManual-Basics.xml
+++ b/books/docbook/SpiceUserManual-Basics.xml
@@ -7,20 +7,26 @@
<title>Basic Definitions</title>
<section xml:id="host">
<title>Host</title>
- <para>Host is a machine running instance of qemu-kvm.</para>
+ <para>Host is a machine running an instance of qemu-kvm.</para>
</section>
-
+
<section xml:id="guest">
<title>Guest</title>
- <para>Guest is a virtual machine hosted on <link linkend="host">host</link> which will be accessed by using spice client.</para>
+ <para>
+ Guest is a virtual machine hosted on the <link linkend="host">host</link>
+ which will be accessed with a spice client.
+ </para>
</section>
-
+
<section xml:id="client">
<title>Client</title>
- <para>Client is referring to a system running the spice client (e.g. spicec or spicy).</para>
+ <para>
+ Client is referring to a system running the spice client
+ (the recommended one is virt-viewer).
+ </para>
</section>
</section>
-
+
<section xml:id="qemu_basics">
<title>Launching qemu</title>
<para>I'll use qemu-kvm as a name for the executable. If you're using a manually built qemu or
@@ -29,7 +35,7 @@
section <link xlink:href="definitions">Basic Definitions</link> to be sure that you know
difference between the host, client and guest. You can ignore the difference between guest, client
and host if they are all running on the same machine.</para>
-
+
<para>
<emphasis role="bold">The first important thing to do is to create a guest
image.</emphasis> You can use any raw device such as a clean logical volume, or an iSCSI