Browse Source

tor-doc*.html is now valid HTML 4.01 Transitional

svn:r4313
Thomas Sjögren 20 years ago
parent
commit
bb64b9534b
3 changed files with 6 additions and 4 deletions
  1. 1 0
      doc/tor-doc-osx.html
  2. 2 0
      doc/tor-doc-win32.html
  3. 3 4
      doc/tor-doc.html

+ 1 - 0
doc/tor-doc-osx.html

@@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
 
 <html>
 <head>

+ 2 - 0
doc/tor-doc-win32.html

@@ -1,3 +1,5 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
+
 <html>
 <head>
 <title>Tor Win32 Install Instructions</title>

+ 3 - 4
doc/tor-doc.html

@@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
 <html>
 <head>
 <title>Tor Documentation</title>
@@ -120,7 +121,7 @@ gives users more robustness against curious telcos and brute force
 attacks.
 </ul>
 
-<p>Other things to note:
+<p>Other things to note:</p>
 <ul>
 <li>Tor has built-in support for rate limiting; see BandwidthRate
 and BandwidthBurst config options. Further, if you have
@@ -147,7 +148,6 @@ Clients choose paths weighted by this capacity, so high-bandwidth
 servers will attract more paths than low-bandwidth ones. That's why
 having even low-bandwidth servers is useful too.</li>
 </ul>
-</p>
 
 <p>You can read more about setting up Tor as a
 server <a href="#server">below</a>.</p>
@@ -311,10 +311,9 @@ of new stable releases. You might also consider subscribing to <a
 href="http://archives.seul.org/or/talk/">or-talk</a> (higher volume),
 where new development releases are announced.</li>
 </ul>
-</p>
 
 <p>Here's where Tor puts its files on many common platforms:</p>
-<table borderwidth="3 px">
+<table>
 <tr><th></th><th>Unix</th><th>Windows</th><th>Mac OS X</th></tr>
 <tr><th>Configuration</th>
     <td><tt>/etc/torrc</tt> <br />or <tt>/usr/local/etc/torrc</tt></td>