diff --git a/doc/source/sysadmin.rst b/doc/source/sysadmin.rst index a7ce576809..80f33f9386 100644 --- a/doc/source/sysadmin.rst +++ b/doc/source/sysadmin.rst @@ -48,7 +48,7 @@ easily test an OpenStack project manifest on your own server. Finally, the `manifests/site.pp` file contains the information that is specific to the actual servers that OpenStack runs. These should be very simple node definitions that largely exist simply to provide -private date from hiera to the more robust manifests in the +private data from hiera to the more robust manifests in the `openstack_project` modules. This means that you can run the same configuration on your own server @@ -56,11 +56,11 @@ simply by providing a different manifest file instead of site.pp. .. note:: The example below is for Debian / Ubuntu systems. If you are using a - RedHat based system be sure to setup sudo or simply run the commands as + Red Hat based system be sure to setup sudo or simply run the commands as the root user. As an example, to run the etherpad configuration on your own server, -start by ensuring git is installed and then cloning the system-config +start by ensuring `git` is installed and then cloning the system-config Git repo:: sudo su - @@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ Git repo:: git clone https://git.openstack.org/openstack-infra/system-config cd system-config -Then copy the etherpad node definition from manifests/site.pp to a new +Then copy the etherpad node definition from `manifests/site.pp` to a new file (be sure to specify the FQDN of the host you are working with in the node specifier). It might look something like this:: diff --git a/doc/source/third_party.rst b/doc/source/third_party.rst index 9215668aeb..d650ea11b6 100644 --- a/doc/source/third_party.rst +++ b/doc/source/third_party.rst @@ -6,11 +6,11 @@ Third Party Testing Overview -------- -Gerrit has an event stream which can be subscribed to, using this it -is possible to test commits against testing systems beyond those -supplied by OpenStack's Jenkins setup. It is also possible for these -systems to feed information back into Gerrit and they can also leave -non-gating votes on Gerrit review requests. +Gerrit has an event stream which can be subscribed to. Using this event stream, +it is possible to test commits against testing systems beyond those supplied by +OpenStack's Jenkins setup. It is also possible for these systems to feed +information back into Gerrit and they can also leave non-gating votes on Gerrit +review requests. There are several examples of systems that read the Gerrit event stream and run their own tests on the commits