doc: fix typos in man pages
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@ -191,7 +191,7 @@ This option sets the NTP version number used in packets sent to the server.
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This can be useful when the server runs an old NTP implementation that doesn't
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respond to newer versions. The default version number is 4.
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[[pool]]*pool* _hostname_ [_option_]...::
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[[pool]]*pool* _name_ [_option_]...::
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The syntax of this directive is similar to that for the <<server,*server*>>
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directive, except that it is used to specify a pool of NTP servers rather than
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a single NTP server. The pool name is expected to resolve to multiple addresses
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@ -1465,7 +1465,7 @@ from the example line above):
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. The estimated local clock error (_theta_ in RFC 5905). Positive indicates
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that the local clock is slow of the remote source. [-4.966e-03]
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. The peer delay (_delta_ in RFC 5905). [2.296e-01]
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. The peer dispersion (`epsilon' in RFC 5905). [1.577e-05]
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. The peer dispersion (_epsilon_ in RFC 5905). [1.577e-05]
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. The root delay (_DELTA_ in RFC 5905). [1.615e-01]
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. The root dispersion (_EPSILON_ in RFC 5905). [7.446e-03]
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+
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@ -78,7 +78,7 @@ This option disables resolving of IP addresses to hostnames (e.g. to avoid slow
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DNS lookups).
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*-c*::
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This option enables printing of reports in a column-separated values (CSV)
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This option enables printing of reports in a comma-separated values (CSV)
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format. IP addresses will not be resolved to hostnames, time will be printed as
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number of seconds since the epoch and values in seconds will not be converted
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to other units.
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@ -177,11 +177,11 @@ This is the estimated local offset on the last clock update.
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*RMS offset*:::
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This is a long-term average of the offset value.
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*Frequency*:::
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The '`frequency`' is the rate by which the system's clock would be would be
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wrong if *chronyd* was not correcting it. It is expressed in ppm (parts per
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million). For example, a value of 1 ppm would mean that when the system's
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clock thinks it has advanced 1 second, it has actually advanced by 1.000001
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seconds relative to true time.
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The '`frequency`' is the rate by which the system's clock would be wrong if
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*chronyd* was not correcting it. It is expressed in ppm (parts per million).
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For example, a value of 1 ppm would mean that when the system's clock thinks it
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has advanced 1 second, it has actually advanced by 1.000001 seconds relative to
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true time.
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+
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As you can see in the example, the clock in the computer is not a very
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good one - it would gain about 30 seconds per day if it wasn't corrected!
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