A few README typos fixed #2.

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antirez 2015-11-04 12:44:36 +01:00
parent d80d051792
commit 8badf160b6

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@ -216,7 +216,7 @@ Inside the root directory the are the following important directories:
* `src`: contains the Redis implementation, written in C.
* `tests`: contains the unit tests, implemented in Tcl.
* `deps`: contains libraries Redis uses. Everything needed to compile Redis is inside this directory, your system needs to provide just the `libc`, a POSIX compatible interface, and a C compiler. Notably `deps` contains a copy of `jemalloc`, which is the default allocator of Redis under Linux. Note that under `deps` there are also things which started with the Redis project, but for which the main repository is not `anitrez/redis`. an Exception to this rule is `deps/geohash-int` which is the low level geocoding library used by Redis: it originated from a different project, but at this point it diverged so much that it is developed as a separated entity directly inside the Redis repository.
* `deps`: contains libraries Redis uses. Everything needed to compile Redis is inside this directory, your system needs to provide just the `libc`, a POSIX compatible interface, and a C compiler. Notably `deps` contains a copy of `jemalloc`, which is the default allocator of Redis under Linux. Note that under `deps` there are also things which started with the Redis project, but for which the main repository is not `anitrez/redis`. an exception to this rule is `deps/geohash-int` which is the low level geocoding library used by Redis: it originated from a different project, but at this point it diverged so much that it is developed as a separated entity directly inside the Redis repository.
There are a few more directories but they are not very important for our goals
here. We'll focus mostly on `src`, where the Redis implementation is contained,
@ -227,7 +227,7 @@ of complexity incrementally.
Note: lately Redis was refactored quite a bit. Function names and file
names changed, so you may find that this documentation reflects the
`unstable` branch more closely. For instance in Redis 3.0 the `server.c`
and `server.h` where called `redis.c` and `redis.h`. However the overall
and `server.h` files were renamed `redis.c` and `redis.h`. However the overall
structure is the same. Keep in mind that all the new developments and pull
requests should be performed against the `unstable` branch.