make the commenting in the torrc.sample consistent, and try to

explain in it what comments are.


svn:r5711
This commit is contained in:
Roger Dingledine 2006-01-03 00:45:12 +00:00
parent 16ee6830b6
commit 4f033b0028

View file

@ -1,18 +1,22 @@
## Configuration file for a typical Tor user
## Last updated 26 October 2005 for Tor 0.1.1.9-alpha.
## Last updated 2 January 2006 for Tor 0.1.1.11-alpha.
## (May or may not work for older or newer versions of Tor.)
#
##
## Lines that begin with "## " try to explain what's going on. Lines
## that begin with just "#" are disabled commands: you can enable them
## by removing the "#" symbol.
##
## See the man page, or http://tor.eff.org/tor-manual.html, for more
## options you can use in this file.
#
# On Unix, Tor will look for this file in someplace like "~/.tor/torrc" or
# "/etc/torrc"
#
# On Windows, Tor will look for the configuration file in someplace like
# "Application Data\tor\torrc" or "Application Data\<username>\tor\torrc"
#
# With the default Mac OS X installer, Tor will look in ~/.tor/torrc or
# /Library/Tor/torrc
##
## On Unix, Tor will look for this file in someplace like "~/.tor/torrc" or
## "/etc/torrc"
##
## On Windows, Tor will look for the configuration file in someplace like
## "Application Data\tor\torrc" or "Application Data\<username>\tor\torrc"
##
## With the default Mac OS X installer, Tor will look in ~/.tor/torrc or
## /Library/Tor/torrc
## Replace this with "SocksPort 0" if you plan to run Tor only as a