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authorPavel Machek <pavel@ucw.cz>2000-05-30 11:27:42 +0000
committerPavel Machek <pavel@ucw.cz>2000-05-30 11:27:42 +0000
commit068b41272e8fbb81882a187dcef6d5f3d4e43ed2 (patch)
tree97ed2c17e1516612d5e668c6c623e52ba946c959
parente9df1bb64786b24a230686310aeb4850b93fa5bb (diff)
Don't say too bad things about our concurence.
-rw-r--r--doc/bird.sgml10
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/doc/bird.sgml b/doc/bird.sgml
index 37c28cb8..fe08b2aa 100644
--- a/doc/bird.sgml
+++ b/doc/bird.sgml
@@ -53,11 +53,9 @@ a statically configured table.
<p>A <em/Routing Daemon/ is in UNIX terminology a non-interactive program running on
background which does the dynamic part of Internet routing, that is it communicates
with the other routers, calculates routing tables and sends them to the OS kernel
-which does the actual packet forwarding.
-
-<p>There already exist some such routing daemons (routed, GateD <HTMLURL URL="http://www.gated.org/">
-and Zebra <HTMLURL URL="http://www.zebra.org">), but their capabilities are very limited and
-they are very hard to configure and maintain.
+which does the actual packet forwarding. There are other such routing daemons: routed (rip only), GateD <HTMLURL URL="http://www.gated.org/">
+ (non free) and Zebra <HTMLURL URL="http://www.zebra.org">, but their capabilities are limited and
+they are relatively hard to configure and maintain.
<p>BIRD is an Internet Routing Daemon designed to avoid all of these shortcomings,
to support all the routing technology used in the today's Internet or planned to be
@@ -87,7 +85,7 @@ Public License.
<p>BIRD has been designed to work on all UNIX-like systems. It has been developed and
tested under Linux 2.0 to 2.3, but porting to other systems (even non-UNIX ones) should
-be relatively easy due to its highly modular architecture).
+be relatively easy due to its highly modular architecture.
<sect1>About this documentation