website: omit excessive use of the word lastly

Simplify wording by removing various uses of the word lastly.
This commit is contained in:
Emil Hessman 2015-01-09 06:34:16 +01:00
parent 91c2939294
commit 880e21837c
3 changed files with 21 additions and 22 deletions

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@ -151,7 +151,7 @@ session that owns the lock.
The `Key` is simply the full path of the entry. `Flags` are an opaque
unsigned integer that can be attached to each entry. The use of this is
left totally to the user. Lastly, the `Value` is a base64 key value.
left totally to the user. The `Value` is a base64 key value.
It is possible to also only list keys without their values by using the
"?keys" query parameter along with a `GET` request. This will return
@ -211,9 +211,9 @@ then the update has not taken place.
### DELETE method
Lastly, the `DELETE` method can be used to delete a single key or all
keys sharing a prefix. There are a number of query parameters that can
be used with a DELETE request:
The `DELETE` method can be used to delete a single key or all keys sharing
a prefix. There are a number of query parameters that can be used with a
DELETE request:
* ?recurse : This is used to delete all keys which have the specified prefix.
Without this, only a key with an exact match will be deleted.
@ -611,7 +611,7 @@ The `CheckID` can be omitted, and will default to the `Name`. Like before, the
`CheckID` must be node-unique. The `Notes` is an opaque field that is meant to
hold human readable text. If a `ServiceID` is provided that matches the `ID`
of a service on that node, then the check is treated as a service level health
check, instead of a node level health check. Lastly, the status must be one of
check, instead of a node level health check. The `Status` must be one of
"unknown", "passing", "warning", or "critical". The "unknown" status is used
to indicate that the initial check has not been performed yet.
@ -1384,11 +1384,11 @@ may be different depending on their configuration.
This endpoint does allow for filtering on events by name by providing
the `?name=` query parameter.
Lastly, to support [watches](/docs/agent/watches.html), this endpoint
supports blocking queries. However, the semantics of this endpoint
are slightly different. Most blocking queries provide a monotonic index,
and block until a newer index is available. This can be supported as
a consequence of the total ordering of the [consensus protocol](/docs/internals/consensus.html).
To support [watches](/docs/agent/watches.html), this endpoint supports
blocking queries. However, the semantics of this endpoint are slightly
different. Most blocking queries provide a monotonic index, and block
until a newer index is available. This can be supported as a consequence
of the total ordering of the [consensus protocol](/docs/internals/consensus.html).
With gossip, there is no ordering, and instead `X-Consul-Index` maps
to the newest event that matches the query.
@ -1397,10 +1397,10 @@ single agent, and has no meaning globally. Because Consul defines
the index as being opaque, clients should not be expecting a natural
ordering either.
Lastly, agents only buffer the most recent entries. The number
of entries should not be depended upon, but currently defaults to
256. This value could change in the future. The buffer should be large
enough for most clients and watches.
Agents only buffer the most recent entries. The number of entries should
not be depended upon, but currently defaults to 256. This value could
change in the future. The buffer should be large enough for most clients
and watches.
It returns a JSON body like this:

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@ -47,11 +47,11 @@ The `port` can be used as well to make a service oriented architecture
simpler to configure. This way the address and port of a service can
be discovered.
Lastly, a service can have an associated health check. This is a powerful
feature as it allows a web balancer to gracefully remove failing nodes, or
a database to replace a failed slave, etc. The health check is strongly integrated
in the DNS interface as well. If a service is failing its health check or
a node has any failing system-level check, the DNS interface will omit that
A service can have an associated health check. This is a powerful feature as
it allows a web balancer to gracefully remove failing nodes, or a database
to replace a failed slave, etc. The health check is strongly integrated in
the DNS interface as well. If a service is failing its health check or a
node has any failing system-level check, the DNS interface will omit that
node from any service query.
There is more information about [checks here](/docs/agent/checks.html). The

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@ -23,9 +23,8 @@ is modeled around "tokens".
Every token has an ID, name, type and rule set. The ID is a randomly generated
UUID, making it unfeasible to guess. The name is opaque and human readable.
Lastly the type is either "client" meaning it cannot modify ACL rules, and
is restricted by the provided rules, or is "management" and is allowed to
perform all actions.
The type is either "client" meaning it cannot modify ACL rules, and is restricted
by the provided rules, or is "management" and is allowed to perform all actions.
The token ID is passed along with each RPC request to the servers. Agents
[can be configured](/docs/agent/options.html) with `acl_token` to provide a default token,