From 288490094a7fe9167747dc78d416940759a31197 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: FlavioJS Date: Tue, 5 Dec 2006 13:23:07 +0000 Subject: - Massive EOL normalization & 'svn:eol-style native' flag setting for all txt/conf/h/c files. git-svn-id: https://rathena.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/rathena/trunk@9410 54d463be-8e91-2dee-dedb-b68131a5f0ec --- conf-tmpl/readme.txt | 64 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++-------------------------- 1 file changed, 32 insertions(+), 32 deletions(-) (limited to 'conf-tmpl/readme.txt') diff --git a/conf-tmpl/readme.txt b/conf-tmpl/readme.txt index 6b0ddd2ac..db8777680 100644 --- a/conf-tmpl/readme.txt +++ b/conf-tmpl/readme.txt @@ -1,33 +1,33 @@ -What is the import folder for? - -Most people don't know the real use of the import folder. After you do, you will wonder -what you ever did without it. - -The main thing it does, is provide a way for you to change your config settings without -having to update the files every time you update your server. You store your changes, and -the rest are updated with eA (usually though SVN). - -How does this work? - -Well, you place only the settings you have changed in the import files. I'll use -battle_athena.conf and battle_conf.txt for my example. Everytime you update you conf -folder, using the normal method, you have to go and edit the configs again. So, you have to -redo your rates, redo your ip addresses, you have to redo it all. Well, not with the import -system. - -Say you want to change your base experience rate from the default (100)to 7x (700). Well -then you would place this in your import/battle_conf.txt: - -// Rate at which exp. is given. (Note 2) -base_exp_rate: 700 - -You don't need the comment (duh, it's a commnet), but I usually leave them for clarity -sake. - -So, now this new setting take place over the setting in battle_athena.conf. You just keep -this file everytime you update, and your setting will always be there. Neat, isn't it? - -So, yeah, that's what the import folder is for. I hope to see a lot more people use it, to -make my life as a managed server runer better. - +What is the import folder for? + +Most people don't know the real use of the import folder. After you do, you will wonder +what you ever did without it. + +The main thing it does, is provide a way for you to change your config settings without +having to update the files every time you update your server. You store your changes, and +the rest are updated with eA (usually though SVN). + +How does this work? + +Well, you place only the settings you have changed in the import files. I'll use +battle_athena.conf and battle_conf.txt for my example. Everytime you update you conf +folder, using the normal method, you have to go and edit the configs again. So, you have to +redo your rates, redo your ip addresses, you have to redo it all. Well, not with the import +system. + +Say you want to change your base experience rate from the default (100)to 7x (700). Well +then you would place this in your import/battle_conf.txt: + +// Rate at which exp. is given. (Note 2) +base_exp_rate: 700 + +You don't need the comment (duh, it's a commnet), but I usually leave them for clarity +sake. + +So, now this new setting take place over the setting in battle_athena.conf. You just keep +this file everytime you update, and your setting will always be there. Neat, isn't it? + +So, yeah, that's what the import folder is for. I hope to see a lot more people use it, to +make my life as a managed server runer better. + Semi-guide by Ajarn \ No newline at end of file -- cgit v1.2.3-60-g2f50