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@@ -21,14 +21,14 @@ a good amount of free space on the filesystem that has your backup repository
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(and also on ~/.cache). A few GB should suffice for most hard-drive sized
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repositories. See also :ref:`cache-memory-usage`.
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-Borg doesn't use space reserved for root on repository disks (even when run as root),
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+|project_name| doesn't use space reserved for root on repository disks (even when run as root),
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on file systems which do not support this mechanism (e.g. XFS) we recommend to
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-reserve some space in Borg itself just to be safe by adjusting the
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+reserve some space in |project_name| itself just to be safe by adjusting the
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``additional_free_space`` setting in the ``[repository]`` section of a repositories
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``config`` file. A good starting point is ``2G``.
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If |project_name| runs out of disk space, it tries to free as much space as it
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-can while aborting the current operation safely, which allows to free more space
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+can while aborting the current operation safely, which allows it to free more space
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by deleting/pruning archives. This mechanism is not bullet-proof in some
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circumstances [1]_.
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@@ -153,14 +153,14 @@ backed up and that the ``prune`` command is keeping and deleting the correct bac
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Pitfalls with shell variables and environment variables
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-------------------------------------------------------
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-This applies to all environment variables you want borg to see, not just
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+This applies to all environment variables you want |project_name| to see, not just
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``BORG_PASSPHRASE``. The short explanation is: always ``export`` your variable,
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and use single quotes if you're unsure of the details of your shell's expansion
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behavior. E.g.::
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export BORG_PASSPHRASE='complicated & long'
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-This is because ``export`` exposes variables to subprocesses, which borg may be
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+This is because ``export`` exposes variables to subprocesses, which |project_name| may be
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one of. More on ``export`` can be found in the "ENVIRONMENT" section of the
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bash(1) man page.
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