docs: fix swapped link syntax
A few links in the docs had the Markdown syntax swapped like: (link title)[link url] Just cleaned up those. Verified via `mkdocs serve` Closes: #297 Approved by: cgwalters
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@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ operate "live" on the currently booted filesystem. The way they could
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work with OSTree is instead to take the list of installed packages in
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the currently booted tree, and compute a new filesystem from that. A
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later chapter describes in more details how this could work:
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[adapting-existing.md](Adapting Existing Systems).
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[Adapting Existing Systems](adapting-existing.md).
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For the purposes of this section, let's assume that we have a
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newly generated filesystem tree stored in the repo (which shares
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@ -56,7 +56,7 @@ checking it back out of the repo into a deployment.
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Given a commit to deploy, OSTree first allocates a directory for
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it. This is of the form `/boot/loader/entries/ostree-$osname-$checksum.$serial.conf`.
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The `$serial` is normally 0, but if a
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The `$serial` is normally `0`, but if a
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given commit is deployed more than once, it will be incremented.
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This is supported because the previous deployment may have
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configuration in `/etc` that we do not want to use or overwrite.
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@ -125,8 +125,7 @@ the client executes.
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This "updates as code" model allows for multiple content generation
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strategies. The design of this was inspired by that of Chromium:
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[http://dev.chromium.org/chromium-os/chromiumos-design-docs/filesystem-autoupdate](ChromiumOS
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autoupdate).
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[ChromiumOS Autoupdate](http://dev.chromium.org/chromium-os/chromiumos-design-docs/filesystem-autoupdate).
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### The delta superblock
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@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ that.
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A later addition to OSTree is the concept of a "summary" file, created
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via the `ostree summary -u` command. This was introduced for a few
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reasons. A primary use case is to be a target a
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(Metalink)[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metalink], which requires a
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[Metalink](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metalink), which requires a
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single file with a known checksum as a target.
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The summary file primarily contains two mappings:
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