diff -rN -u old-ticket1398-make_docs_performance_rst_more_precise_and_accurate/docs/configuration.rst new-ticket1398-make_docs_performance_rst_more_precise_and_accurate/docs/configuration.rst
--- old-ticket1398-make_docs_performance_rst_more_precise_and_accurate/docs/configuration.rst	2012-06-17 19:38:52.587628030 -0300
+++ new-ticket1398-make_docs_performance_rst_more_precise_and_accurate/docs/configuration.rst	2012-06-17 19:38:52.990959790 -0300
@@ -365,10 +365,13 @@
     mutable-type parameter in the webapi. If you do not specify a value here,
     Tahoe-LAFS will use SDMF for all newly-created mutable files.
 
-    Note that this parameter only applies to mutable files. Mutable
-    directories, which are stored as mutable files, are not controlled by
-    this parameter and will always use SDMF. We may revisit this decision in
-    future versions of Tahoe-LAFS.
+    Note that this parameter applies only to files, not to
+    directories. Mutable directories, which are stored in mutable files, are
+    not controlled by this parameter and will always use SDMF. We may revisit
+    this decision in future versions of Tahoe-LAFS.
+
+	See `<frontends/specifications/mutable.rst>`_ for details about mutable
+	file formats.
 
 Frontend Configuration
 ======================
diff -rN -u old-ticket1398-make_docs_performance_rst_more_precise_and_accurate/docs/performance.rst new-ticket1398-make_docs_performance_rst_more_precise_and_accurate/docs/performance.rst
--- old-ticket1398-make_docs_performance_rst_more_precise_and_accurate/docs/performance.rst	2012-06-17 19:38:52.624294554 -0300
+++ new-ticket1398-make_docs_performance_rst_more_precise_and_accurate/docs/performance.rst	2012-06-17 19:38:52.990959790 -0300
@@ -10,8 +10,8 @@
 6.  `Inserting/Removing B bytes in an A-byte mutable file`_
 7.  `Adding an entry to an A-entry directory`_
 8.  `Listing an A entry directory`_
-9.  `Performing a file-check on an A-byte file`_
-10. `Performing a file-verify on an A-byte file`_
+9.  `Checking an A-byte file`_
+10. `Verifying an A-byte file (immutable)`_
 11. `Repairing an A-byte file (mutable or immutable)`_
 
 ``K`` indicates the number of shares required to reconstruct the file
@@ -191,8 +191,8 @@
 file. This is relatively inexpensive, compared to the verify and repair
 operations.
 
-Performing a file-verify on an ``A``-byte file
-==============================================
+Verifying an A-byte file (immutable)
+====================================
 
 cpu: ~N/K*A
 
@@ -202,8 +202,24 @@
 
 notes: To verify a file, Tahoe-LAFS downloads all of the ciphertext shares
 that were originally uploaded to the grid and integrity checks them. This is
-(for well-behaved grids) more expensive than downloading an A-byte file,
-since only a fraction of these shares are necessary to recover the file.
+(for grids with good redundancy) more expensive than downloading an A-byte
+file, since only a fraction of these shares would be necessary to recover the
+file.
+
+Verifying an A-byte file (mutable)
+==================================
+
+cpu: ~N/K*A
+
+network: N/K*A
+
+memory footprint: N/K*A
+
+notes: To verify a file, Tahoe-LAFS downloads all of the ciphertext shares
+that were originally uploaded to the grid and integrity checks them. This is
+(for grids with good redundancy) more expensive than downloading an A-byte
+file, since only a fraction of these shares would be necessary to recover the
+file.
 
 Repairing an ``A``-byte file (mutable or immutable)
 ===================================================
diff -rN -u old-ticket1398-make_docs_performance_rst_more_precise_and_accurate/docs/specifications/mutable.rst new-ticket1398-make_docs_performance_rst_more_precise_and_accurate/docs/specifications/mutable.rst
--- old-ticket1398-make_docs_performance_rst_more_precise_and_accurate/docs/specifications/mutable.rst	2012-06-17 19:38:52.657627757 -0300
+++ new-ticket1398-make_docs_performance_rst_more_precise_and_accurate/docs/specifications/mutable.rst	2012-06-17 19:38:52.994293110 -0300
@@ -2,8 +2,6 @@
 Mutable Files
 =============
 
-This describes the "RSA-based mutable files" which were shipped in Tahoe v0.8.0.
-
 1.  `Mutable Formats`_
 2.  `Consistency vs. Availability`_
 3.  `The Prime Coordination Directive: "Don't Do That"`_
@@ -19,33 +17,37 @@
 6.  `Large Distributed Mutable Files`_
 7.  `TODO`_
 
-Mutable File Slots are places with a stable identifier that can hold data
-that changes over time. In contrast to CHK slots, for which the
-URI/identifier is derived from the contents themselves, the Mutable File Slot
-URI remains fixed for the life of the slot, regardless of what data is placed
-inside it.
+Mutable files are places with a stable identifier that can hold data that
+changes over time. In contrast to immutable slots, for which the
+identifier/capability is derived from the contents themselves, the Mutable
+file identifier remains fixed for the life of the slot, regardless of what
+data is placed inside it.
 
-Each mutable slot is referenced by two different URIs. The "read-write" URI
+Each mutable file is referenced by two different caps. The "read-write" cap
 grants read-write access to its holder, allowing them to put whatever
-contents they like into the slot. The "read-only" URI is less powerful, only
+contents they like into the slot. The "read-only" cap is less powerful, only
 granting read access, and not enabling modification of the data. The
-read-write URI can be turned into the read-only URI, but not the other way
+read-write cap can be turned into the read-only cap, but not the other way
 around.
 
-The data in these slots is distributed over a number of servers, using the
-same erasure coding that CHK files use, with 3-of-10 being a typical choice
-of encoding parameters. The data is encrypted and signed in such a way that
-only the holders of the read-write URI will be able to set the contents of
-the slot, and only the holders of the read-only URI will be able to read
-those contents. Holders of either URI will be able to validate the contents
-as being written by someone with the read-write URI. The servers who hold the
-shares cannot read or modify them: the worst they can do is deny service (by
-deleting or corrupting the shares), or attempt a rollback attack (which can
-only succeed with the cooperation of at least k servers).
+The data in these files is distributed over a number of servers, using the
+same erasure coding that immutable files use, with 3-of-10 being a typical
+choice of encoding parameters. The data is encrypted and signed in such a way
+that only the holders of the read-write cap will be able to set the contents
+of the slot, and only the holders of the read-only cap will be able to read
+those contents. Holders of either cap will be able to validate the contents
+as being written by someone with the read-write cap. The servers who hold the
+shares are not automatically given the ability read or modify them: the worst
+they can do is deny service (by deleting or corrupting the shares), or
+attempt a rollback attack (which can only succeed with the cooperation of at
+least k servers).
 
 Mutable Formats
 ===============
 
+History
+-------
+
 When mutable files first shipped in Tahoe-0.8.0 (15-Feb-2008), the only
 version available was "SDMF", described below. This was a
 limited-functionality placeholder, intended to be replaced with
@@ -75,8 +77,11 @@
 handled by the old SDMF code). In the fall of 2011, Kevan's code was finally
 integrated, and first made available in the Tahoe-1.9.0 release.
 
-The main improvement of MDMF is the use of multiple segments: individual
-128KiB sections of the file can be retrieved or modified independently. The
+SDMF vs. MDMF
+-------------
+
+The improvement of MDMF is the use of multiple segments: individual 128 KiB
+sections of the file can be retrieved or modified independently. The
 improvement can be seen when fetching just a portion of the file (using a
 Range: header on the webapi), or when modifying a portion (again with a
 Range: header). It can also be seen indirectly when fetching the whole file:
@@ -84,12 +89,14 @@
 than from an SDMF file, although the overall download will then proceed at
 the same rate.
 
-We've decided to make it opt-in for the first release while we shake out the
-bugs, just in case a problem is found which requires an incompatible format
-change. All new mutable files will be in SDMF format unless the user
-specifically chooses to use MDMF instead. The code can read and modify
-existing files of either format without user intervention. We expect to make
-MDMF the default in a subsequent release, perhaps 2.0.
+We've decided to make it opt-in for now—mutable files default to SDMF format
+unless explicitly configured to use MDMF, either in tahoe.cfg (see
+`<configuration.rst>`_) or in the WUI or CLI command that created a new
+mutable file.
+
+The code can read and modify existing files of either format without user
+intervention. We expect to make MDMF the default in a subsequent release,
+perhaps 2.0.
 
 Which format should you use? SDMF works well for files up to a few MB, and
 can be handled by older versions (Tahoe-1.8.3 and earlier). If you do not
