Fixes a few spelling mistakes in documentation (arch/i386/boot/setup.S,
Documentation/sysrq.txt). Pretty boring. This is against 2.4.19-pre7,
but also applies to 2.5.9.
Thanks.
Rob.
diff -Naur linux-2.4/Documentation/sysrq.txt linux-2.4-work/Documentation/sysrq.txt
--- linux-2.4/Documentation/sysrq.txt Tue Sep 18 01:52:35 2001
+++ linux-2.4-work/Documentation/sysrq.txt Tue Apr 23 10:55:44 2002
@@ -153,7 +153,7 @@
and 4 functions are exported for interface to it: __sysrq_lock_table,
__sysrq_unlock_table, __sysrq_get_key_op, and __sysrq_put_key_op. The
functions __sysrq_swap_key_ops and __sysrq_swap_key_ops_nolock are defined
-in the header itself, and the REGISTER and UNREGISTER macros are built fromi
+in the header itself, and the REGISTER and UNREGISTER macros are built from
these. More complex (and dangerous!) manipulations of the table are possible
using these functions, but you must be careful to always lock the table before
you read or write from it, and to unlock it again when you are done. (And of
diff -Naur linux-2.4/arch/i386/boot/setup.S linux-2.4-work/arch/i386/boot/setup.S
--- linux-2.4/arch/i386/boot/setup.S Mon Feb 25 14:37:52 2002
+++ linux-2.4-work/arch/i386/boot/setup.S Tue Apr 23 10:54:02 2002
@@ -805,7 +805,7 @@
#
# but we yet haven't reloaded the CS register, so the default size
# of the target offset still is 16 bit.
-# However, using an operant prefix (0x66), the CPU will properly
+# However, using an operand prefix (0x66), the CPU will properly
# take our 48 bit far pointer. (INTeL 80386 Programmer's Reference
# Manual, Mixing 16-bit and 32-bit code, page 16-6)
On Tue, 23 Apr 2002 15:50:52 -0400
[email protected] wrote:
> Fixes a few spelling mistakes in documentation (arch/i386/boot/setup.S,
> Documentation/sysrq.txt). Pretty boring. This is against 2.4.19-pre7,
> but also applies to 2.5.9.
>
> Thanks.
> Rob.
You might want to send each of these individually to the Trivial Patch Monkey,
for tracking and retransmission:
trivial at rustcorp.com.au
Thanks,
Rusty.
--
there are those who do and those who hang on and you don't see too
many doers quoting their contemporaries. -- Larry McVoy