Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.m@jp.panasonic.com>
Acked-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
In case of the new uImage argument syntax, the address portion of any argument
can be omitted. If <addr3> is omitted, then it is assumed that image at
-<addr2> should be used. Similarly, when <addr2> is omitted, is is assumed that
+<addr2> should be used. Similarly, when <addr2> is omitted, it is assumed that
image at <addr1> should be used. If <addr1> is omitted, it is assumed that the
current image address is to be used. For example, consider the following
commands:
The following picture shows how the new uImage is prepared. Input consists of
image source file (.its) and a set of data files. Image is created with the
help of standard U-boot mkimage tool which in turn uses dtc (device tree
-compiler) to produce image tree blob (.itb). Resulting .itb file is is the
+compiler) to produce image tree blob (.itb). Resulting .itb file is the
actual binary of a new uImage.