From d5d9ca6d882f7c8d47ef91a701fc042cbebbc334 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Adam Henley Date: Tue, 26 Sep 2006 10:52:28 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] [PATCH] A few trivial spelling and grammar fixes A few trivial spelling and grammar mistakes picked up in "arch/x86_64/aperture.c", "arch/x86_64/crash.c" and "arch/x86_64/apic.c". I think all are correct fixes but am ever aware of my fallibility :o) This is my first patch submission so all feedback is appreciated, esp. WRT CCing to Linus, Andi and trivial@kernel.org, is this correct? And which is the most appropriate kernel version to diff against? If any. Should apply cleanly to 2.6.18-rc1 Signed-off-by: Adam Henley Signed-off-by: Andi Kleen - adam --- arch/x86_64/kernel/aperture.c | 2 +- arch/x86_64/kernel/apic.c | 4 ++-- arch/x86_64/kernel/crash.c | 2 +- 3 files changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/arch/x86_64/kernel/aperture.c b/arch/x86_64/kernel/aperture.c index 58af8e7..04dbf16 100644 --- a/arch/x86_64/kernel/aperture.c +++ b/arch/x86_64/kernel/aperture.c @@ -48,7 +48,7 @@ static u32 __init allocate_aperture(void) /* * Aperture has to be naturally aligned. This means an 2GB aperture won't - * have much chances to find a place in the lower 4GB of memory. + * have much chance of finding a place in the lower 4GB of memory. * Unfortunately we cannot move it up because that would make the * IOMMU useless. */ diff --git a/arch/x86_64/kernel/apic.c b/arch/x86_64/kernel/apic.c index 692e9b5..63d9b03 100644 --- a/arch/x86_64/kernel/apic.c +++ b/arch/x86_64/kernel/apic.c @@ -400,7 +400,7 @@ void __cpuinit setup_local_APIC (void) value |= APIC_SPIV_APIC_ENABLED; /* - * Some unknown Intel IO/APIC (or APIC) errata is biting us with + * Some unknown Intel IO/APIC (or APIC) errata are biting us with * certain networking cards. If high frequency interrupts are * happening on a particular IOAPIC pin, plus the IOAPIC routing * entry is masked/unmasked at a high rate as well then sooner or @@ -950,7 +950,7 @@ void smp_local_timer_interrupt(struct pt_regs *regs) * We take the 'long' return path, and there every subsystem * grabs the appropriate locks (kernel lock/ irq lock). * - * we might want to decouple profiling from the 'long path', + * We might want to decouple profiling from the 'long path', * and do the profiling totally in assembly. * * Currently this isn't too much of an issue (performance wise), diff --git a/arch/x86_64/kernel/crash.c b/arch/x86_64/kernel/crash.c index fc57a13..7d7a9e7 100644 --- a/arch/x86_64/kernel/crash.c +++ b/arch/x86_64/kernel/crash.c @@ -69,7 +69,7 @@ static void crash_save_this_cpu(struct pt_regs *regs, int cpu) * for the data I pass, and I need tags * on the data to indicate what information I have * squirrelled away. ELF notes happen to provide - * all of that that no need to invent something new. + * all of that, no need to invent something new. */ buf = (u32*)per_cpu_ptr(crash_notes, cpu); -- 2.7.4