copy the page to transcendent memory and associate it with the type and
offset associated with the page. A "load" will copy the page, if found,
from transcendent memory into kernel memory, but will NOT remove the page
-from from transcendent memory. An "invalidate_page" will remove the page
+from transcendent memory. An "invalidate_page" will remove the page
from transcendent memory and an "invalidate_area" will remove ALL pages
associated with the swap type (e.g., like swapoff) and notify the "device"
to refuse further stores with that swap type.
how much of the RAM is available for each of the clients!
In the virtual case, the whole point of virtualization is to statistically
-multiplex physical resources acrosst the varying demands of multiple
+multiplex physical resources across the varying demands of multiple
virtual machines. This is really hard to do with RAM and efforts to do
it well with no kernel changes have essentially failed (except in some
well-publicized special-case workloads).
* "Store" data from a page to frontswap and associate it with the page's
* swaptype and offset. Page must be locked and in the swap cache.
* If frontswap already contains a page with matching swaptype and
- * offset, the frontswap implmentation may either overwrite the data and
+ * offset, the frontswap implementation may either overwrite the data and
* return success or invalidate the page from frontswap and return failure.
*/
int __frontswap_store(struct page *page)