From: Masanari Iida Date: Mon, 16 Nov 2015 11:07:37 +0000 (+0900) Subject: Doc: ioctl: Fix typos in Documentation/ioctl X-Git-Url: https://git.stricted.de/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=d53a7b8ff60e7e7a68d623072872064465b2cd90;p=GitHub%2Fmoto-9609%2Fandroid_kernel_motorola_exynos9610.git Doc: ioctl: Fix typos in Documentation/ioctl This patch fix some spelling typos in Documentation/ioctl. Signed-off-by: Masanari Iida Acked-by: Randy Dunlap Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet --- diff --git a/Documentation/ioctl/botching-up-ioctls.txt b/Documentation/ioctl/botching-up-ioctls.txt index 45fe78c58019..cc30b14791cb 100644 --- a/Documentation/ioctl/botching-up-ioctls.txt +++ b/Documentation/ioctl/botching-up-ioctls.txt @@ -122,7 +122,7 @@ Time, Waiting and Missing it ---------------------------- GPUs do most everything asynchronously, so we have a need to time operations and -wait for oustanding ones. This is really tricky business; at the moment none of +wait for outstanding ones. This is really tricky business; at the moment none of the ioctls supported by the drm/i915 get this fully right, which means there's still tons more lessons to learn here. @@ -146,7 +146,7 @@ still tons more lessons to learn here. ioctl restartable relative timeouts tend to be too coarse and can indefinitely extend your wait time due to rounding on each restart. Especially if your reference clock is something really slow like the display - frame counter. With a spec laywer hat on this isn't a bug since timeouts can + frame counter. With a spec lawyer hat on this isn't a bug since timeouts can always be extended - but users will surely hate you if their neat animations starts to stutter due to this. @@ -176,7 +176,7 @@ entails its own little set of pitfalls: * Ensure that you have sufficient insulation between different clients. By default pick a private per-fd namespace which forces any sharing to be done - explictly. Only go with a more global per-device namespace if the objects + explicitly. Only go with a more global per-device namespace if the objects are truly device-unique. One counterexample in the drm modeset interfaces is that the per-device modeset objects like connectors share a namespace with framebuffer objects, which mostly are not shared at all. A separate