Commit the results of the typo hunt by Darren Pilgrim.

This change affects documentation and comments only,
no real code involved.

PR:		misc/101245
Submitted by:	Darren Pilgrim <darren pilgrim bitfreak org>
Tested by:	md5(1)
MFC after:	1 week
This commit is contained in:
Yaroslav Tykhiy 2006-08-04 07:56:35 +00:00
parent 091eb5a3db
commit 776fc0e90e
Notes: svn2git 2020-12-20 02:59:44 +00:00
svn path=/head/; revision=160964
26 changed files with 28 additions and 28 deletions

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@ -370,7 +370,7 @@ histcmd(int argc, char **argv)
fputs(s, efp);
}
/*
* At end? (if we were to loose last, we'd sure be
* At end? (if we were to lose last, we'd sure be
* messed up).
*/
if (he.num == last)

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@ -5459,7 +5459,7 @@ never when standing.
Most of us just sit back and marvel at such a story; how could that terminal
know whether the poor guy was sitting or standing? Good debuggers, though,
know that there has to be a reason. Electrical theories are the easiest to
hypothesize: was there a loose with under the carpet, or problems with static
hypothesize: was there a loose wire under the carpet, or problems with static
electricity? But electrical problems are rarely consistently reproducible.
An alert IBMer finally noticed that the problem was in the terminal's keyboard:
the tops of two keys were switched. When the programmer was seated he was a

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@ -267,7 +267,7 @@ This system call does not return unless there is an error.
.Pp
As a special case, if the last remaining KSE in the last remaining KSE group
invokes this system call, then the KSE is not destroyed;
instead, the KSE just looses the association with its mailbox and
instead, the KSE just loses the association with its mailbox and
.Fn kse_exit
returns normally.
This returns the process to its original, unthreaded state.

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@ -1212,7 +1212,7 @@ cpu EV4</programlisting>
IDE interface is quite slow, a Promise card gives a 3-4 times
speed improvement.</para>
<para>On PC164 the SRM sometimes seems to loose its variable settings.
<para>On PC164 the SRM sometimes seems to lose its variable settings.
<quote>For PC164, current superstition says that, to avoid losing settings,
you want to first downgrade to SRM 4.x and then upgrade to 5.x.</quote>
One sample error that was observed was:</para>

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@ -72,7 +72,7 @@ Despite the fact that time is the physical quantity (or maybe entity
?) about which we know the least, it is at the same time [sic!] what we
can measure with the highest precision of all physical quantities.
.LP
The current crop of atomic clocks will neither gain nor loose a
The current crop of atomic clocks will neither gain nor lose a
second in the next couple hundred million years, provided we
stick to the preventative maintenance schedules. This is a feat
roughly in line with to knowing the circumference of the Earth

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@ -69,7 +69,7 @@ or
The read channel for this device is used to report changes to
userland in realtime.
We return one record at a time.
If you try to read this device a character at a time, you will loose
If you try to read this device a character at a time, you will lose
the rest of the data.
Listening programs are expected to cope.
.Pp

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@ -226,7 +226,7 @@ extract_currdev(void)
/*
* If we are booted by an old bootstrap, we have to guess at the BIOS
* unit number. We will loose if there is more than one disk type
* unit number. We will lose if there is more than one disk type
* and we are not booting from the lowest-numbered disk type
* (ie. SCSI when IDE also exists).
*/

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@ -218,7 +218,7 @@ extract_currdev(void)
/*
* If we are booted by an old bootstrap, we have to guess at the BIOS
* unit number. We will loose if there is more than one disk type
* unit number. We will lose if there is more than one disk type
* and we are not booting from the lowest-numbered disk type
* (ie. SCSI when IDE also exists).
*/

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@ -182,7 +182,7 @@
video_open() function select PAL rather than NTSC.
This fixed all the hangs on my Dual Crystal card
when using a PAL video signal. As a result, you
can loose the tsleep (of 2 seconds - now 0.25!!)
can lose the tsleep (of 2 seconds - now 0.25!!)
which I previously added. (Unless someone else
wanted the 0.25 second tsleep).

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@ -1811,7 +1811,7 @@ dpttimeout(void *arg)
s = splcam();
/*
* Try to clear any pending jobs. FreeBSD will loose interrupts,
* Try to clear any pending jobs. FreeBSD will lose interrupts,
* leaving the controller suspended, and commands timed-out.
* By calling the interrupt handler, any command thus stuck will be
* completed.

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@ -1055,7 +1055,7 @@ em_init_locked(struct adapter *adapter)
}
em_initialize_receive_unit(adapter);
/* Don't loose promiscuous settings */
/* Don't lose promiscuous settings */
em_set_promisc(adapter);
ifp->if_drv_flags |= IFF_DRV_RUNNING;

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@ -1197,7 +1197,7 @@ fe_start (struct ifnet *ifp)
* If txb_count is incorrect, leaving it as-is will cause
* sending of garbage after next interrupt. We have to
* avoid it. Hence, we reset the txb_count here. If
* txb_free was incorrect, resetting txb_count just loose
* txb_free was incorrect, resetting txb_count just loses
* some packets. We can live with it.
*/
sc->txb_count = 0;

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@ -697,7 +697,7 @@ ixgb_init_locked(struct adapter *adapter)
}
ixgb_initialize_receive_unit(adapter);
/* Don't loose promiscuous settings */
/* Don't lose promiscuous settings */
ixgb_set_promisc(adapter);
ifp = adapter->ifp;

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@ -226,7 +226,7 @@ patm_intr(void *p)
* Feeding buffers is actually not so easy as it seems. We cannot use the
* fraction fields in the status registers, because they round down, i.e.
* if we have 34 buffers in the queue, it will show 1. If we now feed
* 512 - 1 * 32 buffers, we loose two buffers. The only reliable way to know
* 512 - 1 * 32 buffers, we lose two buffers. The only reliable way to know
* how many buffers are in the queue are the FBQP registers.
*/
static u_int

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@ -317,10 +317,10 @@ pci_is_vga_memory_range(u_long start, u_long end)
* power from the system and delivering full functionality to the user.
* D1 Class-specific low-power state in which device context may or may not
* be lost. Buses in D1 cannot do anything to the bus that would force
* devices on that bus to loose context.
* devices on that bus to lose context.
* D2 Class-specific low-power state in which device context may or may
* not be lost. Attains greater power savings than D1. Buses in D2
* can cause devices on that bus to loose some context. Devices in D2
* can cause devices on that bus to lose some context. Devices in D2
* must be prepared for the bus to be in D2 or higher.
* D3 State in which the device is off and not running. Device context is
* lost. Power can be removed from the device.

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@ -317,7 +317,7 @@ static struct SYM_FWA_SCR SYM_FWA_SCR = {
/*
* Now there are 4 possibilities:
*
* (1) The chip looses arbitration.
* (1) The chip loses arbitration.
* This is ok, because it will try again,
* when the bus becomes idle.
* (But beware of the timeout function!)

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@ -290,7 +290,7 @@ static struct SYM_FWA_SCR SYM_FWA_SCR = {
/*
* Now there are 4 possibilities:
*
* (1) The chip looses arbitration.
* (1) The chip loses arbitration.
* This is ok, because it will try again,
* when the bus becomes idle.
* (But beware of the timeout function!)

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@ -311,7 +311,7 @@ struct hpfsmount {
struct sublock hpm_su;
struct spblock hpm_sp;
struct mount * hpm_mp;
struct vnode * hpm_devvp; /* XXX: loose this, it's in hpfsmount */
struct vnode * hpm_devvp; /* XXX: lose this, it's in hpfsmount */
struct g_consumer *hpm_cp;
struct bufobj *hpm_bo;
struct cdev *hpm_dev;

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@ -646,7 +646,7 @@ g_bde_worker(void *arg)
PRIBIO, "-", hz);
if (error == EWOULDBLOCK) {
/*
* Loose our skey cache in an orderly fashion.
* Lose our skey cache in an orderly fashion.
* The exact rate can be tuned to be less
* aggressive if this is desirable. 10% per
* second means that the cache is gone in a

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@ -2079,7 +2079,7 @@ g_mirror_determine_state(struct g_mirror_disk *disk)
* and more fresh disk just arrive.
* If there were writes, mirror is broken, sorry.
* I think the best choice here is don't touch
* this disk and inform the user laudly.
* this disk and inform the user loudly.
*/
G_MIRROR_DEBUG(0, "Device %s was started before the freshest "
"disk (%s) arrives!! It will not be connected to the "

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@ -2353,7 +2353,7 @@ g_raid3_determine_state(struct g_raid3_disk *disk)
* and more fresh disk just arrive.
* If there were writes, device is broken, sorry.
* I think the best choice here is don't touch
* this disk and inform the user laudly.
* this disk and inform the user loudly.
*/
G_RAID3_DEBUG(0, "Device %s was started before the freshest "
"disk (%s) arrives!! It will not be connected to the "

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@ -94,11 +94,11 @@ void
init_TSC_tc(void)
{
/*
* We can not use the TSC if we support APM. Precise timekeeping
* We can not use the TSC if we support APM. Precise timekeeping
* on an APM'ed machine is at best a fools pursuit, since
* any and all of the time spent in various SMM code can't
* be reliably accounted for. Reading the RTC is your only
* source of reliable time info. The i8254 looses too of course
* source of reliable time info. The i8254 loses too, of course,
* but we need to have some kind of time...
* We don't know at this point whether APM is going to be used
* or not, nor when it might be activated. Play it safe.

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@ -1087,7 +1087,7 @@ uihold(uip)
* that we don't need to free, simply unlock and return.
* Suboptimal case:
* If refcount lowering results in need to free, bump the count
* back up, loose the lock and aquire the locks in the proper
* back up, lose the lock and aquire the locks in the proper
* order to try again.
*/
void

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@ -961,7 +961,7 @@ cpu_tickrate(void)
* years) and in 64 bits at 4 GHz (146 years), but if we do a multiply
* before divide conversion (to retain precision) we find that the
* margin shrinks to 1.5 hours (one millionth of 146y).
* With a three prong approach we never loose significant bits, no
* With a three prong approach we never lose significant bits, no
* matter what the cputick rate and length of timeinterval is.
*/

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@ -417,7 +417,7 @@ devclose(struct cdev *dev, int fflag, int devtype, d_thread_t *td)
* userland in realtime. We are required to free the data as well as
* the n1 object because we allocate them separately. Also note that
* we return one record at a time. If you try to read this device a
* character at a time, you will loose the rest of the data. Listening
* character at a time, you will lose the rest of the data. Listening
* programs are expected to cope.
*/
static int

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@ -1532,7 +1532,7 @@ static struct script script0 = {
/*
** Now there are 4 possibilities:
**
** (1) The ncr looses arbitration.
** (1) The ncr loses arbitration.
** This is ok, because it will try again,
** when the bus becomes idle.
** (But beware of the timeout function!)