diff mbox series

Fix misspellings in manual/ -- BZ 25337

Message ID 20230527164318.4117590-1-ppluzhnikov@google.com
State New
Headers show
Series Fix misspellings in manual/ -- BZ 25337 | expand

Commit Message

Paul Pluzhnikov May 27, 2023, 4:43 p.m. UTC
---
 manual/README.pretty-printers | 2 +-
 manual/arith.texi             | 2 +-
 manual/install.texi           | 2 +-
 manual/intro.texi             | 4 ++--
 manual/ipc.texi               | 2 +-
 manual/llio.texi              | 2 +-
 manual/memory.texi            | 2 +-
 manual/pattern.texi           | 2 +-
 manual/process.texi           | 2 +-
 manual/socket.texi            | 2 +-
 manual/threads.texi           | 2 +-
 manual/time.texi              | 2 +-
 manual/tunables.texi          | 4 ++--
 13 files changed, 15 insertions(+), 15 deletions(-)

Comments

Florian Weimer May 27, 2023, 8:34 p.m. UTC | #1
* Paul Pluzhnikov via Libc-alpha:

> ---
>  manual/README.pretty-printers | 2 +-
>  manual/arith.texi             | 2 +-
>  manual/install.texi           | 2 +-
>  manual/intro.texi             | 4 ++--
>  manual/ipc.texi               | 2 +-
>  manual/llio.texi              | 2 +-
>  manual/memory.texi            | 2 +-
>  manual/pattern.texi           | 2 +-
>  manual/process.texi           | 2 +-
>  manual/socket.texi            | 2 +-
>  manual/threads.texi           | 2 +-
>  manual/time.texi              | 2 +-
>  manual/tunables.texi          | 4 ++--
>  13 files changed, 15 insertions(+), 15 deletions(-)

Looks okay, thanks.
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/manual/README.pretty-printers b/manual/README.pretty-printers
index a2ba89843c..a696406ce5 100644
--- a/manual/README.pretty-printers
+++ b/manual/README.pretty-printers
@@ -140,7 +140,7 @@  its name to the 'tests-printers-libs' variable in your submodule's Makefile.
 Known issues
 ------------
 
-* Pretty printers are inherently coupled to the code they're targetting, thus
+* Pretty printers are inherently coupled to the code they're targeting, thus
 any changes to the target code must also update the corresponding printers.
 On the plus side, the printer code itself may serve as a kind of documentation
 for the target code.
diff --git a/manual/arith.texi b/manual/arith.texi
index 002621f11e..fa7110e992 100644
--- a/manual/arith.texi
+++ b/manual/arith.texi
@@ -111,7 +111,7 @@  minimum possible values for each integer data type.  The macro names
 follow these examples: @code{INT32_MAX}, @code{UINT8_MAX},
 @code{INT_FAST32_MIN}, @code{INT_LEAST64_MIN}, @code{UINTMAX_MAX},
 @code{INTMAX_MAX}, @code{INTMAX_MIN}.  Note that there are no macros for
-unsigned integer minima.  These are always zero.  Similiarly, there
+unsigned integer minima.  These are always zero.  Similarly, there
 are macros such as @code{INTMAX_WIDTH} for the width of these types.
 Those macros for integer type widths come from TS 18661-1:2014.
 @cindex maximum possible integer
diff --git a/manual/install.texi b/manual/install.texi
index a1f01a1ec0..a44a552d1f 100644
--- a/manual/install.texi
+++ b/manual/install.texi
@@ -509,7 +509,7 @@  build @theglibc{}:
 @item
 GNU @code{make} 4.0 or newer
 
-As of relase time, GNU @code{make} 4.4 is the newest verified to work
+As of release time, GNU @code{make} 4.4 is the newest verified to work
 to build @theglibc{}.
 
 @item
diff --git a/manual/intro.texi b/manual/intro.texi
index 9bdfd09c83..ff43c5a7fb 100644
--- a/manual/intro.texi
+++ b/manual/intro.texi
@@ -1294,14 +1294,14 @@  this manual.
 @c Pattern Matching (10)
 @c Input/Output Overview (11)
 @c Input/Output on Streams (12)
-@c Low-level Input/Ooutput (13)
+@c Low-level Input/Output (13)
 @c File System Interface (14)
 @c Pipes and FIFOs (15)
 @c Sockets (16)
 @c Low-Level Terminal Interface (17)
 @c Syslog (18)
 @c Mathematics (19)
-@c Aritmetic Functions (20)
+@c Arithmetic Functions (20)
 @c Date and Time (21)
 @c Non-Local Exist (23)
 @c Signal Handling (24)
diff --git a/manual/ipc.texi b/manual/ipc.texi
index be74664af9..6a6e5ad410 100644
--- a/manual/ipc.texi
+++ b/manual/ipc.texi
@@ -62,7 +62,7 @@  by @theglibc{}.
 @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@asuinit{}}@acunsafe{@acuinit{}}}
 @c pthread_once asuinit
 @c
-@c We are AC-Unsafe becuase we use pthread_once to initialize
+@c We are AC-Unsafe because we use pthread_once to initialize
 @c a global variable that holds the location of the mounted
 @c shmfs on Linux.
 @end deftypefun
diff --git a/manual/llio.texi b/manual/llio.texi
index 1b801ee817..0b61d491f5 100644
--- a/manual/llio.texi
+++ b/manual/llio.texi
@@ -320,7 +320,7 @@  is used.
 
 @item ENOMEM
 Either there is not enough memory for the operation, or the process is
-out of address space.  It can only happnes when @code{CLOSE_RANGE_UNSHARED}
+out of address space.  It can only happen when @code{CLOSE_RANGE_UNSHARED}
 flag is used.
 
 @item EMFILE
diff --git a/manual/memory.texi b/manual/memory.texi
index 8952ff2bfa..5781a64f35 100644
--- a/manual/memory.texi
+++ b/manual/memory.texi
@@ -1746,7 +1746,7 @@  are no problems with the code, all allocated memory was freed
 afterwards.
 
 If we call @code{mtrace} on the example trace given above we would get a
-different outout:
+different output:
 
 @example
 drepper$ mtrace errlog
diff --git a/manual/pattern.texi b/manual/pattern.texi
index 4fa4c25525..250fa1e265 100644
--- a/manual/pattern.texi
+++ b/manual/pattern.texi
@@ -258,7 +258,7 @@  containing a given name.
 The @code{glob} function reads the @code{struct dirent} members listed
 above and makes a copy of the file name in the @code{d_name} member
 immediately after the @code{gl_readdir} callback function returns.
-Future invocations of any of the callback functions may dealloacte or
+Future invocations of any of the callback functions may deallocate or
 reuse the buffer.  It is the responsibility of the caller of the
 @code{glob} function to allocate and deallocate the buffer, around the
 call to @code{glob} or using the callback functions.  For example, an
diff --git a/manual/process.texi b/manual/process.texi
index 9307379194..c8413a5a58 100644
--- a/manual/process.texi
+++ b/manual/process.texi
@@ -254,7 +254,7 @@  It is declared in the header file @file{unistd.h}.
 @c handlers, and unlocks the internal lock.  The child bumps the fork
 @c generation, sets the thread-local pid, resets cpu clocks, initializes
 @c the robust mutex list, the stream locks, the IO_list lock, the dynamic
-@c loader lock, runs the child handlers, reseting ref counters to 1, and
+@c loader lock, runs the child handlers, resetting ref counters to 1, and
 @c initializes the fork lock.  These are all safe, unless atfork
 @c handlers themselves are unsafe.
 The @code{fork} function creates a new process.
diff --git a/manual/socket.texi b/manual/socket.texi
index 68c930b552..f0e35d9e13 100644
--- a/manual/socket.texi
+++ b/manual/socket.texi
@@ -821,7 +821,7 @@  here.  The address is stored in network byte order.
 This combines the IPv6 traffic class and flow label values, as found
 in the IPv6 header.  This field is stored in network byte order.  Only
 the 28 lower bits (of the number in network byte order) are used; the
-remainig bits must be zero.  The lower 20 bits are the flow label, and
+remaining bits must be zero.  The lower 20 bits are the flow label, and
 bits 20 to 27 are the the traffic class.  Typically, this field is
 zero.
 
diff --git a/manual/threads.texi b/manual/threads.texi
index a721c7f464..e5544ff3da 100644
--- a/manual/threads.texi
+++ b/manual/threads.texi
@@ -945,7 +945,7 @@  undefined behavior.)  In any case, an application must not write to
 @code{__libc_single_threaded} even if it has joined the last
 application-created thread because future versions of @theglibc{} may
 create background threads after the first thread has been created, and
-the application has no way of knowning that these threads are present.
+the application has no way of knowing that these threads are present.
 
 @node Restartable Sequences
 @subsubsection Restartable Sequences
diff --git a/manual/time.texi b/manual/time.texi
index 0c7a942b4c..3aabdc4953 100644
--- a/manual/time.texi
+++ b/manual/time.texi
@@ -503,7 +503,7 @@  Systems may support more than just these two clocks.
 
 @deftypefun int clock_gettime (clockid_t @var{clock}, struct timespec *@var{ts})
 @standards{POSIX.1, time.h}
-Get the current time accoding to the clock identified by @var{clock},
+Get the current time according to the clock identified by @var{clock},
 storing it as seconds and nanoseconds in @code{*@var{ts}}.
 @xref{Time Types}, for a description of @code{struct timespec}.
 
diff --git a/manual/tunables.texi b/manual/tunables.texi
index 130f94b2bc..4ca0e42a11 100644
--- a/manual/tunables.texi
+++ b/manual/tunables.texi
@@ -446,7 +446,7 @@  stack cache exceeds this size, unused thread stacks are returned to
 the kernel, to bring the cache size below this limit.
 
 The value is measured in bytes.  The default is @samp{41943040}
-(fourty mibibytes).
+(forty mibibytes).
 @end deftp
 
 @deftp Tunable glibc.pthread.rseq
@@ -625,7 +625,7 @@  and the process manage memory.
 @deftp Tunable glibc.mem.tagging
 If the hardware supports memory tagging, this tunable can be used to
 control the way @theglibc{} uses this feature.  At present this is only
-supported on AArch64 systems with the MTE extention; it is ignored for
+supported on AArch64 systems with the MTE extension; it is ignored for
 all other systems.
 
 This tunable takes a value between 0 and 255 and acts as a bitmask