@@ -150,5 +150,5 @@
/* Internal errors: */
-#define TARGET_EJUSTRETURN 254 /* Just return without modifing regs */
+#define TARGET_EJUSTRETURN 254 /* Just return without modifying regs */
#define TARGET_ERESTART 255 /* Restart syscall */
@@ -73,5 +73,5 @@ typedef struct target_siginfo {
} _mesgp;
- /* SIGPOLL -- Not really genreated in FreeBSD ??? */
+ /* SIGPOLL -- Not really generated in FreeBSD ??? */
struct {
int _band; /* POLL_IN, POLL_OUT, POLL_MSG */
@@ -26,5 +26,5 @@
/*
- * The inital FreeBSD stack is as follows:
+ * The initial FreeBSD stack is as follows:
* (see kern/kern_exec.c exec_copyout_strings() )
*
@@ -60,5 +60,5 @@ static inline int setup_initial_stack(struct bsd_binprm *bprm,
p -= sizeof(struct target_ps_strings);
- /* Add machine depedent sigcode. */
+ /* Add machine dependent sigcode. */
p -= TARGET_SZSIGCODE;
if (setup_sigtramp(p, (unsigned)offsetof(struct target_sigframe, sf_uc),
@@ -27,5 +27,5 @@ struct target_priority {
uint8_t pri_class; /* Scheduling class. */
uint8_t pri_level; /* Normal priority level. */
- uint8_t pri_native; /* Priority before propogation. */
+ uint8_t pri_native; /* Priority before propagation. */
uint8_t pri_user; /* User priority based on p_cpu and p_nice. */
};
@@ -119,5 +119,5 @@ extern const char *qemu_uname_release;
* TARGET_ARG_MAX defines the number of bytes allocated for arguments
* and envelope for the new program. 256k should suffice for a reasonable
- * maxiumum env+arg in 32-bit environments, bump it up to 512k for !ILP32
+ * maximum env+arg in 32-bit environments, bump it up to 512k for !ILP32
* platforms.
*/
@@ -50,9 +50,9 @@ void target_to_host_sigset(sigset_t *d, const target_sigset_t *s);
* host_to_target_siginfo_noswap() and tswap_siginfo(); it does not appear
* either within host siginfo_t or in target_siginfo structures which we get
- * from the guest userspace program. Linux kenrels use this internally, but BSD
+ * from the guest userspace program. Linux kernels use this internally, but BSD
* kernels don't do this, but its a useful abstraction.
*
* The linux-user version of this uses the top 16 bits, but FreeBSD's SI_USER
- * and other signal indepenent SI_ codes have bit 16 set, so we only use the top
+ * and other signal independent SI_ codes have bit 16 set, so we only use the top
* byte instead.
*
@@ -45,5 +45,5 @@ static inline int sas_ss_flags(TaskState *ts, unsigned long sp)
/*
- * The BSD ABIs use the same singal numbers across all the CPU architectures, so
+ * The BSD ABIs use the same signal numbers across all the CPU architectures, so
* (unlike Linux) these functions are just the identity mapping. This might not
* be true for XyzBSD running on AbcBSD, which doesn't currently work.
@@ -242,5 +242,5 @@ static inline void host_to_target_siginfo_noswap(target_siginfo_t *tinfo,
/*
* Unsure that this can actually be generated, and our support for
- * capsicum is somewhere between weak and non-existant, but if we get
+ * capsicum is somewhere between weak and non-existent, but if we get
* one, then we know what to save.
*/
@@ -320,5 +320,5 @@ int block_signals(void)
* It's OK to block everything including SIGSEGV, because we won't run any
* further guest code before unblocking signals in
- * process_pending_signals(). We depend on the FreeBSD behaivor here where
+ * process_pending_signals(). We depend on the FreeBSD behavior here where
* this will only affect this thread's signal mask. We don't use
* pthread_sigmask which might seem more correct because that routine also
Signed-off-by: Michael Tokarev <mjt@tls.msk.ru> --- bsd-user/errno_defs.h | 2 +- bsd-user/freebsd/target_os_siginfo.h | 2 +- bsd-user/freebsd/target_os_stack.h | 4 ++-- bsd-user/freebsd/target_os_user.h | 2 +- bsd-user/qemu.h | 2 +- bsd-user/signal-common.h | 4 ++-- bsd-user/signal.c | 6 +++--- 7 files changed, 11 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-)