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Merge git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/bunk/trivial

* git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/bunk/trivial:
  Fix typos in drivers/isdn/hisax/isdnl2.c
  Fix typos in doc and comments
  BUG_ON conversion for fs/aio.c
  BUG_ON conversion for drivers/mmc/omap.c
  BUG_ON conversion for drivers/media/video/pwc/pwc-if.c
  Fix misc .c/.h comment typos
  Fix misc Kconfig typos
  Fix typos in /Documentation : Misc
  Fix typos in /Documentation : 'U-Z'
  Fix typos in /Documentation : 'T''
  Fix jiffies.h comment
  tabify MAINTAINERS
  fix spelling error in include/linux/kernel.h
  mqueue.h: don't include linux/types.h
Linus Torvalds il y a 18 ans
Parent
commit
1399ff5474
100 fichiers modifiés avec 266 ajouts et 266 suppressions
  1. 1 1
      Documentation/Changes
  2. 1 1
      Documentation/DMA-API.txt
  3. 1 1
      Documentation/DMA-ISA-LPC.txt
  4. 1 1
      Documentation/MSI-HOWTO.txt
  5. 5 5
      Documentation/accounting/taskstats.txt
  6. 5 5
      Documentation/block/biodoc.txt
  7. 2 2
      Documentation/cpu-freq/cpufreq-nforce2.txt
  8. 2 2
      Documentation/cpu-hotplug.txt
  9. 4 4
      Documentation/devices.txt
  10. 1 1
      Documentation/driver-model/porting.txt
  11. 2 2
      Documentation/dvb/ci.txt
  12. 1 1
      Documentation/eisa.txt
  13. 1 1
      Documentation/filesystems/adfs.txt
  14. 2 2
      Documentation/filesystems/configfs/configfs.txt
  15. 2 2
      Documentation/filesystems/fuse.txt
  16. 1 1
      Documentation/filesystems/hpfs.txt
  17. 2 2
      Documentation/filesystems/ntfs.txt
  18. 1 1
      Documentation/filesystems/ocfs2.txt
  19. 5 5
      Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt
  20. 1 1
      Documentation/filesystems/spufs.txt
  21. 1 1
      Documentation/fujitsu/frv/gdbstub.txt
  22. 1 1
      Documentation/fujitsu/frv/kernel-ABI.txt
  23. 1 1
      Documentation/ide.txt
  24. 2 2
      Documentation/input/amijoy.txt
  25. 6 6
      Documentation/input/atarikbd.txt
  26. 1 1
      Documentation/input/yealink.txt
  27. 1 1
      Documentation/ioctl/cdrom.txt
  28. 5 5
      Documentation/kbuild/makefiles.txt
  29. 1 1
      Documentation/keys.txt
  30. 4 4
      Documentation/laptop-mode.txt
  31. 1 1
      Documentation/memory-barriers.txt
  32. 13 13
      Documentation/networking/NAPI_HOWTO.txt
  33. 3 3
      Documentation/networking/cs89x0.txt
  34. 1 1
      Documentation/networking/iphase.txt
  35. 1 1
      Documentation/networking/packet_mmap.txt
  36. 3 3
      Documentation/networking/pktgen.txt
  37. 1 1
      Documentation/networking/proc_net_tcp.txt
  38. 1 1
      Documentation/networking/sk98lin.txt
  39. 1 1
      Documentation/networking/slicecom.txt
  40. 4 4
      Documentation/networking/wan-router.txt
  41. 1 1
      Documentation/pnp.txt
  42. 2 2
      Documentation/power/pci.txt
  43. 1 1
      Documentation/power/states.txt
  44. 1 1
      Documentation/power/swsusp.txt
  45. 4 4
      Documentation/powerpc/booting-without-of.txt
  46. 1 1
      Documentation/robust-futex-ABI.txt
  47. 1 1
      Documentation/robust-futexes.txt
  48. 2 2
      Documentation/s390/crypto/crypto-API.txt
  49. 2 2
      Documentation/scsi/aic79xx.txt
  50. 2 2
      Documentation/scsi/aic7xxx_old.txt
  51. 7 7
      Documentation/scsi/ibmmca.txt
  52. 1 1
      Documentation/scsi/in2000.txt
  53. 1 1
      Documentation/scsi/libsas.txt
  54. 1 1
      Documentation/scsi/ncr53c8xx.txt
  55. 2 2
      Documentation/scsi/scsi-changer.txt
  56. 1 1
      Documentation/scsi/scsi_eh.txt
  57. 1 1
      Documentation/scsi/st.txt
  58. 1 1
      Documentation/scsi/sym53c8xx_2.txt
  59. 2 2
      Documentation/sharedsubtree.txt
  60. 1 1
      Documentation/sound/alsa/ALSA-Configuration.txt
  61. 1 1
      Documentation/sound/alsa/Audigy-mixer.txt
  62. 1 1
      Documentation/sound/alsa/SB-Live-mixer.txt
  63. 1 1
      Documentation/stable_kernel_rules.txt
  64. 1 1
      Documentation/sysctl/fs.txt
  65. 1 1
      Documentation/sysctl/vm.txt
  66. 1 1
      Documentation/uml/UserModeLinux-HOWTO.txt
  67. 1 1
      Documentation/usb/hiddev.txt
  68. 2 2
      Documentation/usb/rio.txt
  69. 4 4
      Documentation/usb/usb-serial.txt
  70. 1 1
      Documentation/watchdog/watchdog-api.txt
  71. 72 72
      MAINTAINERS
  72. 1 1
      arch/arm/mach-ixp4xx/Kconfig
  73. 1 1
      arch/arm/mach-lh7a40x/Kconfig
  74. 1 1
      arch/arm/mach-s3c2410/Kconfig
  75. 1 1
      arch/arm/mm/Kconfig
  76. 1 1
      arch/cris/arch-v10/Kconfig
  77. 1 1
      arch/cris/arch-v10/drivers/Kconfig
  78. 3 3
      arch/cris/arch-v10/drivers/eeprom.c
  79. 1 1
      arch/cris/arch-v10/drivers/i2c.c
  80. 1 1
      arch/cris/arch-v10/kernel/kgdb.c
  81. 4 4
      arch/cris/arch-v32/drivers/Kconfig
  82. 4 4
      arch/ia64/hp/common/sba_iommu.c
  83. 2 2
      arch/m68knommu/Kconfig
  84. 2 2
      arch/mips/Kconfig
  85. 1 1
      arch/powerpc/Kconfig
  86. 2 2
      arch/powerpc/platforms/83xx/Kconfig
  87. 1 1
      arch/ppc/Kconfig
  88. 1 1
      arch/sh/Kconfig
  89. 1 1
      arch/sh64/lib/dbg.c
  90. 2 2
      arch/sparc/Kconfig
  91. 1 1
      arch/um/drivers/chan_user.c
  92. 1 1
      drivers/atm/iphase.c
  93. 1 1
      drivers/char/Kconfig
  94. 1 1
      drivers/char/rio/riocmd.c
  95. 1 1
      drivers/char/rio/rioinit.c
  96. 3 3
      drivers/char/rio/rioparam.c
  97. 1 1
      drivers/ide/ide-floppy.c
  98. 1 1
      drivers/isdn/hardware/eicon/os_4bri.c
  99. 1 1
      drivers/isdn/hisax/hfc4s8s_l1.h
  100. 10 10
      drivers/isdn/hisax/isdnl2.c

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/Changes

@@ -201,7 +201,7 @@ udev
 ----
 udev is a userspace application for populating /dev dynamically with
 only entries for devices actually present.  udev replaces the basic
-functionality of devfs, while allowing persistant device naming for
+functionality of devfs, while allowing persistent device naming for
 devices.
 
 FUSE

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/DMA-API.txt

@@ -489,7 +489,7 @@ size is the size of the area (must be multiples of PAGE_SIZE).
 flags can be or'd together and are
 
 DMA_MEMORY_MAP - request that the memory returned from
-dma_alloc_coherent() be directly writeable.
+dma_alloc_coherent() be directly writable.
 
 DMA_MEMORY_IO - request that the memory returned from
 dma_alloc_coherent() be addressable using read/write/memcpy_toio etc.

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/DMA-ISA-LPC.txt

@@ -110,7 +110,7 @@ lock.
 
 Once the DMA transfer is finished (or timed out) you should disable
 the channel again. You should also check get_dma_residue() to make
-sure that all data has been transfered.
+sure that all data has been transferred.
 
 Example:
 

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/MSI-HOWTO.txt

@@ -219,7 +219,7 @@ into the field vector of each element contained in a second argument.
 Note that the pre-assigned IOAPIC dev->irq is valid only if the device
 operates in PIN-IRQ assertion mode. In MSI-X mode, any attempt at
 using dev->irq by the device driver to request for interrupt service
-may result unpredictabe behavior.
+may result in unpredictable behavior.
 
 For each MSI-X vector granted, a device driver is responsible for calling
 other functions like request_irq(), enable_irq(), etc. to enable

+ 5 - 5
Documentation/accounting/taskstats.txt

@@ -96,9 +96,9 @@ a) TASKSTATS_TYPE_AGGR_PID/TGID : attribute containing no payload but indicates
 a pid/tgid will be followed by some stats.
 
 b) TASKSTATS_TYPE_PID/TGID: attribute whose payload is the pid/tgid whose stats
-is being returned.
+are being returned.
 
-c) TASKSTATS_TYPE_STATS: attribute with a struct taskstsats as payload. The
+c) TASKSTATS_TYPE_STATS: attribute with a struct taskstats as payload. The
 same structure is used for both per-pid and per-tgid stats.
 
 3. New message sent by kernel whenever a task exits. The payload consists of a
@@ -122,12 +122,12 @@ of atomicity).
 
 However, maintaining per-process, in addition to per-task stats, within the
 kernel has space and time overheads. To address this, the taskstats code
-accumalates each exiting task's statistics into a process-wide data structure.
-When the last task of a process exits, the process level data accumalated also
+accumulates each exiting task's statistics into a process-wide data structure.
+When the last task of a process exits, the process level data accumulated also
 gets sent to userspace (along with the per-task data).
 
 When a user queries to get per-tgid data, the sum of all other live threads in
-the group is added up and added to the accumalated total for previously exited
+the group is added up and added to the accumulated total for previously exited
 threads of the same thread group.
 
 Extending taskstats

+ 5 - 5
Documentation/block/biodoc.txt

@@ -183,7 +183,7 @@ it, the pci dma mapping routines and associated data structures have now been
 modified to accomplish a direct page -> bus translation, without requiring
 a virtual address mapping (unlike the earlier scheme of virtual address
 -> bus translation). So this works uniformly for high-memory pages (which
-do not have a correponding kernel virtual address space mapping) and
+do not have a corresponding kernel virtual address space mapping) and
 low-memory pages.
 
 Note: Please refer to DMA-mapping.txt for a discussion on PCI high mem DMA
@@ -391,7 +391,7 @@ forced such requests to be broken up into small chunks before being passed
 on to the generic block layer, only to be merged by the i/o scheduler
 when the underlying device was capable of handling the i/o in one shot.
 Also, using the buffer head as an i/o structure for i/os that didn't originate
-from the buffer cache unecessarily added to the weight of the descriptors
+from the buffer cache unnecessarily added to the weight of the descriptors
 which were generated for each such chunk.
 
 The following were some of the goals and expectations considered in the
@@ -403,14 +403,14 @@ i.  Should be appropriate as a descriptor for both raw and buffered i/o  -
     for raw i/o.
 ii. Ability to represent high-memory buffers (which do not have a virtual
     address mapping in kernel address space).
-iii.Ability to represent large i/os w/o unecessarily breaking them up (i.e
+iii.Ability to represent large i/os w/o unnecessarily breaking them up (i.e
     greater than PAGE_SIZE chunks in one shot)
 iv. At the same time, ability to retain independent identity of i/os from
     different sources or i/o units requiring individual completion (e.g. for
     latency reasons)
 v.  Ability to represent an i/o involving multiple physical memory segments
     (including non-page aligned page fragments, as specified via readv/writev)
-    without unecessarily breaking it up, if the underlying device is capable of
+    without unnecessarily breaking it up, if the underlying device is capable of
     handling it.
 vi. Preferably should be based on a memory descriptor structure that can be
     passed around different types of subsystems or layers, maybe even
@@ -1013,7 +1013,7 @@ Characteristics:
 i. Binary tree
 AS and deadline i/o schedulers use red black binary trees for disk position
 sorting and searching, and a fifo linked list for time-based searching. This
-gives good scalability and good availablility of information. Requests are
+gives good scalability and good availability of information. Requests are
 almost always dispatched in disk sort order, so a cache is kept of the next
 request in sort order to prevent binary tree lookups.
 

+ 2 - 2
Documentation/cpu-freq/cpufreq-nforce2.txt

@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 
-The cpufreq-nforce2 driver changes the FSB on nVidia nForce2 plattforms.
+The cpufreq-nforce2 driver changes the FSB on nVidia nForce2 platforms.
 
-This works better than on other plattforms, because the FSB of the CPU
+This works better than on other platforms, because the FSB of the CPU
 can be controlled independently from the PCI/AGP clock.
 
 The module has two options:

+ 2 - 2
Documentation/cpu-hotplug.txt

@@ -54,8 +54,8 @@ additional_cpus=n (*)	Use this to limit hotpluggable cpus. This option sets
 
 ia64 and x86_64 use the number of disabled local apics in ACPI tables MADT
 to determine the number of potentially hot-pluggable cpus. The implementation
-should only rely on this to count the #of cpus, but *MUST* not rely on the
-apicid values in those tables for disabled apics. In the event BIOS doesnt
+should only rely on this to count the # of cpus, but *MUST* not rely on the
+apicid values in those tables for disabled apics. In the event BIOS doesn't
 mark such hot-pluggable cpus as disabled entries, one could use this
 parameter "additional_cpus=x" to represent those cpus in the cpu_possible_map.
 

+ 4 - 4
Documentation/devices.txt

@@ -92,7 +92,7 @@ Your cooperation is appreciated.
 		  7 = /dev/full		Returns ENOSPC on write
 		  8 = /dev/random	Nondeterministic random number gen.
 		  9 = /dev/urandom	Faster, less secure random number gen.
-		 10 = /dev/aio		Asyncronous I/O notification interface
+		 10 = /dev/aio		Asynchronous I/O notification interface
 		 11 = /dev/kmsg		Writes to this come out as printk's
   1 block	RAM disk
 		  0 = /dev/ram0		First RAM disk
@@ -1093,7 +1093,7 @@ Your cooperation is appreciated.
 
  55 char	DSP56001 digital signal processor
 		  0 = /dev/dsp56k	First DSP56001
- 55 block	Mylex DAC960 PCI RAID controller; eigth controller
+ 55 block	Mylex DAC960 PCI RAID controller; eighth controller
 		  0 = /dev/rd/c7d0	First disk, whole disk
 		  8 = /dev/rd/c7d1	Second disk, whole disk
 		    ...
@@ -1456,7 +1456,7 @@ Your cooperation is appreciated.
 		  1 = /dev/cum1		Callout device for ttyM1
 		    ...
 
- 79 block	Compaq Intelligent Drive Array, eigth controller
+ 79 block	Compaq Intelligent Drive Array, eighth controller
 		  0 = /dev/ida/c7d0	First logical drive whole disk
 		 16 = /dev/ida/c7d1	Second logical drive whole disk
 		    ...
@@ -1900,7 +1900,7 @@ Your cooperation is appreciated.
 		  1 = /dev/av1		Second A/V card
 		    ...
 
-111 block	Compaq Next Generation Drive Array, eigth controller
+111 block	Compaq Next Generation Drive Array, eighth controller
 		  0 = /dev/cciss/c7d0	First logical drive, whole disk
 		 16 = /dev/cciss/c7d1	Second logical drive, whole disk
 		    ...

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/driver-model/porting.txt

@@ -92,7 +92,7 @@ struct device represents a single device. It mainly contains metadata
 describing the relationship the device has to other entities. 
 
 
-- Embedd a struct device in the bus-specific device type. 
+- Embed a struct device in the bus-specific device type. 
 
 
 struct pci_dev {

+ 2 - 2
Documentation/dvb/ci.txt

@@ -71,7 +71,7 @@ eliminating the need for any additional ioctls.
 The disadvantage is that the driver/hardware has to manage the rest. For
 the application programmer it would be as simple as sending/receiving an
 array to/from the CI ioctls as defined in the Linux DVB API. No changes
-have been made in the API to accomodate this feature.
+have been made in the API to accommodate this feature.
 
 
 * Why the need for another CI interface ?
@@ -102,7 +102,7 @@ This CI interface follows the CI high level interface, which is not
 implemented by most applications. Hence this area is revisited.
 
 This CI interface is quite different in the case that it tries to
-accomodate all other CI based devices, that fall into the other categories
+accommodate all other CI based devices, that fall into the other categories.
 
 This means that this CI interface handles the EN50221 style tags in the
 Application layer only and no session management is taken care of by the

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/eisa.txt

@@ -62,7 +62,7 @@ res           : root device I/O resource
 bus_base_addr : slot 0 address on this bus
 slots	      : max slot number to probe
 force_probe   : Probe even when slot 0 is empty (no EISA mainboard)
-dma_mask      : Default DMA mask. Usualy the bridge device dma_mask.
+dma_mask      : Default DMA mask. Usually the bridge device dma_mask.
 bus_nr	      : unique bus id, set by eisa_root_register
 
 ** Driver :

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/filesystems/adfs.txt

@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ Mount options for ADFS
 
   uid=nnn	All files in the partition will be owned by
 		user id nnn.  Default 0 (root).
-  gid=nnn	All files in the partition willbe in group
+  gid=nnn	All files in the partition will be in group
 		nnn.  Default 0 (root).
   ownmask=nnn	The permission mask for ADFS 'owner' permissions
 		will be nnn.  Default 0700.

+ 2 - 2
Documentation/filesystems/configfs/configfs.txt

@@ -209,7 +209,7 @@ will happen for write(2).
 
 [struct config_group]
 
-A config_item cannot live in a vaccum.  The only way one can be created
+A config_item cannot live in a vacuum.  The only way one can be created
 is via mkdir(2) on a config_group.  This will trigger creation of a
 child item.
 
@@ -275,7 +275,7 @@ directory is not empty.
 
 [struct configfs_subsystem]
 
-A subsystem must register itself, ususally at module_init time.  This
+A subsystem must register itself, usually at module_init time.  This
 tells configfs to make the subsystem appear in the file tree.
 
 	struct configfs_subsystem {

+ 2 - 2
Documentation/filesystems/fuse.txt

@@ -111,7 +111,7 @@ For each connection the following files exist within this directory:
 
  'waiting'
 
-  The number of requests which are waiting to be transfered to
+  The number of requests which are waiting to be transferred to
   userspace or being processed by the filesystem daemon.  If there is
   no filesystem activity and 'waiting' is non-zero, then the
   filesystem is hung or deadlocked.
@@ -136,7 +136,7 @@ following will happen:
 
   2) If the request is not yet sent to userspace AND the signal is not
      fatal, then an 'interrupted' flag is set for the request.  When
-     the request has been successfully transfered to userspace and
+     the request has been successfully transferred to userspace and
      this flag is set, an INTERRUPT request is queued.
 
   3) If the request is already sent to userspace, then an INTERRUPT

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/filesystems/hpfs.txt

@@ -274,7 +274,7 @@ History
      Fixed race-condition in buffer code - it is in all filesystems in Linux;
         when reading device (cat /dev/hda) while creating files on it, files
         could be damaged
-2.02 Woraround for bug in breada in Linux. breada could cause accesses beyond
+2.02 Workaround for bug in breada in Linux. breada could cause accesses beyond
         end of partition
 2.03 Char, block devices and pipes are correctly created
      Fixed non-crashing race in unlink (Alexander Viro)

+ 2 - 2
Documentation/filesystems/ntfs.txt

@@ -337,7 +337,7 @@ Finally, for a mirrored volume, i.e. raid level 1, the table would look like
 this (note all values are in 512-byte sectors):
 
 --- cut here ---
-# Ofs Size   Raid   Log  Number Region Should Number Source  Start Taget  Start
+# Ofs Size   Raid   Log  Number Region Should Number Source  Start Target Start
 # in  of the type   type of log size   sync?  of     Device  in    Device in
 # vol volume		 params		     mirrors	     Device	  Device
 0    2056320 mirror core 2	16     nosync 2	   /dev/hda1 0   /dev/hdb1 0
@@ -599,7 +599,7 @@ Note, a technical ChangeLog aimed at kernel hackers is in fs/ntfs/ChangeLog.
 	- Major bug fixes for reading files and volumes in corner cases which
 	  were being hit by Windows 2k/XP users.
 2.1.2:
-	- Major bug fixes aleviating the hangs in statfs experienced by some
+	- Major bug fixes alleviating the hangs in statfs experienced by some
 	  users.
 2.1.1:
 	- Update handling of compressed files so people no longer get the

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/filesystems/ocfs2.txt

@@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ Caveats
 Features which OCFS2 does not support yet:
 	- sparse files
 	- extended attributes
-	- shared writeable mmap
+	- shared writable mmap
 	- loopback is supported, but data written will not
 	  be cluster coherent.
 	- quotas

+ 5 - 5
Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt

@@ -1220,9 +1220,9 @@ applications are using mlock(), or if you are running with no swap then
 you probably should increase the lower_zone_protection setting.
 
 The units of this tunable are fairly vague.  It is approximately equal
-to "megabytes".  So setting lower_zone_protection=100 will protect around 100
+to "megabytes," so setting lower_zone_protection=100 will protect around 100
 megabytes of the lowmem zone from user allocations.  It will also make
-those 100 megabytes unavaliable for use by applications and by
+those 100 megabytes unavailable for use by applications and by
 pagecache, so there is a cost.
 
 The effects of this tunable may be observed by monitoring
@@ -1538,10 +1538,10 @@ TCP settings
 tcp_ecn
 -------
 
-This file controls the use of the ECN bit in the IPv4 headers, this is a new
+This file controls the use of the ECN bit in the IPv4 headers. This is a new
 feature about Explicit Congestion Notification, but some routers and firewalls
-block trafic that has this bit set, so it could be necessary to echo 0 to
-/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_ecn, if you want to talk to this sites. For more info
+block traffic that has this bit set, so it could be necessary to echo 0 to
+/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_ecn if you want to talk to these sites. For more info
 you could read RFC2481.
 
 tcp_retrans_collapse

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/filesystems/spufs.txt

@@ -210,7 +210,7 @@ FILES
    /signal2
        The two signal notification channels of an SPU.  These  are  read-write
        files  that  operate  on  a 32 bit word.  Writing to one of these files
-       triggers an interrupt on the SPU. The  value  writting  to  the  signal
+       triggers an interrupt on the SPU.  The  value  written  to  the  signal
        files can be read from the SPU through a channel read or from host user
        space through the file.  After the value has been read by the  SPU,  it
        is  reset  to zero.  The possible operations on an open signal1 or sig-

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/fujitsu/frv/gdbstub.txt

@@ -59,7 +59,7 @@ the following things on the "Kernel Hacking" tab:
 Then build as usual, download to the board and execute. Note that if
 "Immediate activation" was selected, then the kernel will wait for GDB to
 attach. If not, then the kernel will boot immediately and GDB will have to
-interupt it or wait for an exception to occur if before doing anything with
+interrupt it or wait for an exception to occur before doing anything with
 the kernel.
 
 

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/fujitsu/frv/kernel-ABI.txt

@@ -156,7 +156,7 @@ with the main kernel in this regard. Hence the debug mode code (gdbstub) is
 almost completely self-contained. The only external code used is the
 sprintf family of functions.
 
-Futhermore, break.S is so complicated because single-step mode does not
+Furthermore, break.S is so complicated because single-step mode does not
 switch off on entry to an exception. That means unless manually disabled,
 single-stepping will blithely go on stepping into things like interrupts.
 See gdbstub.txt for more information.

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/ide.txt

@@ -390,5 +390,5 @@ mlord@pobox.com
 Wed Apr 17 22:52:44 CEST 2002 edited by Marcin Dalecki, the current
 maintainer.
 
-Wed Aug 20 22:31:29 CEST 2003 updated ide boot uptions to current ide.c
+Wed Aug 20 22:31:29 CEST 2003 updated ide boot options to current ide.c
 comments at 2.6.0-test4 time. Maciej Soltysiak <solt@dns.toxicfilms.tv>

+ 2 - 2
Documentation/input/amijoy.txt

@@ -91,8 +91,8 @@ JOY1DAT   Y7  Y6  Y5  Y4  Y3  Y2  Y1  Y0     X7  X6  X5  X4  X3  X2  X1  X0
          |   1    | M0HQ     | JOY0DAT Horizontal Clock (quadrature)   |
          |   2    | M0V      | JOY0DAT Vertical Clock                  |
          |   3    | M0VQ     | JOY0DAT Vertical Clock  (quadrature)    |
-         |   4    | M1V      | JOY1DAT Horizontall Clock               |
-         |   5    | M1VQ     | JOY1DAT Horizontall Clock (quadrature)  |
+         |   4    | M1V      | JOY1DAT Horizontal Clock                |
+         |   5    | M1VQ     | JOY1DAT Horizontal Clock (quadrature)   |
          |   6    | M1V      | JOY1DAT Vertical Clock                  |
          |   7    | M1VQ     | JOY1DAT Vertical Clock (quadrature)     |
          +--------+----------+-----------------------------------------+

+ 6 - 6
Documentation/input/atarikbd.txt

@@ -103,7 +103,7 @@ LEFT=0x74 & RIGHT=0x75).
 
 5.1 Joystick Event Reporting
 
-In this mode, the ikbd generates a record whever the joystick position is
+In this mode, the ikbd generates a record whenever the joystick position is
 changed (i.e. for each opening or closing of a joystick switch or trigger).
 
 The joystick event record is two bytes of the form:
@@ -277,8 +277,8 @@ default to 1 at RESET (or power-up).
 9.7 SET MOUSE SCALE
 
     0x0C
-    X                   ; horizontal mouse ticks per internel X
-    Y                   ; vertical mouse ticks per internel Y
+    X                   ; horizontal mouse ticks per internal X
+    Y                   ; vertical mouse ticks per internal Y
 
 This command sets the scale factor for the ABSOLUTE MOUSE POSITIONING mode.
 In this mode, the specified number of mouse phase changes ('clicks') must
@@ -323,7 +323,7 @@ mouse position.
     0x0F
 
 This command makes the origin of the Y axis to be at the bottom of the
-logical coordinate system internel to the ikbd for all relative or absolute
+logical coordinate system internal to the ikbd for all relative or absolute
 mouse motion. This causes mouse motion toward the user to be negative in sign
 and away from the user to be positive.
 
@@ -597,8 +597,8 @@ mode or FIRE BUTTON MONITORING mode.
 
 10. SCAN CODES
 
-The key scan codes return by the ikbd are chosen to simplify the
-implementaion of GSX.
+The key scan codes returned by the ikbd are chosen to simplify the
+implementation of GSX.
 
 GSX Standard Keyboard Mapping.
 

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/input/yealink.txt

@@ -134,7 +134,7 @@ Reading /sys/../lineX will return the format string with its current value:
   888888888888
   Linux Rocks!
 
-Writing to /sys/../lineX will set the coresponding LCD line.
+Writing to /sys/../lineX will set the corresponding LCD line.
  - Excess characters are ignored.
  - If less characters are written than allowed, the remaining digits are
    unchanged.

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/ioctl/cdrom.txt

@@ -735,7 +735,7 @@ CDROM_DISC_STATUS		Get disc type, etc.
 	    Ok, this is where problems start.  The current interface for
 	    the CDROM_DISC_STATUS ioctl is flawed.  It makes the false
 	    assumption that CDs are all CDS_DATA_1 or all CDS_AUDIO, etc.
-	    Unfortunatly, while this is often the case, it is also
+	    Unfortunately, while this is often the case, it is also
 	    very common for CDs to have some tracks with data, and some
 	    tracks with audio.	Just because I feel like it, I declare
 	    the following to be the best way to cope.  If the CD has

+ 5 - 5
Documentation/kbuild/makefiles.txt

@@ -227,9 +227,9 @@ more details, with real examples.
 	be included in a library, lib.a.
 	All objects listed with lib-y are combined in a single
 	library for that directory.
-	Objects that are listed in obj-y and additionaly listed in
-	lib-y will not be included in the library, since they will anyway
-	be accessible.
+	Objects that are listed in obj-y and additionally listed in
+	lib-y will not be included in the library, since they will
+	be accessible anyway.
 	For consistency, objects listed in lib-m will be included in lib.a.
 
 	Note that the same kbuild makefile may list files to be built-in
@@ -535,7 +535,7 @@ Both possibilities are described in the following.
 	Host programs can be made up based on composite objects.
 	The syntax used to define composite objects for host programs is
 	similar to the syntax used for kernel objects.
-	$(<executeable>-objs) lists all objects used to link the final
+	$(<executable>-objs) lists all objects used to link the final
 	executable.
 
 	Example:
@@ -1022,7 +1022,7 @@ When kbuild executes, the following steps are followed (roughly):
 	In this example, there are two possible targets, requiring different
 	options to the linker. The linker options are specified using the
 	LDFLAGS_$@ syntax - one for each potential target.
-	$(targets) are assinged all potential targets, by which kbuild knows
+	$(targets) are assigned all potential targets, by which kbuild knows
 	the targets and will:
 		1) check for commandline changes
 		2) delete target during make clean

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/keys.txt

@@ -304,7 +304,7 @@ about the status of the key service:
 	R	Revoked
 	D	Dead
 	Q	Contributes to user's quota
-	U	Under contruction by callback to userspace
+	U	Under construction by callback to userspace
 	N	Negative key
 
      This file must be enabled at kernel configuration time as it allows anyone

+ 4 - 4
Documentation/laptop-mode.txt

@@ -121,7 +121,7 @@ contains the following options:
 MAX_AGE:
 
 Maximum time, in seconds, of hard drive spindown time that you are
-confortable with. Worst case, it's possible that you could lose this
+comfortable with. Worst case, it's possible that you could lose this
 amount of work if your battery fails while you're in laptop mode.
 
 MINIMUM_BATTERY_MINUTES:
@@ -235,7 +235,7 @@ It should be installed as /etc/default/laptop-mode on Debian, and as
 
 --------------------CONFIG FILE BEGIN-------------------------------------------
 # Maximum time, in seconds, of hard drive spindown time that you are
-# confortable with. Worst case, it's possible that you could lose this
+# comfortable with. Worst case, it's possible that you could lose this
 # amount of work if your battery fails you while in laptop mode.
 #MAX_AGE=600
 
@@ -350,7 +350,7 @@ fi
 # set defaults instead:
 
 # Maximum time, in seconds, of hard drive spindown time that you are
-# confortable with. Worst case, it's possible that you could lose this
+# comfortable with. Worst case, it's possible that you could lose this
 # amount of work if your battery fails you while in laptop mode.
 MAX_AGE=${MAX_AGE:-'600'}
 
@@ -699,7 +699,7 @@ ACPI integration
 Dax Kelson submitted this so that the ACPI acpid daemon will
 kick off the laptop_mode script and run hdparm. The part that
 automatically disables laptop mode when the battery is low was
-writen by Jan Topinski.
+written by Jan Topinski.
 
 -----------------/etc/acpi/events/ac_adapter BEGIN------------------------------
 event=ac_adapter

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/memory-barriers.txt

@@ -212,7 +212,7 @@ There are some minimal guarantees that may be expected of a CPU:
 
 	STORE *X = c, d = LOAD *X
 
-     (Loads and stores overlap if they are targetted at overlapping pieces of
+     (Loads and stores overlap if they are targeted at overlapping pieces of
      memory).
 
 And there are a number of things that _must_ or _must_not_ be assumed:

+ 13 - 13
Documentation/networking/NAPI_HOWTO.txt

@@ -95,8 +95,8 @@ There are two types of event register ACK mechanisms.
 		Move all to dev->poll()
 
 C) Ability to detect new work correctly.
-NAPI works by shutting down event interrupts when theres work and
-turning them on when theres none. 
+NAPI works by shutting down event interrupts when there's work and
+turning them on when there's none. 
 New packets might show up in the small window while interrupts were being 
 re-enabled (refer to appendix 2).  A packet might sneak in during the period 
 we are enabling interrupts. We only get to know about such a packet when the 
@@ -114,7 +114,7 @@ Locking rules and environmental guarantees
 only one CPU can pick the initial interrupt and hence the initial
 netif_rx_schedule(dev);
 - The core layer invokes devices to send packets in a round robin format.
-This implies receive is totaly lockless because of the guarantee only that 
+This implies receive is totally lockless because of the guarantee that only 
 one CPU is executing it.
 -  contention can only be the result of some other CPU accessing the rx
 ring. This happens only in close() and suspend() (when these methods
@@ -510,7 +510,7 @@ static int my_poll (struct net_device *dev, int *budget)
 			an interrupt will be generated */
                         goto done;
 	}
-	/* done! at least thats what it looks like ;->
+	/* done! at least that's what it looks like ;->
 	if new packets came in after our last check on status bits
 	they'll be caught by the while check and we go back and clear them 
 	since we havent exceeded our quota */
@@ -535,11 +535,11 @@ done:
         * 1. it can race with disabling irqs in irq handler (which are done to 
 	* schedule polls)
         * 2. it can race with dis/enabling irqs in other poll threads
-        * 3. if an irq raised after the begining of the outer  beginning 
-        * loop(marked in the code above), it will be immediately
+        * 3. if an irq raised after the beginning of the outer beginning 
+        * loop (marked in the code above), it will be immediately
         * triggered here.
         *
-        * Summarizing: the logic may results in some redundant irqs both
+        * Summarizing: the logic may result in some redundant irqs both
         * due to races in masking and due to too late acking of already
         * processed irqs. The good news: no events are ever lost.
         */
@@ -601,7 +601,7 @@ a)
 	
 5) dev->close() and dev->suspend() issues
 ==========================================
-The driver writter neednt worry about this. The top net layer takes
+The driver writer needn't worry about this; the top net layer takes
 care of it.
 
 6) Adding new Stats to /proc 
@@ -622,9 +622,9 @@ FC should be programmed to apply in the case when the system cant pull out
 packets fast enough i.e send a pause only when you run out of rx buffers.
 Note FC in itself is a good solution but we have found it to not be
 much of a commodity feature (both in NICs and switches) and hence falls
-under the same category as using NIC based mitigation. Also experiments
-indicate that its much harder to resolve the resource allocation
-issue (aka lazy receiving that NAPI offers) and hence quantify its usefullness
+under the same category as using NIC based mitigation. Also, experiments
+indicate that it's much harder to resolve the resource allocation
+issue (aka lazy receiving that NAPI offers) and hence quantify its usefulness
 proved harder. In any case, FC works even better with NAPI but is not
 necessary.
 
@@ -678,10 +678,10 @@ routine:
 CSR5 bit of interest is only the rx status. 
 If you look at the last if statement: 
 you just finished grabbing all the packets from the rx ring .. you check if
-status bit says theres more packets just in ... it says none; you then
+status bit says there are more packets just in ... it says none; you then
 enable rx interrupts again; if a new packet just came in during this check,
 we are counting that CSR5 will be set in that small window of opportunity
-and that by re-enabling interrupts, we would actually triger an interrupt
+and that by re-enabling interrupts, we would actually trigger an interrupt
 to register the new packet for processing.
 
 [The above description nay be very verbose, if you have better wording 

+ 3 - 3
Documentation/networking/cs89x0.txt

@@ -248,7 +248,7 @@ c) The driver's hardware probe routine is designed to avoid
    with device probing.  To avoid this behaviour, add one
    to the `io=' module parameter.  This doesn't actually change
    the I/O address, but it is a flag to tell the driver
-   topartially initialise the hardware before trying to
+   to partially initialise the hardware before trying to
    identify the card.  This could be dangerous if you are
    not sure that there is a cs89x0 card at the provided address.
 
@@ -620,8 +620,8 @@ I/O Address    	Device                        IRQ      Device
                                                 12       Mouse (PS/2)                              
 Memory Address  Device                          13       Math Coprocessor
 --------------  ---------------------           14       Hard Disk controller
-A000-BFFF	EGA Graphics Adpater
-A000-C7FF	VGA Graphics Adpater
+A000-BFFF	EGA Graphics Adapter
+A000-C7FF	VGA Graphics Adapter
 B000-BFFF	Mono Graphics Adapter
 B800-BFFF	Color Graphics Adapter
 E000-FFFF	AT BIOS

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/networking/iphase.txt

@@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ Installation
     1M. The RAM size decides the number of buffers and buffer size. The default 
     size and number of buffers are set as following: 
 
-          Totol    Rx RAM   Tx RAM   Rx Buf   Tx Buf   Rx buf   Tx buf
+          Total    Rx RAM   Tx RAM   Rx Buf   Tx Buf   Rx buf   Tx buf
          RAM size   size     size     size     size      cnt      cnt
          --------  ------   ------   ------   ------   ------   ------
            128K      64K      64K      10K      10K       6        6

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/networking/packet_mmap.txt

@@ -284,7 +284,7 @@ the necessary memory, so normally limits can be reached.
 -------------------
 
 If you check the source code you will see that what I draw here as a frame
-is not only the link level frame. At the begining of each frame there is a 
+is not only the link level frame. At the beginning of each frame there is a 
 header called struct tpacket_hdr used in PACKET_MMAP to hold link level's frame
 meta information like timestamp. So what we draw here a frame it's really 
 the following (from include/linux/if_packet.h):

+ 3 - 3
Documentation/networking/pktgen.txt

@@ -63,8 +63,8 @@ Current:
 Result: OK: 13101142(c12220741+d880401) usec, 10000000 (60byte,0frags)
   763292pps 390Mb/sec (390805504bps) errors: 39664
 
-Confguring threads and devices
-==============================
+Configuring threads and devices
+================================
 This is done via the /proc interface easiest done via pgset in the scripts
 
 Examples:
@@ -116,7 +116,7 @@ Examples:
 					 there must be no spaces between the
 					 arguments. Leading zeros are required.
 					 Do not set the bottom of stack bit,
-					 thats done automatically. If you do
+					 that's done automatically. If you do
 					 set the bottom of stack bit, that
 					 indicates that you want to randomly
 					 generate that address and the flag

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/networking/proc_net_tcp.txt

@@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ up into 3 parts because of the length of the line):
 
    1000        0 54165785 4 cd1e6040 25 4 27 3 -1
     |          |    |     |    |     |  | |  | |--> slow start size threshold, 
-    |          |    |     |    |     |  | |  |      or -1 if the treshold
+    |          |    |     |    |     |  | |  |      or -1 if the threshold
     |          |    |     |    |     |  | |  |      is >= 0xFFFF
     |          |    |     |    |     |  | |  |----> sending congestion window
     |          |    |     |    |     |  | |-------> (ack.quick<<1)|ack.pingpong

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/networking/sk98lin.txt

@@ -346,7 +346,7 @@ Possible modes:
       depending on the load of the system. If the driver detects that the
       system load is too high, the driver tries to shield the system against 
       too much network load by enabling interrupt moderation. If - at a later
-      time - the CPU utilizaton decreases again (or if the network load is 
+      time - the CPU utilization decreases again (or if the network load is 
       negligible) the interrupt moderation will automatically be disabled.
 
 Interrupt moderation should be used when the driver has to handle one or more

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/networking/slicecom.txt

@@ -126,7 +126,7 @@ comx0/boardnum	- board number of the SliceCom in the PC (using the 'natural'
 
 Though the options below are to be set on a single interface, they apply to the
 whole board. The restriction, to use them on 'UP' interfaces, is because the 
-command sequence below could lead to unpredicable results.
+command sequence below could lead to unpredictable results.
 
 	# echo 0        >boardnum
 	# echo internal >clock_source

+ 4 - 4
Documentation/networking/wan-router.txt

@@ -412,7 +412,7 @@ beta-2.1.4 Jul 2000		o Dynamic interface configuration:
 
 beta3-2.1.4 Jul 2000		o X25 M_BIT Problem fix.
 				o Added the Multi-Port PPP
-				  Updated utilites for the Multi-Port PPP.
+				  Updated utilities for the Multi-Port PPP.
 
 2.1.4	Aut 2000
 				o In X25API:
@@ -444,13 +444,13 @@ beta1-2.1.5 	Nov 15 2000
 					
 				o Cpipemon
 					- Added set FT1 commands to the cpipemon. Thus CSU/DSU
-					  configuraiton can be performed using cpipemon.
+					  configuration can be performed using cpipemon.
 					  All systems that cannot run cfgft1 GUI utility should
 					  use cpipemon to configure the on board CSU/DSU.
 
 
 				o Keyboard Led Monitor/Debugger
-					- A new utilty /usr/sbin/wpkbdmon uses keyboard leds
+					- A new utility /usr/sbin/wpkbdmon uses keyboard leds
 					  to convey operational statistic information of the 
 					  Sangoma WANPIPE cards.
 					NUM_LOCK    = Line State  (On=connected,    Off=disconnected)
@@ -464,7 +464,7 @@ beta1-2.1.5 	Nov 15 2000
 					- Appropriate number of devices are dynamically loaded 
 					  based on the number of Sangoma cards found.
 
-					  Note: The kernel configuraiton option 
+					  Note: The kernel configuration option 
 						CONFIG_WANPIPE_CARDS has been taken out.
 					
 				o Fixed the Frame Relay and Chdlc network interfaces so they are

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/pnp.txt

@@ -184,7 +184,7 @@ static const struct pnp_id pnp_dev_table[] = {
 Please note that the character 'X' can be used as a wild card in the function
 portion (last four characters).
 ex:
-	/* Unkown PnP modems */
+	/* Unknown PnP modems */
 	{	"PNPCXXX",		UNKNOWN_DEV	},
 
 Supported PnP card IDs can optionally be defined.

+ 2 - 2
Documentation/power/pci.txt

@@ -153,7 +153,7 @@ Description:
 	events, which is implicit if it doesn't even support it in the first
 	place).
 
-	Note that the PMC Register in the device's PM Capabilties has a bitmask
+	Note that the PMC Register in the device's PM Capabilities has a bitmask
 	of the states it supports generating PME# from. D3hot is bit 3 and
 	D3cold is bit 4. So, while a value of 4 as the state may not seem
 	semantically correct, it is. 
@@ -268,7 +268,7 @@ to wake the system up. (However, it is possible that a device may support
 some non-standard way of generating a wake event on sleep.)
 
 Bits 15:11 of the PMC (Power Mgmt Capabilities) Register in a device's
-PM Capabilties describe what power states the device supports generating a 
+PM Capabilities describe what power states the device supports generating a 
 wake event from:
 
 +------------------+

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/power/states.txt

@@ -62,7 +62,7 @@ setup via another operating system for it to use. Despite the
 inconvenience, this method requires minimal work by the kernel, since
 the firmware will also handle restoring memory contents on resume. 
 
-If the kernel is responsible for persistantly saving state, a mechanism 
+If the kernel is responsible for persistently saving state, a mechanism
 called 'swsusp' (Swap Suspend) is used to write memory contents to
 free swap space. swsusp has some restrictive requirements, but should
 work in most cases. Some, albeit outdated, documentation can be found

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/power/swsusp.txt

@@ -153,7 +153,7 @@ add:
 
 If the thread is needed for writing the image to storage, you should
 instead set the PF_NOFREEZE process flag when creating the thread (and
-be very carefull).
+be very careful).
 
 
 Q: What is the difference between "platform", "shutdown" and

+ 4 - 4
Documentation/powerpc/booting-without-of.txt

@@ -33,13 +33,13 @@
                          - Change version 16 format to always align
                            property data to 4 bytes. Since tokens are
                            already aligned, that means no specific
-                           required alignement between property size
+                           required alignment between property size
                            and property data. The old style variable
                            alignment would make it impossible to do
                            "simple" insertion of properties using
                            memove (thanks Milton for
                            noticing). Updated kernel patch as well
-			 - Correct a few more alignement constraints
+			 - Correct a few more alignment constraints
 			 - Add a chapter about the device-tree
                            compiler and the textural representation of
                            the tree that can be "compiled" by dtc.
@@ -854,7 +854,7 @@ address which can extend beyond that limit.
       console device if any. Typically, if you have serial devices on
       your board, you may want to put the full path to the one set as
       the default console in the firmware here, for the kernel to pick
-      it up as it's own default console. If you look at the funciton
+      it up as its own default console. If you look at the function
       set_preferred_console() in arch/ppc64/kernel/setup.c, you'll see
       that the kernel tries to find out the default console and has
       knowledge of various types like 8250 serial ports. You may want
@@ -1124,7 +1124,7 @@ should have the following properties:
 	- interrupt-parent : contains the phandle of the interrupt
           controller which handles interrupts for this device
 	- interrupts : a list of tuples representing the interrupt
-          number and the interrupt sense and level for each interupt
+          number and the interrupt sense and level for each interrupt
           for this device.
 
 This information is used by the kernel to build the interrupt table

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/robust-futex-ABI.txt

@@ -170,7 +170,7 @@ any point:
  1) the 'head' pointer or an subsequent linked list pointer
     is not a valid address of a user space word
  2) the calculated location of the 'lock word' (address plus
-    'offset') is not the valud address of a 32 bit user space
+    'offset') is not the valid address of a 32 bit user space
     word
  3) if the list contains more than 1 million (subject to
     future kernel configuration changes) elements.

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/robust-futexes.txt

@@ -181,7 +181,7 @@ for new threads, without the need of another syscall.]
 So there is virtually zero overhead for tasks not using robust futexes,
 and even for robust futex users, there is only one extra syscall per
 thread lifetime, and the cleanup operation, if it happens, is fast and
-straightforward. The kernel doesnt have any internal distinction between
+straightforward. The kernel doesn't have any internal distinction between
 robust and normal futexes.
 
 If a futex is found to be held at exit time, the kernel sets the

+ 2 - 2
Documentation/s390/crypto/crypto-API.txt

@@ -75,8 +75,8 @@ name of the respective module is given in square brackets.
 
 - SHA1 Digest Algorithm [sha1 -> sha1_z990]
 - DES Encrypt/Decrypt Algorithm (64bit key) [des -> des_z990]
-- Tripple DES Encrypt/Decrypt Algorithm (128bit key) [des3_ede128 -> des_z990]
-- Tripple DES Encrypt/Decrypt Algorithm (192bit key) [des3_ede -> des_z990]
+- Triple DES Encrypt/Decrypt Algorithm (128bit key) [des3_ede128 -> des_z990]
+- Triple DES Encrypt/Decrypt Algorithm (192bit key) [des3_ede -> des_z990]
 
 In order to load, for example, the sha1_z990 module when the sha1 algorithm is
 requested (see 3.2.) add 'alias sha1 sha1_z990' to /etc/modprobe.conf.

+ 2 - 2
Documentation/scsi/aic79xx.txt

@@ -127,7 +127,7 @@ The following information is available in this file:
         - Correct a reference to free'ed memory during controller
           shutdown.
         - Reset the bus on an SE->LVD change.  This is required
-          to reset our transcievers.
+          to reset our transceivers.
 
    1.3.5 (March 24th, 2003)
         - Fix a few register window mode bugs.
@@ -169,7 +169,7 @@ The following information is available in this file:
    1.3.0 (January 21st, 2003)
         - Full regression testing for all U320 products completed.
         - Added abort and target/lun reset error recovery handler and
-          interrupt coalessing.
+          interrupt coalescing.
 
    1.2.0 (November 14th, 2002)
         - Added support for Domain Validation

+ 2 - 2
Documentation/scsi/aic7xxx_old.txt

@@ -256,7 +256,7 @@ linux-1.1.x and fairly stable since linux-1.2.x, and are also in FreeBSD
 	      En/Disable High Byte LVD Termination
 
 	The upper 2 bits that deal with LVD termination only apply to Ultra2
-	controllers.  Futhermore, due to the current Ultra2 controller
+	controllers.  Furthermore, due to the current Ultra2 controller
 	designs, these bits are tied together such that setting either bit
 	enables both low and high byte LVD termination.  It is not possible
 	to only set high or low byte LVD termination in this manner.  This is
@@ -436,7 +436,7 @@ linux-1.1.x and fairly stable since linux-1.2.x, and are also in FreeBSD
     the commas to periods, insmod won't interpret this as more than one
     string and write junk into our binary image.  I consider it a bug in
     the insmod program that even if you wrap your string in quotes (quotes
-    that pass the shell mind you and that insmod sees) it still treates
+    that pass the shell mind you and that insmod sees) it still treats
     a comma inside of those quotes as starting a new variable, resulting
     in memory scribbles if you don't switch the commas to periods.
 

+ 7 - 7
Documentation/scsi/ibmmca.txt

@@ -461,7 +461,7 @@
       This needs the RD-Bit to be disabled on IM_OTHER_SCSI_CMD_CMD which 
       allows data to be written from the system to the device. It is a
       necessary step to be allowed to set blocksize of SCSI-tape-drives and 
-      the tape-speed, whithout confusing the SCSI-Subsystem.
+      the tape-speed, without confusing the SCSI-Subsystem.
    2) The recognition of a tape is included in the check_devices routine.
       This is done by checking for TYPE_TAPE, that is already defined in
       the kernel-scsi-environment. The markup of a tape is done in the 
@@ -710,8 +710,8 @@
       of troubles with some controllers and after I wanted to apply some
       extensions, it jumped out in the same situation, on my w/cache, as like 
       on D. Weinehalls' Model 56, having integrated SCSI. This gave me the 
-      descissive hint to move the code-part out and declare it global. Now,
-      it seems to work by far much better an more stable. Let us see, what
+      decisive hint to move the code-part out and declare it global. Now
+      it seems to work far better and more stable. Let us see what
       the world thinks of it...
    3) By the way, only Sony DAT-drives seem to show density code 0x13. A
       test with a HP drive gave right results, so the problem is vendor-
@@ -822,10 +822,10 @@
    A long period of collecting bugreports from all corners of the world
    now lead to the following corrections to the code:
    1) SCSI-2 F/W support crashed with a COMMAND ERROR. The reason for this 
-      was, that it is possible to disbale Fast-SCSI for the external bus.
-      The feature-control command, where this crash appeared regularly tried
+      was that it is possible to disable Fast-SCSI for the external bus.
+      The feature-control command, where this crash appeared regularly, tried
       to set the maximum speed of 10MHz synchronous transfer speed and that
-      reports a COMMAND ERROR, if external bus Fast-SCSI is disabled. Now,
+      reports a COMMAND ERROR if external bus Fast-SCSI is disabled. Now,
       the feature-command probes down from maximum speed until the adapter 
       stops to complain, which is at the same time the maximum possible
       speed selected in the reference program. So, F/W external can run at
@@ -920,7 +920,7 @@
       completed in such a way, that they are now completely conform to the
       demands in the technical description of IBM. Main candidates were the
       DEVICE_INQUIRY, REQUEST_SENSE and DEVICE_CAPACITY commands. They must
-      be tranferred by bypassing the internal command buffer of the adapter
+      be transferred by bypassing the internal command buffer of the adapter
       or else the response can be a random result. GET_POS_INFO would be more
       safe in usage, if one could use the SUPRESS_EXCEPTION_SHORT, but this
       is not allowed by the technical references of IBM. (Sorry, folks, the

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/scsi/in2000.txt

@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ UPDATE NEWS: version 1.32 - 28 Mar 98
 UPDATE NEWS: version 1.31 - 6 Jul 97
 
    Fixed a bug that caused incorrect SCSI status bytes to be
-   returned from commands sent to LUN's greater than 0. This
+   returned from commands sent to LUNs greater than 0. This
    means that CDROM changers work now! Fixed a bug in the
    handling of command-line arguments when loaded as a module.
    Also put all the header data in in2000.h where it belongs.

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/scsi/libsas.txt

@@ -393,7 +393,7 @@ struct sas_task {
 	task_proto -- _one_ of enum sas_proto
 	scatter -- pointer to scatter gather list array
 	num_scatter -- number of elements in scatter
-	total_xfer_len -- total number of bytes expected to be transfered
+	total_xfer_len -- total number of bytes expected to be transferred
 	data_dir -- PCI_DMA_...
 	task_done -- callback when the task has finished execution
 };

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/scsi/ncr53c8xx.txt

@@ -115,7 +115,7 @@ SCSI standard documentations are available at SYMBIOS ftp server:
 
           ftp://ftp.symbios.com/
 
-Usefull SCSI tools written by Eric Youngdale are available at tsx-11:
+Useful SCSI tools written by Eric Youngdale are available at tsx-11:
 
           ftp://tsx-11.mit.edu/pub/linux/ALPHA/scsi/scsiinfo-X.Y.tar.gz
           ftp://tsx-11.mit.edu/pub/linux/ALPHA/scsi/scsidev-X.Y.tar.gz

+ 2 - 2
Documentation/scsi/scsi-changer.txt

@@ -88,7 +88,7 @@ If the module finds the changer, it prints some messages about the
 device [ try "dmesg" if you don't see anything ] and should show up in
 /proc/devices. If not....  some changers use ID ? / LUN 0 for the
 device and ID ? / LUN 1 for the robot mechanism. But Linux does *not*
-look for LUN's other than 0 as default, becauce there are to many
+look for LUNs other than 0 as default, because there are too many
 broken devices. So you can try:
 
   1) echo "scsi add-single-device 0 0 ID 1" > /proc/scsi/scsi
@@ -107,7 +107,7 @@ because the kernel will translate the error codes into human-readable
 strings then.
 
 You can display these messages with the dmesg command (or check the
-logfiles).  If you email me some question becauce of a problem with the
+logfiles).  If you email me some question because of a problem with the
 driver, please include these messages.
 
 

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/scsi/scsi_eh.txt

@@ -75,7 +75,7 @@ with the command.
 
  - otherwise
 	scsi_eh_scmd_add(scmd, 0) is invoked for the command.  See
-	[1-3] for details of this funciton.
+	[1-3] for details of this function.
 
 
 [1-2-2] Completing a scmd w/ timeout

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/scsi/st.txt

@@ -261,7 +261,7 @@ pairs are separated with a comma (no spaces allowed). A colon can be
 used instead of the equal mark. The definition is prepended by the
 string st=. Here is an example:
 
-	st=buffer_kbs:64,write_threhold_kbs:60
+	st=buffer_kbs:64,write_threshold_kbs:60
 
 The following syntax used by the old kernel versions is also supported:
 

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/scsi/sym53c8xx_2.txt

@@ -609,7 +609,7 @@ appropriate mailing lists or news-groups.  Send me a copy in order to
 be sure I will receive it.  Obviously, a bug in the driver code is
 possible.
 
-  My cyrrent email address: Gerard Roudier <groudier@free.fr>
+  My current email address: Gerard Roudier <groudier@free.fr>
 
 Allowing disconnections is important if you use several devices on
 your SCSI bus but often causes problems with buggy devices.

+ 2 - 2
Documentation/sharedsubtree.txt

@@ -942,13 +942,13 @@ replicas continue to be exactly same.
 	->mnt_slave
 	->mnt_master
 
-	->mnt_share links togather all the mount to/from which this vfsmount
+	->mnt_share links together all the mount to/from which this vfsmount
 		send/receives propagation events.
 
 	->mnt_slave_list links all the mounts to which this vfsmount propagates
 		to.
 
-	->mnt_slave links togather all the slaves that its master vfsmount
+	->mnt_slave links together all the slaves that its master vfsmount
 		propagates to.
 
 	->mnt_master points to the master vfsmount from which this vfsmount

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/sound/alsa/ALSA-Configuration.txt

@@ -955,7 +955,7 @@ Prior to version 0.9.0rc4 options had a 'snd_' prefix. This was removed.
 		  dmx6fire, dsp24, dsp24_value, dsp24_71, ez8,
 		  phase88, mediastation
     omni	- Omni I/O support for MidiMan M-Audio Delta44/66
-    cs8427_timeout - reset timeout for the CS8427 chip (S/PDIF transciever)
+    cs8427_timeout - reset timeout for the CS8427 chip (S/PDIF transceiver)
                      in msec resolution, default value is 500 (0.5 sec)
 
     This module supports multiple cards and autoprobe. Note: The consumer part

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/sound/alsa/Audigy-mixer.txt

@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ This is based on SB-Live-mixer.txt.
 
 The EMU10K2 chips have a DSP part which can be programmed to support 
 various ways of sample processing, which is described here.
-(This acticle does not deal with the overall functionality of the 
+(This article does not deal with the overall functionality of the 
 EMU10K2 chips. See the manuals section for further details.)
 
 The ALSA driver programs this portion of chip by default code

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/sound/alsa/SB-Live-mixer.txt

@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@
 
 The EMU10K1 chips have a DSP part which can be programmed to support
 various ways of sample processing, which is described here.
-(This acticle does not deal with the overall functionality of the 
+(This article does not deal with the overall functionality of the 
 EMU10K1 chips. See the manuals section for further details.)
 
 The ALSA driver programs this portion of chip by default code

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/stable_kernel_rules.txt

@@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ Review cycle:
    Contact the kernel security team for more details on this procedure.
 
 
-Review committe:
+Review committee:
 
  - This is made up of a number of kernel developers who have volunteered for
    this task, and a few that haven't.

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/sysctl/fs.txt

@@ -146,7 +146,7 @@ or otherwise protected/tainted binaries. The modes are
 	readable by root only. This allows the end user to remove
 	such a dump but not access it directly. For security reasons
 	core dumps in this mode will not overwrite one another or
-	other files. This mode is appropriate when adminstrators are
+	other files. This mode is appropriate when administrators are
 	attempting to debug problems in a normal environment.
 
 ==============================================================

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/sysctl/vm.txt

@@ -129,7 +129,7 @@ the high water marks for each per cpu page list.
 
 zone_reclaim_mode:
 
-Zone_reclaim_mode allows to set more or less agressive approaches to
+Zone_reclaim_mode allows someone to set more or less aggressive approaches to
 reclaim memory when a zone runs out of memory. If it is set to zero then no
 zone reclaim occurs. Allocations will be satisfied from other zones / nodes
 in the system.

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/uml/UserModeLinux-HOWTO.txt

@@ -1477,7 +1477,7 @@
 
 
 
-  Making it world-writeable looks bad, but it seems not to be
+  Making it world-writable looks bad, but it seems not to be
   exploitable as a security hole.  However, it does allow anyone to cre-
   ate useless tap devices (useless because they can't configure them),
   which is a DOS attack.  A somewhat more secure alternative would to be

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/usb/hiddev.txt

@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ interfaces, but have similar sorts of communication needs. The two big
 examples for this are power devices (especially uninterruptable power
 supplies) and monitor control on higher end monitors.
 
-To support these disparite requirements, the Linux USB system provides
+To support these disparate requirements, the Linux USB system provides
 HID events to two separate interfaces:
 * the input subsystem, which converts HID events into normal input
 device interfaces (such as keyboard, mouse and joystick) and a

+ 2 - 2
Documentation/usb/rio.txt

@@ -24,10 +24,10 @@ are in no way responsible for any damage that may occur, no matter how
 inconsequential.
 
 It seems that the Rio has a problem when sending .mp3 with low batteries.
-I suggest when the batteries are low and want to transfer stuff that you
+I suggest when the batteries are low and you want to transfer stuff that you
 replace it with a fresh one. In my case, what happened is I lost two 16kb
 blocks (they are no longer usable to store information to it). But I don't
-know if thats normal or not. It could simply be a problem with the flash 
+know if that's normal or not; it could simply be a problem with the flash 
 memory.
 
 In an extreme case, I left my Rio playing overnight and the batteries wore 

+ 4 - 4
Documentation/usb/usb-serial.txt

@@ -175,7 +175,7 @@ Keyspan USA-series Serial Adapters
   
   Current status:
     The USA-18X, USA-28X, USA-19, USA-19W and USA-49W are supported and
-    have been pretty throughly tested at various baud rates with 8-N-1
+    have been pretty thoroughly tested at various baud rates with 8-N-1
     character settings.  Other character lengths and parity setups are
     presently untested.
 
@@ -253,7 +253,7 @@ Cypress M8 CY4601 Family Serial Driver
 	together without hacking the adapter to set the line high.
 
 	The driver is smp safe.  Performance with the driver is rather low when using
-	it for transfering files.  This is being worked on, but I would be willing to
+	it for transferring files.  This is being worked on, but I would be willing to
 	accept patches.  An urb queue or packet buffer would likely fit the bill here.
 
 	If you have any questions, problems, patches, feature requests, etc. you can
@@ -297,7 +297,7 @@ Belkin USB Serial Adapter F5U103
       Parity       N,E,O,M,S
       Handshake    None, Software (XON/XOFF), Hardware (CTSRTS,CTSDTR)*
       Break        Set and clear
-      Line contrl  Input/Output query and control **
+      Line control Input/Output query and control **
 
       *  Hardware input flow control is only enabled for firmware
          levels above 2.06.  Read source code comments describing Belkin
@@ -309,7 +309,7 @@ Belkin USB Serial Adapter F5U103
          automatic hardware flow control.
 
   TO DO List:
-    -- Add true modem contol line query capability.  Currently tracks the
+    -- Add true modem control line query capability.  Currently tracks the
        states reported by the interrupt and the states requested.
     -- Add error reporting back to application for UART error conditions.
     -- Add support for flush ioctls.

+ 1 - 1
Documentation/watchdog/watchdog-api.txt

@@ -214,7 +214,7 @@ returned value is the temperature in degrees fahrenheit.
 
 Finally the SETOPTIONS ioctl can be used to control some aspects of
 the cards operation; right now the pcwd driver is the only one
-supporting thiss ioctl.
+supporting this ioctl.
 
     int options = 0;
     ioctl(fd, WDIOC_SETOPTIONS, options);

+ 72 - 72
MAINTAINERS

@@ -155,16 +155,16 @@ L:	netdev@vger.kernel.org
 S:	Maintained
 
 9P FILE SYSTEM
-P:      Eric Van Hensbergen
-M:      ericvh@gmail.com
-P:      Ron Minnich
-M:      rminnich@lanl.gov
-P:      Latchesar Ionkov
-M:      lucho@ionkov.net
-L:      v9fs-developer@lists.sourceforge.net
-W:      http://v9fs.sf.net
-T:      git kernel.org:/pub/scm/linux/kernel/ericvh/v9fs.git
-S:      Maintained
+P:	Eric Van Hensbergen
+M:	ericvh@gmail.com
+P:	Ron Minnich
+M:	rminnich@lanl.gov
+P:	Latchesar Ionkov
+M:	lucho@ionkov.net
+L:	v9fs-developer@lists.sourceforge.net
+W:	http://v9fs.sf.net
+T:	git kernel.org:/pub/scm/linux/kernel/ericvh/v9fs.git
+S:	Maintained
 
 A2232 SERIAL BOARD DRIVER
 P:	Enver Haase
@@ -290,8 +290,8 @@ M:	ink@jurassic.park.msu.ru
 S:	Maintained for 2.4; PCI support for 2.6.
 
 AMD GEODE PROCESSOR/CHIPSET SUPPORT
-P:      Jordan Crouse
-M:      info-linux@geode.amd.com
+P:	Jordan Crouse
+M:	info-linux@geode.amd.com
 L:	info-linux@geode.amd.com
 W:	http://www.amd.com/us-en/ConnectivitySolutions/TechnicalResources/0,,50_2334_2452_11363,00.html
 S:	Supported
@@ -601,13 +601,13 @@ M:	maxk@qualcomm.com
 S:	Maintained
 
 BONDING DRIVER
-P:   Chad Tindel
-M:   ctindel@users.sourceforge.net
-P:   Jay Vosburgh
-M:   fubar@us.ibm.com
-L:   bonding-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
-W:   http://sourceforge.net/projects/bonding/
-S:   Supported
+P:	Chad Tindel
+M:	ctindel@users.sourceforge.net
+P:	Jay Vosburgh
+M:	fubar@us.ibm.com
+L:	bonding-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
+W:	http://sourceforge.net/projects/bonding/
+S:	Supported
 
 BROADBAND PROCESSOR ARCHITECTURE
 P:	Arnd Bergmann
@@ -744,8 +744,8 @@ W:	http://www.bullopensource.org/cpuset/
 S:	Supported
 
 CRAMFS FILESYSTEM
-W:     http://sourceforge.net/projects/cramfs/
-S:     Orphan
+W:	http://sourceforge.net/projects/cramfs/
+S:	Orphan
 
 CRIS PORT
 P:	Mikael Starvik
@@ -1054,11 +1054,11 @@ W:	http://sourceforge.net/projects/emu10k1/
 S:	Maintained
 
 EMULEX LPFC FC SCSI DRIVER
-P:      James Smart
-M:      james.smart@emulex.com
-L:      linux-scsi@vger.kernel.org
-W:      http://sourceforge.net/projects/lpfcxxxx
-S:      Supported
+P:	James Smart
+M:	james.smart@emulex.com
+L:	linux-scsi@vger.kernel.org
+W:	http://sourceforge.net/projects/lpfcxxxx
+S:	Supported
 
 EPSON 1355 FRAMEBUFFER DRIVER
 P:	Christopher Hoover
@@ -1495,16 +1495,16 @@ L:	linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
 S:	Maintained
 
 INTEL FRAMEBUFFER DRIVER (excluding 810 and 815)
-P:      Sylvain Meyer
-M:      sylvain.meyer@worldonline.fr
-L:      linux-fbdev-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
-S:      Maintained
+P:	Sylvain Meyer
+M:	sylvain.meyer@worldonline.fr
+L:	linux-fbdev-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
+S:	Maintained
 
 INTEL 810/815 FRAMEBUFFER DRIVER
-P:      Antonino Daplas
-M:      adaplas@pol.net
-L:      linux-fbdev-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
-S:      Maintained
+P:	Antonino Daplas
+M:	adaplas@pol.net
+L:	linux-fbdev-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
+S:	Maintained
 
 INTEL APIC/IOAPIC, LOWLEVEL X86 SMP SUPPORT
 P:	Ingo Molnar
@@ -1830,11 +1830,11 @@ L:	linuxppc-embedded@ozlabs.org
 S:	Maintained
 
 LINUX FOR POWERPC EMBEDDED PPC83XX AND PPC85XX
-P:     Kumar Gala
-M:     galak@kernel.crashing.org
-W:     http://www.penguinppc.org/
-L:     linuxppc-embedded@ozlabs.org
-S:     Maintained
+P:	Kumar Gala
+M:	galak@kernel.crashing.org
+W:	http://www.penguinppc.org/
+L:	linuxppc-embedded@ozlabs.org
+S:	Maintained
 
 LINUX FOR POWERPC PA SEMI PWRFICIENT
 P:	Olof Johansson
@@ -1933,10 +1933,10 @@ W: 	http://www.syskonnect.com
 S: 	Supported
 
 MAN-PAGES: MANUAL PAGES FOR LINUX -- Sections 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7
-P: Michael Kerrisk
-M: mtk-manpages@gmx.net
-W: ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/docs/manpages
-S: Maintained
+P:	Michael Kerrisk
+M:	mtk-manpages@gmx.net
+W:	ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/docs/manpages
+S:	Maintained
 
 MARVELL MV643XX ETHERNET DRIVER
 P:	Dale Farnsworth
@@ -1953,11 +1953,11 @@ L:	linux-fbdev-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
 S:	Maintained
 
 MEGARAID SCSI DRIVERS
-P:     Neela Syam Kolli
-M:     Neela.Kolli@engenio.com
-S:     linux-scsi@vger.kernel.org
-W:     http://megaraid.lsilogic.com
-S:     Maintained
+P:	Neela Syam Kolli
+M:	Neela.Kolli@engenio.com
+S:	linux-scsi@vger.kernel.org
+W:	http://megaraid.lsilogic.com
+S:	Maintained
 
 MEMORY MANAGEMENT
 L:	linux-mm@kvack.org
@@ -2186,10 +2186,10 @@ T:	git kernel.org:/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/aia21/ntfs-2.6.git
 S:	Maintained
 
 NVIDIA (rivafb and nvidiafb) FRAMEBUFFER DRIVER
-P:      Antonino Daplas
-M:      adaplas@pol.net
-L:      linux-fbdev-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
-S:      Maintained
+P:	Antonino Daplas
+M:	adaplas@pol.net
+L:	linux-fbdev-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
+S:	Maintained
 
 OPENCORES I2C BUS DRIVER
 P:	Peter Korsgaard
@@ -2539,10 +2539,10 @@ RISCOM8 DRIVER
 S:	Orphan
 
 S3 SAVAGE FRAMEBUFFER DRIVER
-P:      Antonino Daplas
-M:      adaplas@pol.net
-L:      linux-fbdev-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
-S:      Maintained
+P:	Antonino Daplas
+M:	adaplas@pol.net
+L:	linux-fbdev-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
+S:	Maintained
 
 S390
 P:	Martin Schwidefsky
@@ -2623,10 +2623,10 @@ L:	linux-scsi@vger.kernel.org
 S:	Maintained
 
 SCTP PROTOCOL
-P: Sridhar Samudrala
-M: sri@us.ibm.com
-L: lksctp-developers@lists.sourceforge.net
-S: Supported
+P:	Sridhar Samudrala
+M:	sri@us.ibm.com
+L:	lksctp-developers@lists.sourceforge.net
+S:	Supported
 
 SCx200 CPU SUPPORT
 P:	Jim Cromie
@@ -2794,9 +2794,9 @@ L:	tpmdd-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
 S:	Maintained
 
 Telecom Clock Driver for MCPL0010
-P: Mark Gross
-M: mark.gross@intel.com
-S: Supported
+P:	Mark Gross
+M:	mark.gross@intel.com
+S:	Supported
 
 TENSILICA XTENSA PORT (xtensa):
 P:	Chris Zankel
@@ -2943,9 +2943,9 @@ L:	linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
 S:	Maintained
 
 TI PARALLEL LINK CABLE DRIVER
-P:     Romain Lievin
-M:     roms@lpg.ticalc.org
-S:     Maintained
+P:	Romain Lievin
+M:	roms@lpg.ticalc.org
+S:	Maintained
 
 TIPC NETWORK LAYER
 P:	Per Liden
@@ -2995,12 +2995,12 @@ L:	linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
 S:	Maintained
 
 TRIVIAL PATCHES
-P:      Adrian Bunk
-M:      trivial@kernel.org
-L:      linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
-W:      http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/bunk/trivial/
-T:      git kernel.org:/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/bunk/trivial.git
-S:      Maintained
+P:	Adrian Bunk
+M:	trivial@kernel.org
+L:	linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
+W:	http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/bunk/trivial/
+T:	git kernel.org:/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/bunk/trivial.git
+S:	Maintained
 
 TMS380 TOKEN-RING NETWORK DRIVER
 P:	Adam Fritzler

+ 1 - 1
arch/arm/mach-ixp4xx/Kconfig

@@ -133,7 +133,7 @@ config IXP4XX_INDIRECT_PCI
              into the kernel and we can use the standard read[bwl]/write[bwl]
              macros. This is the preferred method due to speed but it
              limits the system to just 64MB of PCI memory. This can be 
-             problamatic if using video cards and other memory-heavy devices.
+             problematic if using video cards and other memory-heavy devices.
           
           2) If > 64MB of memory space is required, the IXP4xx can be 
 	     configured to use indirect registers to access PCI This allows 

+ 1 - 1
arch/arm/mach-lh7a40x/Kconfig

@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ config MACH_KEV7A400
 	help
 	  Say Y here if you are using the Sharp KEV7A400 development
 	  board.  This hardware is discontinued, so I'd be very
-	  suprised if you wanted this option.
+	  surprised if you wanted this option.
 
 config MACH_LPD7A400
 	bool "LPD7A400 Card Engine"

+ 1 - 1
arch/arm/mach-s3c2410/Kconfig

@@ -91,7 +91,7 @@ config SMDK2440_CPU2442
 config MACH_S3C2413
 	bool
 	help
-	  Internal node for S3C2413 verison of SMDK2413, so that
+	  Internal node for S3C2413 version of SMDK2413, so that
 	  machine_is_s3c2413() will work when MACH_SMDK2413 is
 	  selected
 

+ 1 - 1
arch/arm/mm/Kconfig

@@ -197,7 +197,7 @@ config CPU_ARM940T
 	select CPU_CP15_MPU
 	help
 	  ARM940T is a member of the ARM9TDMI family of general-
-	  purpose microprocessors with MPU and seperate 4KB
+	  purpose microprocessors with MPU and separate 4KB
 	  instruction and 4KB data cases, each with a 4-word line
 	  length.
 

+ 1 - 1
arch/cris/arch-v10/Kconfig

@@ -323,7 +323,7 @@ config ETRAX_DEF_R_WAITSTATES
 	depends on ETRAX_ARCH_V10
 	default "95a6"
 	help
-	  Waitstates for SRAM, Flash and peripherials (not DRAM).  95f8 is a
+	  Waitstates for SRAM, Flash and peripherals (not DRAM).  95f8 is a
 	  good choice for most Axis products...
 
 config ETRAX_DEF_R_BUS_CONFIG

+ 1 - 1
arch/cris/arch-v10/drivers/Kconfig

@@ -839,7 +839,7 @@ config ETRAX_DS1302_TRICKLE_CHARGE
 	default "0"
 	help
 	  This controls the initial value of the trickle charge register.
-	  0 = disabled (use this if you are unsure or have a non rechargable battery)
+	  0 = disabled (use this if you are unsure or have a non rechargeable battery)
 	  Otherwise the following values can be OR:ed together to control the
 	  charge current:
 	  1 = 2kohm, 2 = 4kohm, 3 = 4kohm

+ 3 - 3
arch/cris/arch-v10/drivers/eeprom.c

@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 /*!*****************************************************************************
 *!
-*!  Implements an interface for i2c compatible eeproms to run under linux.
-*!  Supports 2k, 8k(?) and 16k. Uses adaptive timing adjustents by
+*!  Implements an interface for i2c compatible eeproms to run under Linux.
+*!  Supports 2k, 8k(?) and 16k. Uses adaptive timing adjustments by
 *!  Johan.Adolfsson@axis.com
 *!
 *!  Probing results:
@@ -51,7 +51,7 @@
 *!  Revision 1.8  2001/06/15 13:24:29  jonashg
 *!  * Added verification of pointers from userspace in read and write.
 *!  * Made busy counter volatile.
-*!  * Added define for inital write delay.
+*!  * Added define for initial write delay.
 *!  * Removed warnings by using loff_t instead of unsigned long.
 *!
 *!  Revision 1.7  2001/06/14 15:26:54  jonashg

+ 1 - 1
arch/cris/arch-v10/drivers/i2c.c

@@ -47,7 +47,7 @@
 *! Update Port B register and shadow even when running with hardware support
 *!   to avoid glitches when reading bits
 *! Never set direction to out in i2c_inbyte
-*! Removed incorrect clock togling at end of i2c_inbyte
+*! Removed incorrect clock toggling at end of i2c_inbyte
 *!
 *! Revision 1.8  2002/08/13 06:31:53  starvik
 *! Made SDA and SCL line configurable

+ 1 - 1
arch/cris/arch-v10/kernel/kgdb.c

@@ -33,7 +33,7 @@
 *!
 *! Revision 1.2  2002/11/19 14:35:24  starvik
 *! Changes from linux 2.4
-*! Changed struct initializer syntax to the currently prefered notation
+*! Changed struct initializer syntax to the currently preferred notation
 *!
 *! Revision 1.1  2001/12/17 13:59:27  bjornw
 *! Initial revision

+ 4 - 4
arch/cris/arch-v32/drivers/Kconfig

@@ -88,7 +88,7 @@ config ETRAX_SERIAL_PORT0_DMA7_IN
 	help
 	  Enables the DMA7 input channel for ser0 (ttyS0).
 	  If you do not enable DMA, an interrupt for each character will be
-	  used when receiveing data.
+	  used when receiving data.
 	  Normally you want to use DMA, unless you use the DMA channel for
 	  something else.
 
@@ -157,7 +157,7 @@ config ETRAX_SERIAL_PORT1_DMA5_IN
 	help
 	  Enables the DMA5 input channel for ser1 (ttyS1).
 	  If you do not enable DMA, an interrupt for each character will be
-	  used when receiveing data.
+	  used when receiving data.
 	  Normally you want this on, unless you use the DMA channel for
 	  something else.
 
@@ -228,7 +228,7 @@ config ETRAX_SERIAL_PORT2_DMA3_IN
 	help
 	  Enables the DMA3 input channel for ser2 (ttyS2).
 	  If you do not enable DMA, an interrupt for each character will be
-	  used when receiveing data.
+	  used when receiving data.
 	  Normally you want to use DMA, unless you use the DMA channel for
 	  something else.
 
@@ -297,7 +297,7 @@ config ETRAX_SERIAL_PORT3_DMA9_IN
 	help
 	  Enables the DMA9 input channel for ser3 (ttyS3).
 	  If you do not enable DMA, an interrupt for each character will be
-	  used when receiveing data.
+	  used when receiving data.
 	  Normally you want to use DMA, unless you use the DMA channel for
 	  something else.
 

+ 4 - 4
arch/ia64/hp/common/sba_iommu.c

@@ -75,7 +75,7 @@
 ** If a device prefetches beyond the end of a valid pdir entry, it will cause
 ** a hard failure, ie. MCA.  Version 3.0 and later of the zx1 LBA should
 ** disconnect on 4k boundaries and prevent such issues.  If the device is
-** particularly agressive, this option will keep the entire pdir valid such
+** particularly aggressive, this option will keep the entire pdir valid such
 ** that prefetching will hit a valid address.  This could severely impact
 ** error containment, and is therefore off by default.  The page that is
 ** used for spill-over is poisoned, so that should help debugging somewhat.
@@ -258,10 +258,10 @@ static u64 prefetch_spill_page;
 
 /*
 ** DMA_CHUNK_SIZE is used by the SCSI mid-layer to break up
-** (or rather not merge) DMA's into managable chunks.
+** (or rather not merge) DMAs into manageable chunks.
 ** On parisc, this is more of the software/tuning constraint
-** rather than the HW. I/O MMU allocation alogorithms can be
-** faster with smaller size is (to some degree).
+** rather than the HW. I/O MMU allocation algorithms can be
+** faster with smaller sizes (to some degree).
 */
 #define DMA_CHUNK_SIZE  (BITS_PER_LONG*iovp_size)
 

+ 2 - 2
arch/m68knommu/Kconfig

@@ -565,7 +565,7 @@ config ROMVEC
 	depends on ROM
 	help
 	  This is almost always the same as the base of the ROM. Since on all
-	  68000 type varients the vectors are at the base of the boot device
+	  68000 type variants the vectors are at the base of the boot device
 	  on system startup.
 
 config ROMVECSIZE
@@ -574,7 +574,7 @@ config ROMVECSIZE
 	depends on ROM
 	help
 	  Define the size of the vector region in ROM. For most 68000
-	  varients this would be 0x400 bytes in size. Set to 0 if you do
+	  variants this would be 0x400 bytes in size. Set to 0 if you do
 	  not want a vector region at the start of the ROM.
 
 config ROMSTART

+ 2 - 2
arch/mips/Kconfig

@@ -865,7 +865,7 @@ config MIPS_DISABLE_OBSOLETE_IDE
 	bool
 
 #
-# Endianess selection.  Suffiently obscure so many users don't know what to
+# Endianess selection.  Sufficiently obscure so many users don't know what to
 # answer,so we try hard to limit the available choices.  Also the use of a
 # choice statement should be more obvious to the user.
 #
@@ -874,7 +874,7 @@ choice
 	help
 	  Some MIPS machines can be configured for either little or big endian
 	  byte order. These modes require different kernels and a different
-	  Linux distribution.  In general there is one prefered byteorder for a
+	  Linux distribution.  In general there is one preferred byteorder for a
 	  particular system but some systems are just as commonly used in the
 	  one or the other endianess.
 

+ 1 - 1
arch/powerpc/Kconfig

@@ -425,7 +425,7 @@ config PPC_MAPLE
 	default n
 	help
           This option enables support for the Maple 970FX Evaluation Board.
-	  For more informations, refer to <http://www.970eval.com>
+	  For more information, refer to <http://www.970eval.com>
 
 config PPC_PASEMI
 	depends on PPC_MULTIPLATFORM && PPC64

+ 2 - 2
arch/powerpc/platforms/83xx/Kconfig

@@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ config MPC834x_SYS
 	  Be aware that PCI buses can only function when SYS board is plugged
 	  into the PIB (Platform IO Board) board from Freescale which provide
 	  3 PCI slots.  The PIBs PCI initialization is the bootloader's
-	  responsiblilty.
+	  responsibility.
 
 config MPC834x_ITX
 	bool "Freescale MPC834x ITX"
@@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ config MPC834x_ITX
 	  This option enables support for the MPC 834x ITX evaluation board.
 
 	  Be aware that PCI initialization is the bootloader's
-	  responsiblilty.
+	  responsibility.
 
 config MPC8360E_PB
 	bool "Freescale MPC8360E PB"

+ 1 - 1
arch/ppc/Kconfig

@@ -724,7 +724,7 @@ config MPC834x_SYS
 	  Be aware that PCI buses can only function when SYS board is plugged
 	  into the PIB (Platform IO Board) board from Freescale which provide
 	  3 PCI slots.  The PIBs PCI initialization is the bootloader's
-	  responsiblilty.
+	  responsibility.
 
 config EV64360
 	bool "Marvell-EV64360BP"

+ 1 - 1
arch/sh/Kconfig

@@ -217,7 +217,7 @@ config SH_SHMIN
 	bool "SHMIN"
 	select CPU_SUBTYPE_SH7706
 	help
-	  Select SHMIN if configureing for the SHMIN board
+	  Select SHMIN if configuring for the SHMIN board.
 
 config SH_UNKNOWN
 	bool "BareCPU"

+ 1 - 1
arch/sh64/lib/dbg.c

@@ -383,7 +383,7 @@ void show_excp_regs(char *from, int trapnr, int signr, struct pt_regs *regs)
 /* ======================================================================= */
 
 /*
-** Depending on <base> scan the MMU, Data or Instrction side
+** Depending on <base> scan the MMU, Data or Instruction side
 ** looking for a valid mapping matching Eaddr & asid.
 ** Return -1 if not found or the TLB id entry otherwise.
 ** Note: it works only for 4k pages!

+ 2 - 2
arch/sparc/Kconfig

@@ -212,8 +212,8 @@ config SPARC_LED
 	tristate "Sun4m LED driver"
 	help
 	  This driver toggles the front-panel LED on sun4m systems
-	  in a user-specifyable manner.  It's state can be probed
-	  by reading /proc/led and it's blinking mode can be changed
+	  in a user-specifiable manner.  Its state can be probed
+	  by reading /proc/led and its blinking mode can be changed
 	  via writes to /proc/led
 
 source "fs/Kconfig.binfmt"

+ 1 - 1
arch/um/drivers/chan_user.c

@@ -120,7 +120,7 @@ static int winch_thread(void *arg)
 	/* These are synchronization calls between various UML threads on the
 	 * host - since they are not different kernel threads, we cannot use
 	 * kernel semaphores. We don't use SysV semaphores because they are
-	 * persistant. */
+	 * persistent. */
 	count = os_read_file(pipe_fd, &c, sizeof(c));
 	if(count != sizeof(c))
 		printk("winch_thread : failed to read synchronization byte, "

+ 1 - 1
drivers/atm/iphase.c

@@ -305,7 +305,7 @@ static void clear_lockup (struct atm_vcc *vcc, IADEV *dev) {
 **  |  R | NZ |  5-bit exponent  |        9-bit mantissa         |
 **  +----+----+------------------+-------------------------------+
 ** 
-**    R = reserverd (written as 0)
+**    R = reserved (written as 0)
 **    NZ = 0 if 0 cells/sec; 1 otherwise
 **
 **    if NZ = 1, rate = 1.mmmmmmmmm x 2^(eeeee) cells/sec

+ 1 - 1
drivers/char/Kconfig

@@ -994,7 +994,7 @@ config HPET
 	help
 	  If you say Y here, you will have a miscdevice named "/dev/hpet/".  Each
 	  open selects one of the timers supported by the HPET.  The timers are
-	  non-periodioc and/or periodic.
+	  non-periodic and/or periodic.
 
 config HPET_RTC_IRQ
 	bool "HPET Control RTC IRQ" if !HPET_EMULATE_RTC

+ 1 - 1
drivers/char/rio/riocmd.c

@@ -922,7 +922,7 @@ int RIOUnUse(unsigned long iPortP, struct CmdBlk *CmdBlkP)
 ** 
 ** Packet is an actual packet structure to be filled in with the packet
 ** information associated with the command. You need to fill in everything,
-** as the command processore doesn't process the command packet in any way.
+** as the command processor doesn't process the command packet in any way.
 ** 
 ** The PreFuncP is called before the packet is enqueued on the host rup.
 ** PreFuncP is called as (*PreFuncP)(PreArg, CmdBlkP);. PreFuncP must

+ 1 - 1
drivers/char/rio/rioinit.c

@@ -222,7 +222,7 @@ int RIOBoardTest(unsigned long paddr, void __iomem *caddr, unsigned char type, i
 ** which value will be written into memory.
 ** Call with op set to zero means that the RAM will not be read and checked
 ** before it is written.
-** Call with op not zero, and the RAM will be read and compated with val[op-1]
+** Call with op not zero and the RAM will be read and compared with val[op-1]
 ** to check that the data from the previous phase was retained.
 */
 

+ 3 - 3
drivers/char/rio/rioparam.c

@@ -87,8 +87,8 @@ static char *_rioparam_c_sccs_ = "@(#)rioparam.c	1.3";
 ** command bit set onto the port. The command bit is in the len field,
 ** and gets ORed in with the actual byte count.
 **
-** When you send a packet with the command bit set, then the first
-** data byte ( data[0] ) is interpretted as the command to execute.
+** When you send a packet with the command bit set the first
+** data byte (data[0]) is interpreted as the command to execute.
 ** It also governs what data structure overlay should accompany the packet.
 ** Commands are defined in cirrus/cirrus.h
 **
@@ -103,7 +103,7 @@ static char *_rioparam_c_sccs_ = "@(#)rioparam.c	1.3";
 **
 ** Most commands do not use the remaining bytes in the data array. The
 ** exceptions are OPEN MOPEN and CONFIG. (NB. As with the SI CONFIG and
-** OPEN are currently analagous). With these three commands the following
+** OPEN are currently analogous). With these three commands the following
 ** 11 data bytes are all used to pass config information such as baud rate etc.
 ** The fields are also defined in cirrus.h. Some contain straightforward
 ** information such as the transmit XON character. Two contain the transmit and

+ 1 - 1
drivers/ide/ide-floppy.c

@@ -1635,7 +1635,7 @@ static int idefloppy_begin_format(ide_drive_t *drive, int __user *arg)
 /*
 ** Get ATAPI_FORMAT_UNIT progress indication.
 **
-** Userland gives a pointer to an int.  The int is set to a progresss
+** Userland gives a pointer to an int.  The int is set to a progress
 ** indicator 0-65536, with 65536=100%.
 **
 ** If the drive does not support format progress indication, we just check

+ 1 - 1
drivers/isdn/hardware/eicon/os_4bri.c

@@ -464,7 +464,7 @@ int diva_4bri_init_card(diva_os_xdi_adapter_t * a)
 
 /*
 **  Cleanup function will be called for master adapter only
-**  this is garanteed by design: cleanup callback is set
+**  this is guaranteed by design: cleanup callback is set
 **  by master adapter only
 */
 static int diva_4bri_cleanup_adapter(diva_os_xdi_adapter_t * a)

+ 1 - 1
drivers/isdn/hisax/hfc4s8s_l1.h

@@ -16,7 +16,7 @@
 
 /*
 *  include Genero generated HFC-4S/8S header file hfc48scu.h
-*  for comlete register description. This will define _HFC48SCU_H_
+*  for complete register description. This will define _HFC48SCU_H_
 *  to prevent redefinitions
 */
 

+ 10 - 10
drivers/isdn/hisax/isdnl2.c

@@ -1442,7 +1442,7 @@ l2_tei_remove(struct FsmInst *fi, int event, void *arg)
 }
 
 static void
-l2_st14_persistant_da(struct FsmInst *fi, int event, void *arg)
+l2_st14_persistent_da(struct FsmInst *fi, int event, void *arg)
 {
 	struct PStack *st = fi->userdata;
 	
@@ -1453,7 +1453,7 @@ l2_st14_persistant_da(struct FsmInst *fi, int event, void *arg)
 }
 
 static void
-l2_st5_persistant_da(struct FsmInst *fi, int event, void *arg)
+l2_st5_persistent_da(struct FsmInst *fi, int event, void *arg)
 {
 	struct PStack *st = fi->userdata;
 
@@ -1466,7 +1466,7 @@ l2_st5_persistant_da(struct FsmInst *fi, int event, void *arg)
 }
 
 static void
-l2_st6_persistant_da(struct FsmInst *fi, int event, void *arg)
+l2_st6_persistent_da(struct FsmInst *fi, int event, void *arg)
 {
 	struct PStack *st = fi->userdata;
 
@@ -1477,7 +1477,7 @@ l2_st6_persistant_da(struct FsmInst *fi, int event, void *arg)
 }
 
 static void
-l2_persistant_da(struct FsmInst *fi, int event, void *arg)
+l2_persistent_da(struct FsmInst *fi, int event, void *arg)
 {
 	struct PStack *st = fi->userdata;
 
@@ -1612,14 +1612,14 @@ static struct FsmNode L2FnList[] __initdata =
 	{ST_L2_6, EV_L2_FRAME_ERROR, l2_frame_error},
 	{ST_L2_7, EV_L2_FRAME_ERROR, l2_frame_error_reest},
 	{ST_L2_8, EV_L2_FRAME_ERROR, l2_frame_error_reest},
-	{ST_L2_1, EV_L1_DEACTIVATE, l2_st14_persistant_da},
+	{ST_L2_1, EV_L1_DEACTIVATE, l2_st14_persistent_da},
 	{ST_L2_2, EV_L1_DEACTIVATE, l2_st24_tei_remove},
 	{ST_L2_3, EV_L1_DEACTIVATE, l2_st3_tei_remove},
-	{ST_L2_4, EV_L1_DEACTIVATE, l2_st14_persistant_da},
-	{ST_L2_5, EV_L1_DEACTIVATE, l2_st5_persistant_da},
-	{ST_L2_6, EV_L1_DEACTIVATE, l2_st6_persistant_da},
-	{ST_L2_7, EV_L1_DEACTIVATE, l2_persistant_da},
-	{ST_L2_8, EV_L1_DEACTIVATE, l2_persistant_da},
+	{ST_L2_4, EV_L1_DEACTIVATE, l2_st14_persistent_da},
+	{ST_L2_5, EV_L1_DEACTIVATE, l2_st5_persistent_da},
+	{ST_L2_6, EV_L1_DEACTIVATE, l2_st6_persistent_da},
+	{ST_L2_7, EV_L1_DEACTIVATE, l2_persistent_da},
+	{ST_L2_8, EV_L1_DEACTIVATE, l2_persistent_da},
 };
 
 #define L2_FN_COUNT (sizeof(L2FnList)/sizeof(struct FsmNode))

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