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authorRical Jasan <ricaljasan@pacific.net>2016-10-06 12:01:51 +0530
committerSiddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org>2016-10-06 12:01:51 +0530
commit4ffa3672e174534916e2ec27fd2cfed4dcc70b22 (patch)
tree9f31e6148a2f10cd0e466e2fff7ff04733c77286 /manual/filesys.texi
parent9739d2d501123ad2be48057a33c9f6b610a9c95e (diff)
downloadglibc-4ffa3672e174534916e2ec27fd2cfed4dcc70b22.tar.gz
Manual typos: File System Interface
2016-05-06 Rical Jasan <ricaljasan@pacific.net> * manual/filesys.texi: Fix typos in the manual.
Diffstat (limited to 'manual/filesys.texi')
-rw-r--r--manual/filesys.texi42
1 files changed, 21 insertions, 21 deletions
diff --git a/manual/filesys.texi b/manual/filesys.texi
index a22c21f012..26758e626e 100644
--- a/manual/filesys.texi
+++ b/manual/filesys.texi
@@ -314,7 +314,7 @@ A symbolic link.
This member is a BSD extension. The symbol @code{_DIRENT_HAVE_D_TYPE}
is defined if this member is available. On systems where it is used, it
corresponds to the file type bits in the @code{st_mode} member of
-@code{struct stat}. If the value cannot be determine the member
+@code{struct stat}. If the value cannot be determined the member
value is DT_UNKNOWN. These two macros convert between @code{d_type}
values and @code{st_mode} values:
@@ -335,7 +335,7 @@ This returns the @code{st_mode} value corresponding to @var{dtype}.
This structure may contain additional members in the future. Their
availability is always announced in the compilation environment by a
-macro names @code{_DIRENT_HAVE_D_@var{xxx}} where @var{xxx} is replaced
+macro named @code{_DIRENT_HAVE_D_@var{xxx}} where @var{xxx} is replaced
by the name of the new member. For instance, the member @code{d_reclen}
available on some systems is announced through the macro
@code{_DIRENT_HAVE_D_RECLEN}.
@@ -723,7 +723,7 @@ the result.
The @code{scandir} function scans the contents of the directory selected
by @var{dir}. The result in *@var{namelist} is an array of pointers to
-structure of type @code{struct dirent} which describe all selected
+structures of type @code{struct dirent} which describe all selected
directory entries and which is allocated using @code{malloc}. Instead
of always getting all directory entries returned, the user supplied
function @var{selector} can be used to decide which entries are in the
@@ -742,7 +742,7 @@ directory could not be opened for reading or the malloc call failed) and
the global variable @code{errno} contains more information on the error.
@end deftypefun
-As described above the fourth argument to the @code{scandir} function
+As described above, the fourth argument to the @code{scandir} function
must be a pointer to a sorting function. For the convenience of the
programmer @theglibc{} contains implementations of functions which
are very helpful for this purpose.
@@ -1009,7 +1009,7 @@ the @var{filename} parameter and appending the names of all passed
directories and then the local file name. So the callback function can
use this parameter to access the file. @code{ftw} also calls
@code{stat} for the file and passes that information on to the callback
-function. If this @code{stat} call was not successful the failure is
+function. If this @code{stat} call is not successful the failure is
indicated by setting the third argument of the callback function to
@code{FTW_NS}. Otherwise it is set according to the description given
in the account of @code{__ftw_func_t} above.
@@ -1261,7 +1261,7 @@ purpose is to obtain information about the link. @code{link}, the
function that makes a hard link, does too. It makes a hard link to the
symbolic link, which one rarely wants.
-Some systems have for some functions operating on files have a limit on
+Some systems have, for some functions operating on files, a limit on
how many symbolic links are followed when resolving a path name. The
limit if it exists is published in the @file{sys/param.h} header file.
@@ -1271,7 +1271,7 @@ limit if it exists is published in the @file{sys/param.h} header file.
The macro @code{MAXSYMLINKS} specifies how many symlinks some function
will follow before returning @code{ELOOP}. Not all functions behave the
-same and this value is not the same a that returned for
+same and this value is not the same as that returned for
@code{_SC_SYMLOOP} by @code{sysconf}. In fact, the @code{sysconf}
result can indicate that there is no fixed limit although
@code{MAXSYMLINKS} exists and has a finite value.
@@ -1376,7 +1376,7 @@ In some situations it is desirable to resolve all the
symbolic links to get the real
name of a file where no prefix names a symbolic link which is followed
and no filename in the path is @code{.} or @code{..}. This is for
-instance desirable if files have to be compare in which case different
+instance desirable if files have to be compared in which case different
names can refer to the same inode.
@comment stdlib.h
@@ -1392,7 +1392,7 @@ result is passed back as the return value of the function in a block of
memory allocated with @code{malloc}. If the result is not used anymore
the memory should be freed with a call to @code{free}.
-If any of the path components is missing the function returns a NULL
+If any of the path components are missing the function returns a NULL
pointer. This is also what is returned if the length of the path
reaches or exceeds @code{PATH_MAX} characters. In any case
@code{errno} is set accordingly.
@@ -1448,7 +1448,7 @@ This function is declared in @file{stdlib.h}.
@end deftypefun
The advantage of using this function is that it is more widely
-available. The drawback is that it reports failures for long path on
+available. The drawback is that it reports failures for long paths on
systems which have no limits on the file name length.
@node Deleting Files
@@ -1828,8 +1828,8 @@ might not be detected as sparse at all. For practical applications,
this is not a problem.
@item unsigned int st_blksize
-The optimal block size for reading of writing this file, in bytes. You
-might use this size for allocating the buffer space for reading of
+The optimal block size for reading or writing this file, in bytes. You
+might use this size for allocating the buffer space for reading or
writing the file. (This is unrelated to @code{st_blocks}.)
@end table
@end deftp
@@ -2254,10 +2254,10 @@ This is the file type constant of a FIFO or pipe.
@end table
The POSIX.1b standard introduced a few more objects which possibly can
-be implemented as object in the filesystem. These are message queues,
+be implemented as objects in the filesystem. These are message queues,
semaphores, and shared memory objects. To allow differentiating these
-objects from other files the POSIX standard introduces three new test
-macros. But unlike the other macros it does not take the value of the
+objects from other files the POSIX standard introduced three new test
+macros. But unlike the other macros they do not take the value of the
@code{st_mode} field as the parameter. Instead they expect a pointer to
the whole @code{struct stat} structure.
@@ -2265,7 +2265,7 @@ the whole @code{struct stat} structure.
@comment POSIX
@deftypefn Macro int S_TYPEISMQ (struct stat *@var{s})
@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
-If the system implement POSIX message queues as distinct objects and the
+If the system implements POSIX message queues as distinct objects and the
file is a message queue object, this macro returns a non-zero value.
In all other cases the result is zero.
@end deftypefn
@@ -2274,7 +2274,7 @@ In all other cases the result is zero.
@comment POSIX
@deftypefn Macro int S_TYPEISSEM (struct stat *@var{s})
@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
-If the system implement POSIX semaphores as distinct objects and the
+If the system implements POSIX semaphores as distinct objects and the
file is a semaphore object, this macro returns a non-zero value.
In all other cases the result is zero.
@end deftypefn
@@ -2283,7 +2283,7 @@ In all other cases the result is zero.
@comment POSIX
@deftypefn Macro int S_TYPEISSHM (struct stat *@var{s})
@safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}}
-If the system implement POSIX shared memory objects as distinct objects
+If the system implements POSIX shared memory objects as distinct objects
and the file is a shared memory object, this macro returns a non-zero
value. In all other cases the result is zero.
@end deftypefn
@@ -2760,7 +2760,7 @@ allow write access to files like @file{/etc/passwd}, which normally can
be written only by the super-user, the modifying program will have to be
owned by @code{root} and the setuid-bit must be set.
-But beside the files the program is intended to change the user should
+But besides the files the program is intended to change the user should
not be allowed to access any file to which s/he would not have access
anyway. The program therefore must explicitly check whether @emph{the
user} would have the necessary access to a file, before it reads or
@@ -2780,7 +2780,7 @@ want to try to keep track of the diverse features that different systems
have. Using @code{access} is simple and automatically does whatever is
appropriate for the system you are using.
-@code{access} is @emph{only} only appropriate to use in setuid programs.
+@code{access} is @emph{only} appropriate to use in setuid programs.
A non-setuid program will always use the effective ID rather than the
real ID.
@@ -3230,7 +3230,7 @@ add (off_t at, void *block, size_t size)
The function @code{add} writes a block of memory at an arbitrary
position in the file. If the current size of the file is too small it
-is extended. Note the it is extended by a round number of pages. This
+is extended. Note that it is extended by a whole number of pages. This
is a requirement of @code{mmap}. The program has to keep track of the
real size, and when it has finished a final @code{ftruncate} call should
set the real size of the file.