Documentation: acpi: Fix typos
Fix typos in acpi directory to make documentation grammatically correct. Signed-off-by: Tamara Diaconita <diaconita.tamara@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
This commit is contained in:
parent
9f02a486da
commit
f4baccdea5
|
@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ kernel.
|
|||
CONFIG_ACPI_DEBUGGER=y
|
||||
CONFIG_ACPI_DEBUGGER_USER=m
|
||||
|
||||
The userspace utlities can be built from the kernel source tree using
|
||||
The userspace utilities can be built from the kernel source tree using
|
||||
the following commands:
|
||||
|
||||
$ cd tools
|
||||
|
|
|
@ -367,10 +367,10 @@ resulting child platform device.
|
|||
|
||||
Device Tree namespace link device ID
|
||||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||||
The Device Tree protocol uses device indentification based on the "compatible"
|
||||
The Device Tree protocol uses device identification based on the "compatible"
|
||||
property whose value is a string or an array of strings recognized as device
|
||||
identifiers by drivers and the driver core. The set of all those strings may be
|
||||
regarded as a device indentification namespace analogous to the ACPI/PNP device
|
||||
regarded as a device identification namespace analogous to the ACPI/PNP device
|
||||
ID namespace. Consequently, in principle it should not be necessary to allocate
|
||||
a new (and arguably redundant) ACPI/PNP device ID for a devices with an existing
|
||||
identification string in the Device Tree (DT) namespace, especially if that ID
|
||||
|
@ -381,7 +381,7 @@ In ACPI, the device identification object called _CID (Compatible ID) is used to
|
|||
list the IDs of devices the given one is compatible with, but those IDs must
|
||||
belong to one of the namespaces prescribed by the ACPI specification (see
|
||||
Section 6.1.2 of ACPI 6.0 for details) and the DT namespace is not one of them.
|
||||
Moreover, the specification mandates that either a _HID or an _ADR identificaion
|
||||
Moreover, the specification mandates that either a _HID or an _ADR identification
|
||||
object be present for all ACPI objects representing devices (Section 6.1 of ACPI
|
||||
6.0). For non-enumerable bus types that object must be _HID and its value must
|
||||
be a device ID from one of the namespaces prescribed by the specification too.
|
||||
|
|
|
@ -110,7 +110,7 @@ upstream.
|
|||
Linux patches. The patches generated by this process are referred to as
|
||||
"linuxized ACPICA patches". The release process is carried out on a local
|
||||
copy the ACPICA git repository. Each commit in the monthly release is
|
||||
converted into a linuxized ACPICA patch. Together, they form the montly
|
||||
converted into a linuxized ACPICA patch. Together, they form the monthly
|
||||
ACPICA release patchset for the Linux ACPI community. This process is
|
||||
illustrated in the following figure:
|
||||
|
||||
|
@ -195,12 +195,12 @@ upstream.
|
|||
release utilities (please refer to Section 4 below for the details).
|
||||
3. Linux specific features - Sometimes it's impossible to use the
|
||||
current ACPICA APIs to implement features required by the Linux kernel,
|
||||
so Linux developers occasionaly have to change ACPICA code directly.
|
||||
so Linux developers occasionally have to change ACPICA code directly.
|
||||
Those changes may not be acceptable by ACPICA upstream and in such cases
|
||||
they are left as committed ACPICA divergences unless the ACPICA side can
|
||||
implement new mechanisms as replacements for them.
|
||||
4. ACPICA release fixups - ACPICA only tests commits using a set of the
|
||||
user space simulation utilies, thus the linuxized ACPICA patches may
|
||||
user space simulation utilities, thus the linuxized ACPICA patches may
|
||||
break the Linux kernel, leaving us build/boot failures. In order to
|
||||
avoid breaking Linux bisection, fixes are applied directly to the
|
||||
linuxized ACPICA patches during the release process. When the release
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user