On 16.03.2018 02:39, Nicholas D Steeves wrote:
> Signed-off-by: Nicholas D Steeves <nsteeves@xxxxxxxxx>
All look fine except one nit, see below.
> ---
> Documentation/btrfs-balance.asciidoc | 2 +-
> Documentation/btrfs-check.asciidoc | 2 +-
> Documentation/btrfs-man5.asciidoc | 8 ++++----
> cmds-subvolume.c | 2 +-
> 4 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/Documentation/btrfs-balance.asciidoc b/Documentation/btrfs-balance.asciidoc
> index 7017bed7..536243bc 100644
> --- a/Documentation/btrfs-balance.asciidoc
> +++ b/Documentation/btrfs-balance.asciidoc
> @@ -204,7 +204,7 @@ The way balance operates, it usually needs to temporarily create a new block
> group and move the old data there, before the old block group can be removed.
> For that it needs the work space, otherwise it fails for ENOSPC reasons.
> This is not the same ENOSPC as if the free space is exhausted. This refers to
> -the space on the level of block groups, which are bigger parts of the filesytem
> +the space on the level of block groups, which are bigger parts of the filesystem
> that contain many file extents.
>
> The free work space can be calculated from the output of the *btrfs filesystem show*
> diff --git a/Documentation/btrfs-check.asciidoc b/Documentation/btrfs-check.asciidoc
> index cc76d846..b963eae5 100644
> --- a/Documentation/btrfs-check.asciidoc
> +++ b/Documentation/btrfs-check.asciidoc
> @@ -122,7 +122,7 @@ NOTE: 'lowmem' mode does not work with '--repair' yet, and is still considered
> experimental.
>
> --force::
> -allow to work on a mounted filesystem. Note that this should work fine on a
> +allow work on a mounted filesystem. Note that this should work fine on a
Shouldn't we use the continuous aspect of the verb here, i.e.
s/work/working ? (I'm not a native speaker so take it with a grain of salt)
> quiescent or read-only mounted filesystem but may crash if the device is
> changed externally, eg. by the kernel module. Repair without mount checks is
> not supported right now.
> diff --git a/Documentation/btrfs-man5.asciidoc b/Documentation/btrfs-man5.asciidoc
> index b20abf05..0529496a 100644
> --- a/Documentation/btrfs-man5.asciidoc
> +++ b/Documentation/btrfs-man5.asciidoc
> @@ -210,7 +210,7 @@ system at that point.
> Enable discarding of freed file blocks. This is useful for SSD devices, thinly
> provisioned LUNs, or virtual machine images; however, every storage layer must
> support discard for it to work. if the backing device does not support
> -asynchronous queued TRIM, then this operation can severly degrade performance,
> +asynchronous queued TRIM, then this operation can severely degrade performance,
> because a synchronous TRIM operation will be attempted instead. Queued TRIM
> requires newer than SATA revision 3.1 chipsets and devices.
>
> @@ -223,7 +223,7 @@ of actually discarding the blocks.
>
> If discarding is not necessary to be done at the block freeing time, there's
> `fstrim`(8) tool that lets the filesystem discard all free blocks in a batch,
> -possibly not much interfering with other operations. Also, the the device may
> +possibly not much interfering with other operations. Also, the device may
> ignore the TRIM command if the range is too small, so running the batch discard
> can actually discard the blocks.
>
> @@ -289,7 +289,7 @@ checksums don't fit inside a single page.
> +
> Don't use this option unless you really need it. The inode number limit
> on 64bit system is 2^64^, which is practically enough for the whole filesystem
> -lifetime. Due to implemention of linux VFS layer, the inode numbers on 32bit
> +lifetime. Due to implementation of linux VFS layer, the inode numbers on 32bit
> systems are only 32 bits wide. This lowers the limit significantly and makes
> it possible to reach it. In such case, this mount option will help.
> Alternatively, files with high inode numbers can be copied to a new subvolume
> @@ -415,7 +415,7 @@ will disable all SSD options.
>
> *subvol='path'*::
> Mount subvolume from 'path' rather than the toplevel subvolume. The
> -'path' is always treated as relative to the the toplevel subvolume.
> +'path' is always treated as relative to the toplevel subvolume.
> This mount option overrides the default subvolume set for the given filesystem.
>
> *subvolid='subvolid'*::
> diff --git a/cmds-subvolume.c b/cmds-subvolume.c
> index ba57eaa0..45363a5a 100644
> --- a/cmds-subvolume.c
> +++ b/cmds-subvolume.c
> @@ -338,7 +338,7 @@ again:
> error("unable to get fsid for '%s': %s",
> path, strerror(-res));
> error(
> - "delete suceeded but commit may not be done in the end");
> + "delete succeeded but commit may not be done in the end");
> ret = 1;
> goto out;
> }
>
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