diff options
author | Holger Hans Peter Freyther <zecke@selfish.org> | 2009-08-11 15:00:31 +0200 |
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committer | Holger Hans Peter Freyther <zecke@selfish.org> | 2009-08-11 15:00:31 +0200 |
commit | 0b5373120b1f074cba500361c31effaf7bee75f5 (patch) | |
tree | 146d676fe923ef0c9337ebc2d959cda6deafe0fa /docs/usermanual | |
parent | 154a69bf190d281eafdb2244d3368cc505510125 (diff) |
usermanual: Some more spelling fixes
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/usermanual')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/usermanual/chapters/getting_oe.xml | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/usermanual/chapters/metadata.xml | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/usermanual/chapters/recipes.xml | 14 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/usermanual/chapters/usage.xml | 2 |
4 files changed, 11 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/docs/usermanual/chapters/getting_oe.xml b/docs/usermanual/chapters/getting_oe.xml index 1d51a55ca0..bd376c33e9 100644 --- a/docs/usermanual/chapters/getting_oe.xml +++ b/docs/usermanual/chapters/getting_oe.xml @@ -209,7 +209,7 @@ $ <command>vi</command> build/conf/local.conf</screen> the following three entries: <varname>BBFILES</varname>, <varname>DISTRO</varname> and <varname>MACHINE</varname>. For example, consider the following - mininal <literal>local.conf</literal> file for the Ångström + minimal <literal>local.conf</literal> file for the Ångström distribution and the Openmoko gta01 machine: <screen> @@ -294,7 +294,7 @@ MACHINE = "om-gta01"</screen> <varlistentry> <term><filename>meta/</filename></term> - <listitem><para>A collection of usefull meta tasks and recipes that + <listitem><para>A collection of useful meta tasks and recipes that don't fit in a general category.</para></listitem> </varlistentry> diff --git a/docs/usermanual/chapters/metadata.xml b/docs/usermanual/chapters/metadata.xml index 3e76b2ddbb..c698be961a 100644 --- a/docs/usermanual/chapters/metadata.xml +++ b/docs/usermanual/chapters/metadata.xml @@ -67,7 +67,7 @@ <varlistentry> <term><filename>recipes/</filename></term> <listitem> - <para>Conatins all of the + <para>Contains all of the <application>BitBake</application> <filename>.bb</filename> files. There is a subdirectory for each task or application and within that subdirectory is diff --git a/docs/usermanual/chapters/recipes.xml b/docs/usermanual/chapters/recipes.xml index e609e98670..74e8e16366 100644 --- a/docs/usermanual/chapters/recipes.xml +++ b/docs/usermanual/chapters/recipes.xml @@ -146,7 +146,7 @@ VAR2 = "The version is ${PV}"</screen></para> <term>Conditional assignment</term> <listitem> - <para>Conditional assignement is used to assign a value to a + <para>Conditional assignment is used to assign a value to a variable, but only when the variable is currently unset. This is commonly used to provide a default value for use when no specific definition is provided by the machine or distro configuration of the @@ -1503,7 +1503,7 @@ inherit autotools</screen></para> example from net-snmp shows oe_runconf being called manually so that the parameter for specifying the endianess can be computed and passed in to the configure script:<screen>do_configure() { - # Additional flag based on target endiness (see siteinfo.bbclass) + # Additional flag based on target endianess (see siteinfo.bbclass) ENDIANESS="${@base_conditional('SITEINFO_ENDIANESS', 'le', '--with-endianness=little', '--with-endianness=big', d)}" oenote Determined endianess as: $ENDIANESS oe_runconf $ENDIANESS @@ -1576,7 +1576,7 @@ inherit autotools</screen></para> <para>The following example from net-snmp uses oenote to tell the user which endianess it determined was appropriate for the target device:<screen>do_configure() { - # Additional flag based on target endiness (see siteinfo.bbclass) + # Additional flag based on target endianess (see siteinfo.bbclass) ENDIANESS="${@base_conditional('SITEINFO_ENDIANESS', 'le', '--with-endianness=little', '--with-endianness=big', d)}" oenote Determined endianess as: $ENDIANESS oe_runconf $ENDIANESS @@ -1694,7 +1694,7 @@ inherit autotools</screen></para> to le for little endian targets and to be for big endian targets:<screen>do_compile () { ... - # Additional flag based on target endiness (see siteinfo.bbclass) + # Additional flag based on target endianess (see siteinfo.bbclass) CFLAG="${CFLAG} ${@base_conditional('SITEINFO_ENDIANESS', 'le', '-DL_ENDIAN', '-DB_ENDIAN', d)}" ...</screen></para> </listitem> @@ -2928,7 +2928,7 @@ fi</screen></para> <para>Sometimes packages require root permissions in order to perform some action, such as changing user or group owners or creating device nodes. Since OpenEmbedded will not keep the user and group information - it's usually preferabe to remove that from the makefiles. For device + it's usually preferable to remove that from the makefiles. For device nodes it's usually preferably to create them from the initial device node lists or via udev configuration.</para> @@ -3268,7 +3268,7 @@ do_configure() { to le for little endian targets and to be for big endian targets:<screen>do_compile () { ... - # Additional flag based on target endiness (see siteinfo.bbclass) + # Additional flag based on target endianess (see siteinfo.bbclass) CFLAG="${CFLAG} ${@base_conditional('SITEINFO_ENDIANESS', 'le', '-DL_ENDIAN', '-DB_ENDIAN', d)}" ...</screen></para> </listitem> @@ -3544,7 +3544,7 @@ which find all contents of the <emphasis role="bold">/var</emphasis> directory is lost when the device is powered off or restarted. Therefore special handling of <emphasis role="bold">/var</emphasis> is required in all - packages. Even if your distrubution does not use a tmpfs based <emphasis + packages. Even if your distribution does not use a tmpfs based <emphasis role="bold">/var</emphasis> you need to assume it does when creating packages to ensure the package can be used on those distributions that do use a tmpfs based <emphasis role="bold">/var</emphasis>. This special diff --git a/docs/usermanual/chapters/usage.xml b/docs/usermanual/chapters/usage.xml index 47aa7b4869..31ba613ca9 100644 --- a/docs/usermanual/chapters/usage.xml +++ b/docs/usermanual/chapters/usage.xml @@ -542,7 +542,7 @@ tmp/work/lzo-1.08-r14/install/lzo/usr/lib/liblzo.so.1.0.0</screen></para> <para>When you go about building and installing a software package there are a number of tasks that you generally follow with most software packages. You probably need to start out by downloading the source code, - then unpacking the source code. Maye you need to apply some patches for + then unpacking the source code. Maybe you need to apply some patches for some reason. Then you might run the configure script of the package, perhaps passing it some options to configure it to your liking. The you might run "make install" to install the software. If your actually going |