/*
* NEEDSWORK:
* There is absolutely no reason to write this as a blob object
- * and create a phoney cache entry just to leak. This hack is
+ * and create a phony cache entry just to leak. This hack is
* primarily to get to the write_entry() machinery that massages
* the contents to work-tree format and writes out which only
* allows it for a cache entry. The code in write_entry() needs
pathspec = get_pathspec(prefix, argv);
- /* be nice with submodule patsh ending in a slash */
+ /* be nice with submodule paths ending in a slash */
read_cache();
if (pathspec)
strip_trailing_slash_from_submodules();
die("unable to read %s", sha1_to_hex(entry->idx.sha1));
/*
* make sure no cached delta data remains from a
- * previous attempt before a pack split occured.
+ * previous attempt before a pack split occurred.
*/
free(entry->delta_data);
entry->delta_data = NULL;
* We need to compute if commit on either side of an reflog
* entry is reachable from the tip of the ref for all entries.
* Mark commits that are reachable from the tip down to the
- * time threashold first; we know a commit marked thusly is
+ * time threshold first; we know a commit marked thusly is
* reachable from the tip without running in_merge_bases()
* at all.
*/
}
/*
* Otherwise, argv[i] could be either <rev> or <paths> and
- * has to be unambigous.
+ * has to be unambiguous.
*/
else if (!get_sha1(argv[i], sha1)) {
/*
* Reading this option is not always possible immediately as git_dir may be
* not be set yet. So until it is set, use cygwin lstat/stat functions.
* However, if core.filemode is set, we must use the Cygwin posix
- * stat/lstat as the Windows stat fuctions do not determine posix filemode.
+ * stat/lstat as the Windows stat functions do not determine posix filemode.
*
* Note that git_cygwin_config() does NOT call git_default_config() and this
* is deliberate. Many commands read from config to establish initial
# include <stdlib.h>
#endif
-/* For platform which support the ISO C amendement 1 functionality we
+/* For platform which support the ISO C amendment 1 functionality we
support user defined character classes. */
#if defined _LIBC || (defined HAVE_WCTYPE_H && defined HAVE_WCHAR_H)
/* Solaris 2.5 has a bug: <wchar.h> must be included before <wctype.h>. */
# if defined _LIBC || (defined HAVE_WCTYPE_H && defined HAVE_WCHAR_H)
/* The GNU C library provides support for user-defined character classes
- and the functions from ISO C amendement 1. */
+ and the functions from ISO C amendment 1. */
# ifdef CHARCLASS_NAME_MAX
# define CHAR_CLASS_MAX_LENGTH CHARCLASS_NAME_MAX
# else
* its own input data to become available. But since
* the process (pack-objects) is itself CPU intensive,
* it will happily pick up the time slice that we are
- * relinguishing here.
+ * relinquishing here.
*/
Sleep(0);
goto repeat;
they can be reliably used as array indices. */
register unsigned char c, c1;
- /* A random tempory spot in PATTERN. */
+ /* A random temporary spot in PATTERN. */
const char *p1;
/* Points to the end of the buffer, where we should append. */
we're all done, the pattern will look like:
set_number_at <jump count> <upper bound>
set_number_at <succeed_n count> <lower bound>
- succeed_n <after jump addr> <succed_n count>
+ succeed_n <after jump addr> <succeed_n count>
<body of loop>
jump_n <succeed_n addr> <jump count>
(The upper bound and `jump_n' are omitted if
int score;
struct diff_filespec *source = p->filespec;
- /* False hash collission? */
+ /* False hash collision? */
if (hashcmp(source->sha1, target->sha1))
continue;
/* Non-regular files? If so, the modes must match! */
delim lf;
# note: declen indicates the length of binary_data in bytes.
- # declen does not include the lf preceeding the binary data.
+ # declen does not include the lf preceding the binary data.
#
exact_data ::= 'data' sp declen lf
binary_data;
#
# In case it is not clear, the '#' that starts the comment
# must be the first character on that the line (an lf have
- # preceeded it).
+ # preceded it).
#
comment ::= '#' not_lf* lf;
not_lf ::= # Any byte that is not ASCII newline (LF);
close(pack_data->pack_fd);
idx_name = keep_pack(create_index());
- /* Register the packfile with core git's machinary. */
+ /* Register the packfile with core git's machinery. */
new_p = add_packed_git(idx_name, strlen(idx_name), 1);
if (!new_p)
die("core git rejected index %s", idx_name);
* the return value is:
* -1 error in processing the object
* <0 return value of the callback, which lead to an abort
- * >0 return value of the first sigaled error >0 (in the case of no other errors)
+ * >0 return value of the first signaled error >0 (in the case of no other errors)
* 0 everything OK
*/
int fsck_walk(struct object *obj, fsck_walk_func walk, void *data);
/*
* We use PATH to find git commands, but we prepend some higher
- * precidence paths: the "--exec-path" option, the GIT_EXEC_PATH
+ * precedence paths: the "--exec-path" option, the GIT_EXEC_PATH
* environment, and the $(gitexecdir) from the Makefile at build
* time.
*/
* newline. A new graph line will not be printed after the final newline.
* If the strbuf is empty, no output will be printed.
*
- * Since the first line will not include the graph ouput, the caller is
+ * Since the first line will not include the graph output, the caller is
* responsible for printing this line's graph (perhaps via
* graph_show_commit() or graph_show_oneline()) before calling
* graph_show_strbuf().
*
* It does so by calculating the costs of the path ending in characters
* i (in string1) and j (in string2), respectively, given that the last
- * operation is a substition, a swap, a deletion, or an insertion.
+ * operation is a substitution, a swap, a deletion, or an insertion.
*
* This implementation allows the costs to be weighted:
*
*
* `argh`::
* token to explain the kind of argument this option wants. Keep it
- * homogenous across the repository.
+ * homogeneous across the repository.
*
* `help`::
* the short help associated to what the option does.
*
* `flags`::
* mask of parse_opt_option_flags.
- * PARSE_OPT_OPTARG: says that the argument is optionnal (not for BOOLEANs)
+ * PARSE_OPT_OPTARG: says that the argument is optional (not for BOOLEANs)
* PARSE_OPT_NOARG: says that this option takes no argument, for CALLBACKs
* PARSE_OPT_NONEG: says that this option cannot be negated
* PARSE_OPT_HIDDEN this option is skipped in the default usage, showed in
{ OPTION_CALLBACK, (s), (l), (v), (a), (h), 0, (f) }
/* parse_options() will filter out the processed options and leave the
- * non-option argments in argv[].
+ * non-option arguments in argv[].
* Returns the number of arguments left in argv[].
*/
extern int parse_options(int argc, const char **argv,
extern NORETURN void usage_with_options(const char * const *usagestr,
const struct option *options);
-/*----- incremantal advanced APIs -----*/
+/*----- incremental advanced APIs -----*/
enum {
PARSE_OPT_HELP = -1,
}
/*
- * Tree object? Either mark it uniniteresting, or add it
+ * Tree object? Either mark it uninteresting, or add it
* to the list of objects to look at later..
*/
if (object->type == OBJ_TREE) {
* build complex strings/buffers whose final size isn't easily known.
*
* It is NOT legal to copy the ->buf pointer away.
- * `strbuf_detach' is the operation that detachs a buffer from its shell
+ * `strbuf_detach' is the operation that detaches a buffer from its shell
* while keeping the shell valid wrt its invariants.
*
* 2. the ->buf member is a byte array that has at least ->len + 1 bytes
}
/*
- * Then, discard all the non-relevane file pairs...
+ * Then, discard all the non-relevant file pairs...
*/
for (i = 0; i < q->nr; i++) {
struct diff_filepair *p = q->queue[i];
/*
* Record the end-of-group position in case we are matched
* with a group of changes in the other file (that is, the
- * change record before the enf-of-group index in the other
+ * change record before the end-of-group index in the other
* file is set).
*/
ixref = rchgo[ixo - 1] ? ix: nrec;