@@ -119,7 +119,7 @@ The only guarantees that you can rely upon in this case are:
ordinary accesses instead cause data races if they are concurrent with
other accesses of which at least one is a write. In order to ensure this,
the compiler will not optimize accesses out of existence, create unsolicited
- accesses, or perform other similar optimzations.
+ accesses, or perform other similar optimizations.
- acquire operations will appear to happen, with respect to the other
components of the system, before all the LOAD or STORE operations
@@ -115,7 +115,7 @@ CI pipeline.
QEMU_JOB_SKIPPED
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-The job is not reliably successsful in general, so is not
+The job is not reliably successful in general, so is not
currently suitable to be run by default. Ideally this should
be a temporary marker until the problems can be addressed, or
the job permanently removed.
@@ -279,7 +279,7 @@ You can change the multiplier and divider of a clock at runtime,
so you can use this to model clock controller devices which
have guest-programmable frequency multipliers or dividers.
-Similary to ``clock_set()``, ``clock_set_mul_div()`` returns ``true`` if
+Similarly to ``clock_set()``, ``clock_set_mul_div()`` returns ``true`` if
the clock state was modified; that is, if the multiplier or the diviser
or both were changed by the call.
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ Overview
Intel Software Guard eXtensions (SGX) is a set of instructions and mechanisms
for memory accesses in order to provide security accesses for sensitive
-applications and data. SGX allows an application to use it's pariticular
+applications and data. SGX allows an application to use its particular
address space as an *enclave*, which is a protected area provides confidentiality
and integrity even in the presence of privileged malware. Accesses to the
enclave memory area from any software not resident in the enclave are prevented,
@@ -802,7 +802,7 @@
#
# @fd: file descriptor name previously passed via 'getfd' command,
# which represents a pre-opened /dev/iommu. This allows the
-# iommufd object to be shared accross several subsystems (VFIO,
+# iommufd object to be shared across several subsystems (VFIO,
# VDPA, ...), and the file descriptor to be shared with other
# process, e.g. DPDK. (default: QEMU opens /dev/iommu by itself)
#