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Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/misc/sgi-xp/xpc_main.c')
-rw-r--r--drivers/misc/sgi-xp/xpc_main.c16
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/misc/sgi-xp/xpc_main.c b/drivers/misc/sgi-xp/xpc_main.c
index 43f5b686ecf3..2934b4473001 100644
--- a/drivers/misc/sgi-xp/xpc_main.c
+++ b/drivers/misc/sgi-xp/xpc_main.c
@@ -26,16 +26,16 @@
* Caveats:
*
* . Currently on sn2, we have no way to determine which nasid an IRQ
- * came from. Thus, xpc_send_IRQ_sn2() does a remote AMO write
- * followed by an IPI. The AMO indicates where data is to be pulled
- * from, so after the IPI arrives, the remote partition checks the AMO
- * word. The IPI can actually arrive before the AMO however, so other
- * code must periodically check for this case. Also, remote AMO
+ * came from. Thus, xpc_send_IRQ_sn2() does a remote amo write
+ * followed by an IPI. The amo indicates where data is to be pulled
+ * from, so after the IPI arrives, the remote partition checks the amo
+ * word. The IPI can actually arrive before the amo however, so other
+ * code must periodically check for this case. Also, remote amo
* operations do not reliably time out. Thus we do a remote PIO read
* solely to know whether the remote partition is down and whether we
* should stop sending IPIs to it. This remote PIO read operation is
* set up in a special nofault region so SAL knows to ignore (and
- * cleanup) any errors due to the remote AMO write, PIO read, and/or
+ * cleanup) any errors due to the remote amo write, PIO read, and/or
* PIO write operations.
*
* If/when new hardware solves this IPI problem, we should abandon
@@ -302,7 +302,7 @@ xpc_hb_checker(void *ignore)
/*
* We need to periodically recheck to ensure no
- * IRQ/AMO pairs have been missed. That check
+ * IRQ/amo pairs have been missed. That check
* must always reset xpc_hb_check_timeout.
*/
force_IRQ = 1;
@@ -1034,7 +1034,7 @@ xpc_init(void)
if (is_shub()) {
/*
* The ia64-sn2 architecture supports at most 64 partitions.
- * And the inability to unregister remote AMOs restricts us
+ * And the inability to unregister remote amos restricts us
* further to only support exactly 64 partitions on this
* architecture, no less.
*/