Most of these were found using Lucas De Marchi's codespell tool.
Signed-off-by: Stefano Lattarini <stefano.lattarini@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Nieder <jrnieder@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Matthieu Moy <Matthieu.Moy@imag.fr>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
}
/*
- * Read the patch text in "buffer" taht extends for "size" bytes; stop
+ * Read the patch text in "buffer" that extends for "size" bytes; stop
* reading after seeing a single patch (i.e. changes to a single file).
* Create fragments (i.e. patch hunks) and hang them to the given patch.
* Return the number of bytes consumed, so that the caller can call us
*
* The latter is needed to deal with a case where two paths A and B
* are swapped by first renaming A to B and then renaming B to A;
- * moving A to B should not be prevented due to presense of B as we
+ * moving A to B should not be prevented due to presence of B as we
* will remove it in a later patch.
*/
#define PATH_TO_BE_DELETED ((struct patch *) -2)
*
* A patch to swap-rename between A and B would first rename A
* to B and then rename B to A. While applying the first one,
- * the presense of B should not stop A from getting renamed to
+ * the presence of B should not stop A from getting renamed to
* B; ask to_be_deleted() about the later rename. Removal of
* B and rename from A to B is handled the same way by asking
* was_deleted().
}
/*
- * Is "commit" a decendant of one of the elements on the "with_commit" list?
+ * Is "commit" a descendant of one of the elements on the "with_commit" list?
*/
int is_descendant_of(struct commit *commit, struct commit_list *with_commit)
{
extern struct commit_list *get_merge_bases_many(struct commit *one, int n, struct commit **twos, int cleanup);
extern struct commit_list *get_octopus_merge_bases(struct commit_list *in);
-/* largest postive number a signed 32-bit integer can contain */
+/* largest positive number a signed 32-bit integer can contain */
#define INFINITE_DEPTH 0x7fffffff
extern int register_shallow(const unsigned char *sha1);
* Binary files are displayed with "Bin XXX -> YYY bytes"
* instead of the change count and graph. This part is treated
* similarly to the graph part, except that it is not
- * "scaled". If total width is too small to accomodate the
+ * "scaled". If total width is too small to accommodate the
* guaranteed minimum width of the filename part and the
* separators and this message, this message will "overflow"
* making the line longer than the maximum width.
# Print a one-line summary of each hunk in the array ref in
-# the first argument, starting wih the index in the 2nd.
+# the first argument, starting with the index in the 2nd.
sub display_hunks {
my ($hunks, $i) = @_;
my $ctr = 0;
}
# Cleanup various junk in filename (try to canonicalize it), and
-# add prependdir to accomodate running CVS client from a
+# add prependdir to accommodate running CVS client from a
# subdirectory (so the output is relative to top directory of the project).
sub filecleanup
{
# the numerical value of the corresponding byte plus
# 100.
# - "plus 100" avoids "0"s, and also reduces the
- # likelyhood of a collision in the case that someone someday
+ # likelihood of a collision in the case that someone someday
# writes an import tool that tries to preserve original
# CVS revision numbers, and the original CVS data had done
# lots of branches off of branches and other strangeness to
tmp_info="$tmp_dir/info"
-# Find the intial commit
+# Find the initial commit
commit=$(git rev-parse HEAD)
mkdir $tmp_dir || exit 2
our $GITWEB_CONFIG_SYSTEM = $ENV{'GITWEB_CONFIG_SYSTEM'} || "++GITWEB_CONFIG_SYSTEM++";
our $GITWEB_CONFIG_COMMON = $ENV{'GITWEB_CONFIG_COMMON'} || "++GITWEB_CONFIG_COMMON++";
- # Protect agains duplications of file names, to not read config twice.
+ # Protect against duplications of file names, to not read config twice.
# Only one of $GITWEB_CONFIG and $GITWEB_CONFIG_SYSTEM is used, so
# there possibility of duplication of filename there doesn't matter.
$GITWEB_CONFIG = "" if ($GITWEB_CONFIG eq $GITWEB_CONFIG_COMMON);
# to avoid infinite loop where error occurs in die_error,
# change handler to default handler, disabling handle_errors_html
- set_message("Error occured when inside die_error:\n$msg");
+ set_message("Error occurred when inside die_error:\n$msg");
# you cannot jump out of die_error when called as error handler;
# the subroutine set via CGI::Carp::set_message is called _after_
system(git_cmd(), "cat-file", '-e', $hash_base) == 0
or die_error(404, "Base object does not exist");
- # here errors should not hapen
+ # here errors should not happen
open my $fd, "-|", git_cmd(), "ls-tree", $hash_base, "--", $file_name
or die_error(500, "Open git-ls-tree failed");
my $line = <$fd>;
=item temp_acquire ( NAME )
-Attempts to retreive the temporary file mapped to the string C<NAME>. If an
+Attempts to retrieve the temporary file mapped to the string C<NAME>. If an
associated temp file has not been created this session or was closed, it is
created, cached, and set for autoflush and binmode.
print __("Welcome to Git!\n");
- printf __("The following error occured: %s\n"), $error;
+ printf __("The following error occurred: %s\n"), $error;
=head1 DESCRIPTION
overload methods.
If the text value ends with C<at file line 1> as $@ strings do, then
-this infomation will be used to set the C<-file> and C<-line> arguments
+this information will be used to set the C<-file> and C<-line> arguments
of the error object.
This class is used internally if an eval'd block die's with an error
if (msg) {
fprintf(stderr, "%s\n", msg);
/*
- * A conflict has occured but the porcelain
+ * A conflict has occurred but the porcelain
* (typically rebase --interactive) wants to take care
* of the commit itself so remove CHERRY_PICK_HEAD
*/
run_tests 'tree' $tree_sha1 $tree_size "" "$tree_pretty_content"
-commit_message="Intial commit"
+commit_message="Initial commit"
commit_sha1=$(echo_without_newline "$commit_message" | git commit-tree $tree_sha1)
-commit_size=176
+commit_size=177
commit_content="tree $tree_sha1
author $GIT_AUTHOR_NAME <$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL> 0000000000 +0000
committer $GIT_COMMITTER_NAME <$GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL> 0000000000 +0000
# times to get out.
#
# 2. Correct version applies the (not)edited version, and asks
- # about the next hunk, against wich we say q and program
+ # about the next hunk, against which we say q and program
# exits.
for a in s e q n q q
do
test 2 = $(grep "my sig" output | wc -l)
'
-test_expect_success 'format.signature="" supresses signatures' '
+test_expect_success 'format.signature="" suppresses signatures' '
git config format.signature "" &&
git format-patch --stdout -1 >output &&
check_patch output &&
! grep "^-- \$" output
'
-test_expect_success 'format-patch --no-signature supresses signatures' '
+test_expect_success 'format-patch --no-signature suppresses signatures' '
git config --unset-all format.signature &&
git format-patch --stdout --no-signature -1 >output &&
check_patch output &&
! grep "^-- \$" output
'
-test_expect_success 'format-patch --signature="" supresses signatures' '
+test_expect_success 'format-patch --signature="" suppresses signatures' '
git format-patch --stdout --signature="" -1 >output &&
check_patch output &&
! grep "^-- \$" output
# find touched lines
$DIFF file target | sed -n -e "s/^> //p" >fixed
- # the changed lines are all expeced to change
+ # the changed lines are all expected to change
fixed_cnt=$(wc -l <fixed)
case "$1" in
'') expect_cnt=$fixed_cnt ;;
# $HASH1 is good, $HASH4 is bad, we skip $HASH3
# but $HASH2 is bad,
# so we should find $HASH2 as the first bad commit
-test_expect_success 'bisect skip: successfull result' '
+test_expect_success 'bisect skip: successful result' '
git bisect reset &&
git bisect start $HASH4 $HASH1 &&
git bisect skip &&
'
# First do the merge with resolve and recursive then verify that
-# recusive is choosen.
+# recusive is chosen.
test_expect_success 'merge picks up the best result' '
git config --unset-all pull.twohead &&
git submodule update -N &&
test_must_fail git merge master &&
- #shouldnt need these lines
+ #should not need these lines
#( yes "d" | git mergetool file11 >/dev/null 2>&1 ) &&
#( yes "d" | git mergetool file12 >/dev/null 2>&1 ) &&
#( yes "l" | git mergetool submod >/dev/null 2>&1 ) &&
test_expect_success $PREREQ 'Send patches with --envelope-sender' '
clean_fake_sendmail &&
- git send-email --envelope-sender="Patch Contributer <patch@example.com>" --suppress-cc=sob --from="Example <nobody@example.com>" --to=nobody@example.com --smtp-server="$(pwd)/fake.sendmail" $patches 2>errors
+ git send-email --envelope-sender="Patch Contributor <patch@example.com>" --suppress-cc=sob --from="Example <nobody@example.com>" --to=nobody@example.com --smtp-server="$(pwd)/fake.sendmail" $patches 2>errors
'
test_expect_success $PREREQ 'setup expect' '
test $ret = "0"
'
-test_expect_success $PREREQ 'confirm doesnt loop forever' '
+test_expect_success $PREREQ 'confirm does not loop forever' '
CONFIRM=$(git config --get sendemail.confirm) &&
git config sendemail.confirm auto &&
GIT_SEND_EMAIL_NOTTY=1 &&
int src_is_sock;
/* Is destination socket? */
int dest_is_sock;
- /* Transfer state (TRANSFERING/FLUSHING/FINISHED) */
+ /* Transfer state (TRANSFERRING/FLUSHING/FINISHED) */
int state;
/* Buffer. */
char buf[BUFFERSIZE];
const char *executable, int fd[2]);
/** get_refs_list(), fetch(), and push_refs() can keep
- * resources (such as a connection) reserved for futher
+ * resources (such as a connection) reserved for further
* use. disconnect() releases these resources.
**/
int (*disconnect)(struct transport *connection);
/*
* Try to move back the possibly merged group of changes, to match
- * the recorded postion in the other file.
+ * the recorded position in the other file.
*/
while (ixref < ix) {
rchg[--ixs] = 1;
struct record {
unsigned int ptr, cnt;
struct record *next;
- } **records, /* an ocurrence */
+ } **records, /* an occurrence */
**line_map; /* map of line to record chain */
chastore_t rcha;
unsigned int *next_ptrs;