X-Git-Url: http://git.cascardo.info/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=drivers%2Fata%2Fata_piix.c;h=0bc3fd6c3fdb8ea2f979f0a57b135ecc57a6e770;hb=94c8a984ae2adbd9a9626fb42e0f2faf3e36e86f;hp=cdec4ab3b159b6796425385bc02a0be1cb88f732;hpb=26ff6801f751cd47e44c2e9507ec08b447f2d2b9;p=cascardo%2Flinux.git diff --git a/drivers/ata/ata_piix.c b/drivers/ata/ata_piix.c index cdec4ab3b159..0bc3fd6c3fdb 100644 --- a/drivers/ata/ata_piix.c +++ b/drivers/ata/ata_piix.c @@ -38,16 +38,16 @@ * Hardware documentation available at http://developer.intel.com/ * * Documentation - * Publically available from Intel web site. Errata documentation - * is also publically available. As an aide to anyone hacking on this + * Publicly available from Intel web site. Errata documentation + * is also publicly available. As an aide to anyone hacking on this * driver the list of errata that are relevant is below, going back to * PIIX4. Older device documentation is now a bit tricky to find. * * The chipsets all follow very much the same design. The original Triton - * series chipsets do _not_ support independant device timings, but this + * series chipsets do _not_ support independent device timings, but this * is fixed in Triton II. With the odd mobile exception the chips then * change little except in gaining more modes until SATA arrives. This - * driver supports only the chips with independant timing (that is those + * driver supports only the chips with independent timing (that is those * with SITRE and the 0x44 timing register). See pata_oldpiix and pata_mpiix * for the early chip drivers. * @@ -122,7 +122,7 @@ enum { P2 = 2, /* port 2 */ P3 = 3, /* port 3 */ IDE = -1, /* IDE */ - NA = -2, /* not avaliable */ + NA = -2, /* not available */ RV = -3, /* reserved */ PIIX_AHCI_DEVICE = 6,