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authorOndrej Filip <feela@network.cz>2003-08-23 12:42:41 +0200
committerOndrej Filip <feela@network.cz>2003-08-23 12:42:41 +0200
commitbaa5dd6ccc14eb6bc43fad37a2bfe88ad190c0fa (patch)
tree355a913f69fbbaec9aa27b8384fc884c15c498d9 /proto/ospf/ospf.c
parentc197d44e1790ab1738cf9e438c2c91bd74e9b94e (diff)
downloadbird-baa5dd6ccc14eb6bc43fad37a2bfe88ad190c0fa.tar
bird-baa5dd6ccc14eb6bc43fad37a2bfe88ad190c0fa.zip
Many spelling mistakes fixed.
Thanks you Harry Moyes.
Diffstat (limited to 'proto/ospf/ospf.c')
-rw-r--r--proto/ospf/ospf.c76
1 files changed, 38 insertions, 38 deletions
diff --git a/proto/ospf/ospf.c b/proto/ospf/ospf.c
index 12037c8..ebea951 100644
--- a/proto/ospf/ospf.c
+++ b/proto/ospf/ospf.c
@@ -10,60 +10,60 @@
* DOC: Open Shortest Path First (OSPF)
*
* The OSPF protocol is quite complicated and its complex implemenation is
- * split to many files. In |ospf.c|, you can find mostly interface
+ * split to many files. In |ospf.c|, you will find mainly the interface
* for communication with the core (e.g., reconfiguration hooks, shutdown
- * and initialisation and so on). In |packet.c|, you can find various
- * functions for sending and receiving of generic OSPF packets. There are
- * also routines for autentication and checksumming. File |iface.c| contains
- * the interface state machine, allocation and deallocation of OSPF's
+ * and initialisation and so on). In |packet.c|, you will find various
+ * functions for sending and receiving generic OSPF packets. There are
+ * also routines for authentication and checksumming. File |iface.c| contains
+ * the interface state machine and functions for allocation and deallocation of OSPF's
* interface data structures. Source |neighbor.c| includes the neighbor state
- * machine and functions for election of Designed Router and Backup
- * Designed router. In |hello.c|, there are routines for sending
+ * machine and functions for election of Designated Router and Backup
+ * Designated router. In |hello.c|, there are routines for sending
* and receiving of hello packets as well as functions for maintaining
* wait times and the inactivity timer. Files |lsreq.c|, |lsack.c|, |dbdes.c|
* contain functions for sending and receiving of link-state requests,
- * link-state acknoledges and database descriptions respectively.
+ * link-state acknowledgements and database descriptions respectively.
* In |lsupd.c|, there are functions for sending and receiving
* of link-state updates and also the flooding algorithm. Source |topology.c| is
- * a place where routines for searching LSA's in the link-state database,
+ * a place where routines for searching LSAs in the link-state database,
* adding and deleting them reside, there also are functions for originating
- * of various types of LSA's (router LSA, net LSA, external LSA). File |rt.c|
+ * of various types of LSAs (router LSA, net LSA, external LSA). File |rt.c|
* contains routines for calculating the routing table. |lsalib.c| is a set
- * of various functions for working with the LSA's (endianity conversions,
+ * of various functions for working with the LSAs (endianity conversions,
* calculation of checksum etc.).
*
* One instance of the protocol is able to hold LSA databases for
* multiple OSPF areas, to exchange routing information between
* multiple neighbors and to calculate the routing tables. The core
* structure is &proto_ospf to which multiple &ospf_area and
- * &ospf_iface structures are connected. To &ospf_area is also connected
+ * &ospf_iface structures are connected. &ospf_area is also connected to
* &top_hash_graph which is a dynamic hashing structure that
* describes the link-state database. It allows fast search, addition
* and deletion. Each LSA is kept in two pieces: header and body. Both of them are
- * kept in endianity of the CPU.
+ * kept in the endianity of the CPU.
*
* Every area has its own area_disp() which is
* responsible for late originating of router LSA, calculating
- * of the routing table and it also ages and flushes the LSA's. This
+ * of the routing table and it also ages and flushes the LSAs. This
* function is called in regular intervals.
* To every &ospf_iface, we connect one or more
* &ospf_neighbor's -- a structure containing many timers and queues
* for building adjacency and for exchange of routing messages.
*
* BIRD's OSPF implementation respects RFC2328 in every detail, but
- * some of internal algorithms do differ. The RFC recommends to make a snapshot
- * of the link-state database when a new adjacency is forming and send
- * the database description packets based on information of this
+ * some of internal algorithms do differ. The RFC recommends making a snapshot
+ * of the link-state database when a new adjacency is forming and sending
+ * the database description packets based on the information in this
* snapshot. The database can be quite large in some networks, so
- * we rather walk through a &slist structure which allows us to
- * continue even if the actual LSA we were worked with is deleted. New
- * LSA's are added at the tail of this &slist.
+ * rather we walk through a &slist structure which allows us to
+ * continue even if the actual LSA we were working with is deleted. New
+ * LSAs are added at the tail of this &slist.
*
* We also don't keep a separate OSPF routing table, because the core
* helps us by being able to recognize when a route is updated
* to an identical one and it suppresses the update automatically.
* Due to this, we can flush all the routes we've recalculated and
- * also those we're deleted to the core's routing table and the
+ * also those we've deleted to the core's routing table and the
* core will take care of the rest. This simplifies the process
* and conserves memory.
*/
@@ -270,13 +270,13 @@ schedule_rtcalc(struct ospf_area *oa)
}
/**
- * area_disp - invokes link-state database aging, originating of
+ * area_disp - invokes link-state database aging, origination of
* router LSA and routing table calculation
* @timer: it's called every @ospf_area->tick seconds
*
- * It ivokes aging and when @ospf_area->origrt is set to 1, start
- * function for origination of router LSA and network LSA's.
- * It also start routing
+ * It invokes aging and when @ospf_area->origrt is set to 1, start
+ * function for origination of router LSA and network LSAs.
+ * It also starts routing
* table calculation when @ospf_area->calcrt is set.
*/
void
@@ -308,11 +308,11 @@ area_disp(timer *timer)
* ospf_import_control - accept or reject new route from nest's routing table
* @p: current instance of protocol
* @new: the new route
- * @attrs: list of arttributes
- * @pool: pool for alloction of attributes
+ * @attrs: list of attributes
+ * @pool: pool for allocation of attributes
*
- * Its quite simple. It does not accept our own routes and decision of
- * import leaves to the filters.
+ * Its quite simple. It does not accept our own routes and leaves the decision on
+ * import to the filters.
*/
int
@@ -341,13 +341,13 @@ ospf_store_tmp_attrs(struct rte *rt, struct ea_list *attrs)
}
/**
- * ospf_shutdown - Finnish of OSPF instance
+ * ospf_shutdown - Finish of OSPF instance
* @p: current instance of protocol
*
- * RFC does not define any action that should be taken befor router
+ * RFC does not define any action that should be taken before router
* shutdown. To make my neighbors react as fast as possible, I send
* them hello packet with empty neighbor list. They should start
- * theirs neighbor state machine with event %NEIGHBOR_1WAY.
+ * their neighbor state machine with event %NEIGHBOR_1WAY.
*/
static int
@@ -374,7 +374,7 @@ ospf_rt_notify(struct proto *p, net *n, rte *new, rte *old, ea_list *attrs)
{
struct proto_ospf *po=(struct proto_ospf *)p;
-/* Temporarily down write anythink
+/* Temporarily down write anything
OSPF_TRACE(D_EVENTS, "Got route %I/%d %s", p->name, n->n.prefix,
n->n.pxlen, new ? "up" : "down");
*/
@@ -481,9 +481,9 @@ ospf_patt_compare(struct ospf_iface_patt *a, struct ospf_iface_patt *b)
* @p: current instance of protocol (with old configuration)
* @c: new configuration requested by user
*
- * This hook tries to be a little bit inteligent. Instance of OSPF
+ * This hook tries to be a little bit intelligent. Instance of OSPF
* will survive change of many constants like hello interval,
- * password change, addition of deletion of some neighbor on
+ * password change, addition or deletion of some neighbor on
* nonbroadcast network, cost of interface, etc.
*/
static int
@@ -629,12 +629,12 @@ ospf_reconfigure(struct proto *p, struct proto_config *c)
ifa->iface->name);
}
- /* AUTHETICATION */
+ /* AUTHENTICATION */
if(ip1->autype!=ip2->autype)
{
ifa->autype=ip2->autype;
OSPF_TRACE(D_EVENTS,
- "Changing autentication type on interface %s",
+ "Changing authentication type on interface %s",
ifa->iface->name);
}
if(strncmp(ip1->password,ip2->password,8)!=0)
@@ -739,7 +739,7 @@ ospf_reconfigure(struct proto *p, struct proto_config *c)
if(((NODE (ac1))->next)!=((NODE (ac2))->next))
return 0; /* One is not null */
- return 1; /* Everythink OK :-) */
+ return 1; /* Everything OK :-) */
}
void