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10057 Man page misspellings ouput particuliar overriden
Reviewed by: Gergő Mihály Doma <domag02@gmail.com>
*** 56,66 ****
lgroup" (see lgrp_home(3LGRP)) and is usually the operating system's
first choice of where to run the thread and allocate its memory.
There are different levels of affinity that can be specified by a
! thread for a particuliar lgroup. The levels of affinity are the
following from strongest to weakest:
LGRP_AFF_STRONG /* strong affinity */
LGRP_AFF_WEAK /* weak affinity */
LGRP_AFF_NONE /* no affinity */
--- 56,66 ----
lgroup" (see lgrp_home(3LGRP)) and is usually the operating system's
first choice of where to run the thread and allocate its memory.
There are different levels of affinity that can be specified by a
! thread for a particular lgroup. The levels of affinity are the
following from strongest to weakest:
LGRP_AFF_STRONG /* strong affinity */
LGRP_AFF_WEAK /* weak affinity */
LGRP_AFF_NONE /* no affinity */
*** 86,96 ****
events that can cause the operating system to change a thread's home
lgroup for which it has a weak affinity.
The LGRP_AFF_NONE affinity signifies no affinity and can be used to
! remove a thread's affinity for a particuliar lgroup. Initially, each
thread has no affinity to any lgroup. If a thread has no lgroup
affinities set, the operating system chooses a home lgroup for the
thread with no affinity set.
RETURN VALUES
--- 86,96 ----
events that can cause the operating system to change a thread's home
lgroup for which it has a weak affinity.
The LGRP_AFF_NONE affinity signifies no affinity and can be used to
! remove a thread's affinity for a particular lgroup. Initially, each
thread has no affinity to any lgroup. If a thread has no lgroup
affinities set, the operating system chooses a home lgroup for the
thread with no affinity set.
RETURN VALUES