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authorTobias Geerinckx-Rice <me@tobias.gr>2020-07-09 16:38:37 +0200
committerTobias Geerinckx-Rice <me@tobias.gr>2020-07-09 19:57:39 +0200
commite892b9c3dc7915b77e7aa56a066dfdc856a7d69b (patch)
treed5b81d9be5da86e403a2709477b67927e59d0a53
parent3786f2969b08b1d46f4d74fe873b16e20799896c (diff)
doc: cookbook: Fix ‘file system’ spelling.
* doc/guix-cookbook.texi (Getting help, Customizing the Kernel): Fix ‘file system’ spelling.
-rw-r--r--doc/guix-cookbook.texi10
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/doc/guix-cookbook.texi b/doc/guix-cookbook.texi
index 13ec2976a6..f541592d13 100644
--- a/doc/guix-cookbook.texi
+++ b/doc/guix-cookbook.texi
@@ -1288,7 +1288,7 @@ version or compilation options.
@subsection Getting help
Sadly, some applications can be tough to package. Sometimes they need a patch to
-work with the non-standard filesystem hierarchy enforced by the store.
+work with the non-standard file system hierarchy enforced by the store.
Sometimes the tests won't run properly. (They can be skipped but this is not
recommended.) Other times the resulting package won't be reproducible.
@@ -1501,7 +1501,7 @@ custom kernel:
@lisp
(define %macbook41-full-config
(append %macbook41-config-options
- %filesystems
+ %file-systems
%efi-support
%emulation
(@@@@ (gnu packages linux) %default-extra-linux-options)))
@@ -1517,8 +1517,8 @@ custom kernel:
#:extra-options %macbook41-config-options))
@end lisp
-In the above example @code{%filesystems} is a collection of flags enabling
-different filesystem support, @code{%efi-support} enables EFI support and
+In the above example @code{%file-systems} is a collection of flags enabling
+different file system support, @code{%efi-support} enables EFI support and
@code{%emulation} enables a x86_64-linux machine to act in 32-bit mode also.
@code{%default-extra-linux-options} are the ones quoted above, which had to be
added in since they were replaced in the @code{extra-options} keyword.
@@ -1582,7 +1582,7 @@ The second way to setup the kernel configuration makes more use of Guix's
features and allows you to share configuration segments between different
kernels. For example, all machines using EFI to boot have a number of EFI
configuration flags that they need. It is likely that all the kernels will
-share a list of filesystems to support. By using variables it is easier to
+share a list of file systems to support. By using variables it is easier to
see at a glance what features are enabled and to make sure you don't have
features in one kernel but missing in another.