From 56e6cf80bd4be6dc95ed9b84b633e3c11ae8c86b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Nick Clifton Date: Tue, 29 Sep 2015 10:55:23 +0100 Subject: PR/19014: Fix a spelling mistake in the linker documentation. --- ld/ld.texinfo | 12 ++++++------ 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) (limited to 'ld/ld.texinfo') diff --git a/ld/ld.texinfo b/ld/ld.texinfo index 90194be..36c8da6 100644 --- a/ld/ld.texinfo +++ b/ld/ld.texinfo @@ -2363,10 +2363,10 @@ file. @kindex --disable-long-section-names @item --enable-long-section-names @itemx --disable-long-section-names -The PE variants of the Coff object format add an extension that permits +The PE variants of the COFF object format add an extension that permits the use of section names longer than eight characters, the normal limit -for Coff. By default, these names are only allowed in object files, as -fully-linked executable images do not carry the Coff string table required +for COFF. By default, these names are only allowed in object files, as +fully-linked executable images do not carry the COFF string table required to support the longer names. As a GNU extension, it is possible to allow their use in executable images as well, or to (probably pointlessly!) disallow it in object files, by using these two options. Executable images @@ -2809,10 +2809,10 @@ The image is Terminal Server aware. Insert a real timestamp into the image. This is the default behaviour as it matches legacy code and it means that the image will work with other, proprietary tools. The problem with this default is that it -will result in slightly different images being produced each tiem the +will result in slightly different images being produced each time the same sources are linked. The option @option{--no-insert-timestamp} can be used to insert a zero value for the timestamp, this ensuring -that binaries produced from indentical sources will compare +that binaries produced from identical sources will compare identically. @end table @@ -2831,7 +2831,7 @@ all executables use an index of 0. @kindex --dsbt-size @item --dsbt-size @var{size} -This option sets the number of entires in the DSBT of the current executable +This option sets the number of entries in the DSBT of the current executable or shared library to @var{size}. The default is to create a table with 64 entries. -- cgit v1.1