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ossp - Difference in ossp-pkg/mm/mm.pod versions 1.19 and 1.20
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ossp-pkg/mm/mm.pod 1.19 -> 1.20

--- mm.pod       2002/07/26 13:04:40     1.19
+++ mm.pod       2002/12/19 09:14:58     1.20
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
 ## are met:
 ##
 ## 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
-##    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 
+##    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
 ##
 ## 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
 ##    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in
@@ -116,12 +116,12 @@
 dependent implementation details (allocation and locking) when dealing with
 shared memory segments and on the second (higher) layer it provides a
 high-level malloc(3)-style API for a convenient and well known way to work
-with data-structures inside those shared memory segments. 
+with data-structures inside those shared memory segments.
 
 The abbreviation B<OSSP mm> is historically and originally comes from the phrase
 ``I<memory mapped>'' as used by the POSIX.1 mmap(2) function. Because this
 facility is internally used by this library on most platforms to establish the
-shared memory segments. 
+shared memory segments.
 
 =head2 LIBRARY STRUCTURE
 
@@ -249,13 +249,13 @@
 
 If a chunk of memory has to be allocated, the internal list of free chunks
 is searched for a minimal-size chunk which is larger or equal than the size of
-the to be allocated chunk (a I<best fit> strategy). 
+the to be allocated chunk (a I<best fit> strategy).
 
 If a chunk is found which matches this best-fit criteria, but is still a lot
 larger than the requested size, it is split into two chunks: One with exactly
 the requested size (which is the resulting chunk given back) and one with the
 remaining size (which is immediately re-inserted into the list of free
-chunks). 
+chunks).
 
 If no fitting chunk is found at all in the list of free chunks, a new one is
 created from the spare area of the shared memory segment until the segment is
@@ -267,7 +267,7 @@
 into the internal list of free chunks. The insertion operation automatically
 merges the chunk with a previous and/or a next free chunk if possible, i.e.
 if the free chunks stay physically seamless (one after another) in memory, to
-automatically form larger free chunks out of smaller ones. 
+automatically form larger free chunks out of smaller ones.
 
 This way the shared memory segment is automatically defragmented when memory
 is deallocated.
@@ -275,7 +275,7 @@
 =back
 
 This strategy reduces memory waste and fragmentation caused by small and
-frequent allocations and deallocations to a minimum. 
+frequent allocations and deallocations to a minimum.
 
 The internal implementation of the list of free chunks is not specially
 optimized (for instance by using binary search trees or even I<splay> trees,
@@ -464,7 +464,7 @@
 
 =item size_t B<mm_available>(MM *I<mm>);
 
-Returns the amount in bytes of still available (free) memory in the 
+Returns the amount in bytes of still available (free) memory in the
 shared memory pool I<mm>.
 
 =item char *B<mm_error>(void);
@@ -524,7 +524,7 @@
 This returns the size in bytes of I<core>. This size is exactly the size which
 was used for creating the shared memory area via mm_core_create(3). The
 function is provided just for convenience reasons to not require the
-application to remember the memory size behind I<core> itself. 
+application to remember the memory size behind I<core> itself.
 
 =item size_t B<mm_core_maxsegsize>(void);
 
@@ -587,7 +587,7 @@
 currently the high-level malloc(3)-style API just uses a single shared memory
 segment as the underlaying data structure for an C<MM> object which means that
 the maximum amount of memory an C<MM> object represents also depends on the
-platform. 
+platform.
 
 This could be changed in later versions by allowing at least the
 high-level malloc(3)-style API to internally use multiple shared memory

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