OSSP CVS Repository

ossp - Difference in ossp-pkg/pth/pth.pod versions 1.153 and 1.154
Not logged in
[Honeypot]  [Browse]  [Home]  [Login]  [Reports
[Search]  [Ticket]  [Timeline
  [History

ossp-pkg/pth/pth.pod 1.153 -> 1.154

--- pth.pod      2002/04/27 11:18:57     1.153
+++ pth.pod      2002/10/15 20:34:22     1.154
@@ -552,8 +552,8 @@
 a thread never directly switches to another thread. A thread always
 yields execution to the scheduler and the scheduler dispatches to the
 next thread. So a freshly spawned thread has to be kept somewhere until
-the scheduler gets a chance to pick it up for scheduling. That is 
-what the B<NEW> queue is for. 
+the scheduler gets a chance to pick it up for scheduling. That is
+what the B<NEW> queue is for.
 
 The purpose of the B<DEAD> queue is to support thread joining. When a
 thread is marked to be unjoinable, it is directly kicked out of the
@@ -799,13 +799,13 @@
 This sets the attribute field I<field> in I<attr> to a value
 specified as an additional argument on the variable argument
 list. The following attribute I<fields> and argument pairs can
-be used: 
+be used:
 
  PTH_ATTR_PRIO           int
  PTH_ATTR_NAME           char *
  PTH_ATTR_JOINABLE       int
  PTH_ATTR_CANCEL_STATE   unsigned int
- PTH_ATTR_STACK_SIZE     unsigned int 
+ PTH_ATTR_STACK_SIZE     unsigned int
  PTH_ATTR_STACK_ADDR     char *
 
 =item int B<pth_attr_get>(pth_attr_t I<attr>, int I<field>, ...);
@@ -1644,7 +1644,7 @@
 
 This is a variant of the 4.2BSD connect(2) function. It establishes a
 connection on a socket I<s> to target specified in I<addr> and I<addrlen>.
-The difference between connect(2) and pth_connect(3) is that 
+The difference between connect(2) and pth_connect(3) is that
 pth_connect(3) suspends only the execution of the current thread and not the
 whole process.  For more details about the arguments and return code semantics
 see connect(2).

CVSTrac 2.0.1