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author | Jan Engelhardt <jengelh@medozas.de> | 2010-10-22 22:05:20 +0200 |
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committer | Jan Engelhardt <jengelh@medozas.de> | 2010-10-22 22:25:12 +0200 |
commit | 3169d25451ed7afdf6978f1f6616046a633a330c (patch) | |
tree | d385d02cd749d680efc41db0cad603a83fb449c2 | |
parent | 00bc7b96c3780b5ac781b69635ec65f26b3c66c3 (diff) | |
download | libmnl-3169d25451ed7afdf6978f1f6616046a633a330c.tar.gz libmnl-3169d25451ed7afdf6978f1f6616046a633a330c.zip |
doc: documentation updates
Spelling, grammer, and synchronization of the readme.
Signed-off-by: Jan Engelhardt <jengelh@medozas.de>
-rw-r--r-- | README | 10 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | src/attr.c | 17 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | src/nlmsg.c | 8 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | src/socket.c | 18 |
4 files changed, 27 insertions, 26 deletions
@@ -6,21 +6,21 @@ both the Netlink header and TLVs that are repetitive and easy to get wrong. This library aims to provide simple helpers that allows you to re-use code and to avoid re-inventing the wheel. The main features of this library are: -* Small: the shared library requires around 30KB in a x86-based computer. +* Small: the shared library requires around 30KB for an x86-based computer. * Simple: this library avoids complexity and elaborated abstractions that tend to hide Netlink details. * Easy to use: the library simplifies the work for Netlink-wise developers. It provides functions to make socket handling, message building, validating, -parsing, and sequence tracking, easier. +parsing and sequence tracking, easier. * Easy to re-use: you can use the library to build your own abstraction layer on top of this library. * Decoupling: the interdependency of the main bricks that compose the library -is reduced, eg. the library provides many helpers but the programmer is not +is reduced, i.e. the library provides many helpers, but the programmer is not forced to use them. -= Examples files = += Example files = -You can find several examples files under examples/ that you can compile by +You can find several example files under examples/ that you can compile by invoking `make check'. -- @@ -65,8 +65,9 @@ uint16_t mnl_attr_get_payload_len(const struct nlattr *attr) /** * mnl_attr_get_payload - get pointer to the attribute payload + * \param attr pointer to netlink attribute * - * This function return a pointer to the attribute payload + * This function return a pointer to the attribute payload. */ void *mnl_attr_get_payload(const struct nlattr *attr) { @@ -75,11 +76,11 @@ void *mnl_attr_get_payload(const struct nlattr *attr) /** * mnl_attr_ok - check if there is room for an attribute in a buffer - * \param nattr attribute that we want to check if there is room for + * \param attr attribute that we want to check if there is room for * \param len remaining bytes in a buffer that contains the attribute * * This function is used to check that a buffer, which is supposed to contain - * an attribute, has enough room for the attribute that it stores, ie. this + * an attribute, has enough room for the attribute that it stores, i.e. this * function can be used to verify that an attribute is neither malformed nor * truncated. * @@ -202,7 +203,7 @@ static const size_t mnl_attr_data_type_len[MNL_TYPE_MAX] = { * * The validation is based on the data type. Specifically, it checks that * integers (u8, u16, u32 and u64) have enough room for them. This function - * returns -1 in case of error and errno is explicitly set. + * returns -1 in case of error, and errno is explicitly set. */ int mnl_attr_validate(const struct nlattr *attr, enum mnl_attr_data_type type) { @@ -248,7 +249,7 @@ int mnl_attr_validate2(const struct nlattr *attr, * usually happens at this stage or you can use any other data structure (such * as lists or trees). * - * This function propagates the return value of the callback that can be + * This function propagates the return value of the callback, which can be * MNL_CB_ERROR, MNL_CB_OK or MNL_CB_STOP. */ int mnl_attr_parse(const struct nlmsghdr *nlh, unsigned int offset, @@ -277,7 +278,7 @@ int mnl_attr_parse(const struct nlmsghdr *nlh, unsigned int offset, * usually happens at this stage or you can use any other data structure (such * as lists or trees). * - * This function propagates the return value of the callback that can be + * This function propagates the return value of the callback, which can be * MNL_CB_ERROR, MNL_CB_OK or MNL_CB_STOP. */ int mnl_attr_parse_nested(const struct nlattr *nested, @@ -333,7 +334,7 @@ uint32_t mnl_attr_get_u32(const struct nlattr *attr) * \param attr pointer to netlink attribute * * This function returns the 64-bit value of the attribute payload. This - * function is align-safe since accessing 64-bit Netlink attributes is a + * function is align-safe, since accessing 64-bit Netlink attributes is a * common source of alignment issues. */ uint64_t mnl_attr_get_u64(const struct nlattr *attr) @@ -453,7 +454,7 @@ void mnl_attr_put_str(struct nlmsghdr *nlh, uint16_t type, const void *data) * \param type netlink attribute type * \param data pointer to string data that is stored by the new attribute * - * This function is similar to mnl_attr_put_str but it includes the NULL + * This function is similar to mnl_attr_put_str, but it includes the NUL * terminator at the end of the string. * * This function updates the length field of the Netlink message (nlmsg_len) diff --git a/src/nlmsg.c b/src/nlmsg.c index 3cec2a2..535f4b5 100644 --- a/src/nlmsg.c +++ b/src/nlmsg.c @@ -219,10 +219,10 @@ int mnl_nlmsg_seq_ok(const struct nlmsghdr *nlh, unsigned int seq) * \param nlh current netlink message that we are handling * \param seq netlink portid that we want to check * - * This functions return 1 if the origin is fulfilled, otherwise + * This functions returns 1 if the origin is fulfilled, otherwise * 0 is returned. We skip the tracking for netlink message whose portID * is zero since it is reserved for event-based kernel notifications. On the - * other hand, if portid is set but the message PortID is not set (i.e. this + * other hand, if portid is set but the message PortID is not (i.e. this * is an event message coming from kernel-space), then we also skip the * tracking. This approach is good if we use the same socket to send commands * to kernel-space (that we want to track) and to listen to events (that we @@ -237,8 +237,8 @@ int mnl_nlmsg_portid_ok(const struct nlmsghdr *nlh, unsigned int portid) * mnl_nlmsg_fprintf - print netlink message to file * \param nlh pointer to netlink message that we want to print * - * This function prints the netlink header to a file. This function may be - * useful for debugging purposes. + * This function prints the netlink header to a file handle. + * It may be useful for debugging purposes. */ void mnl_nlmsg_fprintf(FILE *fd, const struct nlmsghdr *nlh) { diff --git a/src/socket.c b/src/socket.c index 9250c27..6ca3d3e 100644 --- a/src/socket.c +++ b/src/socket.c @@ -28,24 +28,24 @@ "Simplify, simplify" -- Henry David Thoureau. Walden (1854) \endverbatim * - * The acronim libmnl stands for LIBrary Minimalistic NetLink. + * The acronym libmnl stands for LIBrary Minimalistic NetLink. * * (temporary) libmnl homepage is: * http://1984.lsi.us.es/projects/libmnl/ * * \section features Main Features - * - Small: the shared library requires around 30KB in a x86-based computer. + * - Small: the shared library requires around 30KB for an x86-based computer. * - Simple: this library avoids complex abstractions that tend to hide Netlink * details. It avoids elaborated object-oriented infrastructure and complex * callback-based workflow. * - Easy to use: the library simplifies the work for Netlink-wise developers. * It provides functions to make socket handling, message building, - * validating, parsing, and sequence tracking, easier. + * validating, parsing and sequence tracking, easier. * - Easy to re-use: you can use this library to build your own abstraction * layer upon this library, if you want to provide another library that * hides Netlink details to your users. * - Decoupling: the interdependency of the main bricks that compose this - * library is reduced, ie. the library provides many helpers but the + * library is reduced, i.e. the library provides many helpers, but the * programmer is not forced to use them. * * \section Dependencies @@ -58,7 +58,7 @@ * http://git.netfilter.org/cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi?p=libmnl.git;a=summary * * \section using Using libmnl - * You can access several examples files under examples/ in the libmnl source + * You can access several example files under examples/ in the libmnl source * code tree. */ @@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ unsigned int mnl_socket_get_portid(const struct mnl_socket *nl) /** * mnl_socket_open - open a netlink socket - * \param unit the netlink socket bus ID (see NETLINK_* constants) + * \param bus the netlink socket bus ID (see NETLINK_* constants) * * On error, it returns -1 and errno is appropriately set. Otherwise, it * returns a valid pointer to the mnl_socket structure. @@ -164,7 +164,7 @@ int mnl_socket_bind(struct mnl_socket *nl, int groups, int pid) * mnl_socket_sendto - send a netlink message of a certain size * \param nl netlink socket obtained via mnl_socket_open() * \param buf buffer containing the netlink message to be sent - * \param bufsiz number of bytes in the buffer that you want to send + * \param len number of bytes in the buffer that you want to send * * On error, it returns -1 and errno is appropriately set. Otherwise, it * returns the number of bytes sent. @@ -186,8 +186,8 @@ int mnl_socket_sendto(const struct mnl_socket *nl, const void *buf, size_t len) * * On error, it returns -1 and errno is appropriately set. If errno is set * to ENOSPC, it means that the buffer that you have passed to store the - * netlink message is too small so you have received a truncated message. - * To avoid this you have to allocate a buffer of MNL_SOCKET_BUFFER_SIZE + * netlink message is too small, so you have received a truncated message. + * To avoid this, you have to allocate a buffer of MNL_SOCKET_BUFFER_SIZE * (which is 8KB, see linux/netlink.h for more information). Using this * buffer size ensures that your buffer is big enough to store the netlink * message without truncating it. |