From dbae3a3940940977b8b8190a145a444732846219 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Askar Safin Date: Mon, 12 Feb 2024 19:48:55 +0300 Subject: trivial doc fix: remove weird phrase "syscall takes zero to five arguments" "number of arguments, from zero to five" is wrong, because on Linux maximal number of arguments is 6, not 5. Also, maximal number of arguments is kernel-dependent, so let's not include it here at all. Moreover, "Each kind of system call has a definite number of arguments" is questionable. Think about SYS_open on Linux, which takes 2 or 3 arguments. Or SYS_clone on Linux x86_64, which takes 2 to 5 arguments. So I propose to fully remove this sentence. Signed-off-by: Askar Safin Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella --- manual/startup.texi | 3 +-- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 2 deletions(-) (limited to 'manual') diff --git a/manual/startup.texi b/manual/startup.texi index 9bf24123f5..96a7a472bb 100644 --- a/manual/startup.texi +++ b/manual/startup.texi @@ -727,8 +727,7 @@ identified by a number. Macros for all the possible system call numbers are defined in @file{sys/syscall.h} The remaining arguments are the arguments for the system call, in -order, and their meanings depend on the kind of system call. Each kind -of system call has a definite number of arguments, from zero to five. +order, and their meanings depend on the kind of system call. If you code more arguments than the system call takes, the extra ones to the right are ignored. -- cgit 1.4.1