diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'manual/users.texi')
-rw-r--r-- | manual/users.texi | 18 |
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/manual/users.texi b/manual/users.texi index 9e397d3d4d..a622dd5fd4 100644 --- a/manual/users.texi +++ b/manual/users.texi @@ -877,7 +877,7 @@ password database file. If the function returns null @var{result} points to the structure with the wanted data (normally this is in @var{result_buf}). If errors -occured the return value is non-null and @var{result} contains a null +occurred the return value is non-null and @var{result} contains a null pointer. @end deftypefun @@ -916,7 +916,7 @@ buffer or length @var{buflen} starting at @var{buffer}. If the function returns zero @var{result} points to the structure with the wanted data (normally this is in @var{result_buf}). If errors -occured the return value is non-zero and @var{result} contains a null +occurred the return value is non-zero and @var{result} contains a null pointer. @end deftypefun @@ -1100,7 +1100,7 @@ group database file. If the function returns zero @var{result} points to the structure with the wanted data (normally this is in @var{result_buf}). If errors -occured the return value is non-zero and @var{result} contains a null +occurred the return value is non-zero and @var{result} contains a null pointer. @end deftypefun @@ -1137,7 +1137,7 @@ buffer or length @var{buflen} starting at @var{buffer}. If the function returns zero @var{result} points to the structure with the wanted data (normally this is in @var{result_buf}). If errors -occured the return value is non-zero and @var{result} contains a null +occurred the return value is non-zero and @var{result} contains a null pointer. @end deftypefun @@ -1173,7 +1173,7 @@ them individual names. More concrete: a netgroup is a list of triples consisting of a host name, a user name, and a domain name, where any of the entries can be a wildcard entry, matching all inputs. A last possibility is that names of other netgroups can also be given in the -list specifying a netgroup. So one can construct arbitrary hierachies +list specifying a netgroup. So one can construct arbitrary hierarchies without loops. Sun's implementation allows netgroups only for the @code{nis} or @@ -1208,7 +1208,7 @@ in the netgroup with name @var{netgroup}. When the call is successful (i.e., when a netgroup with this name exist) the return value is @code{1}. When the return value is @code{0} no -netgroup of this name is known or some other error occured. +netgroup of this name is known or some other error occurred. @end deftypefun It is important to remember that there is only one single state for @@ -1235,7 +1235,7 @@ The returned string pointers are only valid unless no of the netgroup related functions are called. The return value is @code{1} if the next entry was successfully read. A -value of @code{0} means no further entry exist or internal errors occured. +value of @code{0} means no further entries exist or internal errors occurred. @end deftypefun @comment netdb.h @@ -1249,7 +1249,7 @@ even after other netgroup related functions are called. The return value is @code{1} if the next entry was successfully read and the buffer contains enough room to place the strings in it. @code{0} is returned in case no more entries are found, the buffer is too small, or -internal errors occured. +internal errors occurred. This function is a GNU extension. The original implementation in the SunOS libc does not provide this function. @@ -1292,7 +1292,7 @@ otherwise. The return value is @code{1} if an entry matching the given triple is found in the netgroup. The return value is @code{0} if the netgroup itself is not found, the netgroup does not contain the triple or -internal errors occured. +internal errors occurred. @end deftypefun @node Database Example, , Netgroup Database, Users and Groups |