On 7/28/20 7:11 PM, Luc Van Oostenryck wrote:
> An excerpt from POSIX contains three occurrences of '<slash>' but
> the first two are spelled starting with an HTML entity: '&lt;slash>'
> 
> Fix this by replacing the stray HTML entity by a '<'.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Luc Van Oostenryck <[email protected]>

Hi Luc,
One day late.
Fixed and merged yesterday.

https://lore.kernel.org/linux-doc/[email protected]/


> ---
>  Documentation/filesystems/path-lookup.rst | 4 ++--
>  1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
> 
> diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/path-lookup.rst 
> b/Documentation/filesystems/path-lookup.rst
> index e2ba15146365..d46688d6770d 100644
> --- a/Documentation/filesystems/path-lookup.rst
> +++ b/Documentation/filesystems/path-lookup.rst
> @@ -78,8 +78,8 @@ particular, ``mkdir()`` and ``rmdir()`` each create or 
> remove a directory named
>  by the final component, and they are required to work with pathnames
>  ending in "``/``".  According to POSIX_
>  
> -  A pathname that contains at least one non- &lt;slash> character and
> -  that ends with one or more trailing &lt;slash> characters shall not
> +  A pathname that contains at least one non-<slash> character and
> +  that ends with one or more trailing <slash> characters shall not
>    be resolved successfully unless the last pathname component before
>    the trailing <slash> characters names an existing directory or a
>    directory entry that is to be created for a directory immediately
> 

cheers.
-- 
~Randy

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