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authorJoseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>2012-03-08 01:27:38 +0000
committerJoseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>2012-03-08 01:27:38 +0000
commita7a93d5086103f52367d3e9776976eb0b0bc6c7b (patch)
treea6c659fdb9c384d56bd8c01a55c9332e791f1341 /manual/time.texi
parent07037eeb43ca1e0ac2802e3a1492cecf869c63c6 (diff)
Clean up glibc manual references to "GNU system" (bug 6911).
Diffstat (limited to 'manual/time.texi')
-rw-r--r--manual/time.texi12
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/manual/time.texi b/manual/time.texi
index a2e11a1a9d..a410def3eb 100644
--- a/manual/time.texi
+++ b/manual/time.texi
@@ -84,7 +84,7 @@ time between calendar time @var{time1} and calendar time @var{time0}, as
a value of type @code{double}. The difference ignores leap seconds
unless leap second support is enabled.
-In the GNU system, you can simply subtract @code{time_t} values. But on
+In @theglibc{}, you can simply subtract @code{time_t} values. But on
other systems, the @code{time_t} data type might use some other encoding
where subtraction doesn't work directly.
@end deftypefun
@@ -163,7 +163,7 @@ you can get the information with the functions in this section.
CPU time (@pxref{Time Basics}) is represented by the data type
@code{clock_t}, which is a number of @dfn{clock ticks}. It gives the
total amount of time a process has actively used a CPU since some
-arbitrary event. On the GNU system, that event is the creation of the
+arbitrary event. On @gnusystems{}, that event is the creation of the
process. While arbitrary in general, the event is always the same event
for any particular process, so you can always measure how much time on
the CPU a particular computation takes by examining the process' CPU
@@ -172,7 +172,7 @@ time before and after the computation.
@cindex clock ticks
@cindex ticks, clock
-In the GNU system, @code{clock_t} is equivalent to @code{long int} and
+On @gnulinuxhurdsystems{}, @code{clock_t} is equivalent to @code{long int} and
@code{CLOCKS_PER_SEC} is an integer value. But in other systems, both
@code{clock_t} and the macro @code{CLOCKS_PER_SEC} can be either integer
or floating-point types. Casting CPU time values to @code{double}, as
@@ -319,7 +319,7 @@ indicate failure.
@strong{Portability Note:} The @code{clock} function described in
@ref{CPU Time} is specified by the @w{ISO C} standard. The
-@code{times} function is a feature of POSIX.1. In the GNU system, the
+@code{times} function is a feature of POSIX.1. On @gnusystems{}, the
CPU time is defined to be equivalent to the sum of the @code{tms_utime}
and @code{tms_stime} fields returned by @code{times}.
@@ -487,7 +487,7 @@ following @code{errno} error condition is defined for this function:
@table @code
@item ENOSYS
The operating system does not support getting time zone information, and
-@var{tzp} is not a null pointer. The GNU operating system does not
+@var{tzp} is not a null pointer. @gnusystems{} do not
support using @w{@code{struct timezone}} to represent time zone
information; that is an obsolete feature of 4.3 BSD.
Instead, use the facilities described in @ref{Time Zone Functions}.
@@ -2462,7 +2462,7 @@ handler. And, if @code{sleep} is interrupted by delivery of a signal
whose handler requests an alarm or alters the handling of @code{SIGALRM},
this handler and @code{sleep} will interfere.
-On the GNU system, it is safe to use @code{sleep} and @code{SIGALRM} in
+On @gnusystems{}, it is safe to use @code{sleep} and @code{SIGALRM} in
the same program, because @code{sleep} does not work by means of
@code{SIGALRM}.