Fix typos via codespell. Signed-off-by: Andrew Kreimer <algonell@xxxxxxxxx> --- t/lib-bundle.sh | 2 +- t/lib-rebase.sh | 2 +- t/lib-sudo.sh | 2 +- t/lib-unicode-nfc-nfd.sh | 2 +- 4 files changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/t/lib-bundle.sh b/t/lib-bundle.sh index cf7ed818b2..62b7bb13c8 100644 --- a/t/lib-bundle.sh +++ b/t/lib-bundle.sh @@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ convert_bundle_to_pack () { } # Check count of objects in a bundle file. -# We can use "--thin" opiton to check thin pack, which must be fixed by +# We can use "--thin" option to check thin pack, which must be fixed by # command `git-index-pack --fix-thin --stdin`. test_bundle_object_count () { thin= diff --git a/t/lib-rebase.sh b/t/lib-rebase.sh index 11d2dc9fe3..0dd764310d 100644 --- a/t/lib-rebase.sh +++ b/t/lib-rebase.sh @@ -187,7 +187,7 @@ set_reword_editor () { exit 1 fi fi && - # There should be no uncommited changes + # There should be no uncommitted changes git diff --exit-code HEAD && # The todo-list should be re-read after a reword GIT_SEQUENCE_EDITOR="\"$PWD/reword-sequence-editor.sh\"" \ diff --git a/t/lib-sudo.sh b/t/lib-sudo.sh index b4d7788f4e..477e0fdc04 100644 --- a/t/lib-sudo.sh +++ b/t/lib-sudo.sh @@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ run_with_sudo () { local RUN="$TEST_DIRECTORY/$$.sh" write_script "$RUN" "$TEST_SHELL_PATH" # avoid calling "$RUN" directly so sudo doesn't get a chance to - # override the shell, add aditional restrictions or even reject + # override the shell, add additional restrictions or even reject # running the script because its security policy deem it unsafe sudo "$TEST_SHELL_PATH" -c "\"$RUN\"" ret=$? diff --git a/t/lib-unicode-nfc-nfd.sh b/t/lib-unicode-nfc-nfd.sh index 22232247ef..aed0a4dd44 100755 --- a/t/lib-unicode-nfc-nfd.sh +++ b/t/lib-unicode-nfc-nfd.sh @@ -74,7 +74,7 @@ test_lazy_prereq UNICODE_NFD_PRESERVED ' # Yielding: \xcf \x89 + \xcc \x94 + \xcd \x82 # # Note that I've used the canonical ordering of the -# combinining characters. It is also possible to +# combining characters. It is also possible to # swap them. My testing shows that that non-standard # ordering also causes a collision in mkdir. However, # the resulting names don't draw correctly on the -- 2.43.0