Making the indentions in Kconfig file a bit more consistent. Signed-off-by: Enrico Weigelt, metux IT consult <info@xxxxxxxxx> --- drivers/block/Kconfig | 28 ++++++++++++++-------------- 1 file changed, 14 insertions(+), 14 deletions(-) diff --git a/drivers/block/Kconfig b/drivers/block/Kconfig index ecceaaa1a66f..48fee9be3cf8 100644 --- a/drivers/block/Kconfig +++ b/drivers/block/Kconfig @@ -142,10 +142,10 @@ config BLK_DEV_UBD bool "Virtual block device" depends on UML help - The User-Mode Linux port includes a driver called UBD which will let - you access arbitrary files on the host computer as block devices. - Unless you know that you do not need such virtual block devices say - Y here. + The User-Mode Linux port includes a driver called UBD which will let + you access arbitrary files on the host computer as block devices. + Unless you know that you do not need such virtual block devices say + Y here. config BLK_DEV_UBD_SYNC bool "Always do synchronous disk IO for UBD" @@ -156,16 +156,16 @@ config BLK_DEV_UBD_SYNC Linux 'Virtual Machine' uses a journalling filesystem and the host computer crashes. - Synchronous operation (i.e. always writing data to the host's disk - immediately) is configurable on a per-UBD basis by using a special - kernel command line option. Alternatively, you can say Y here to - turn on synchronous operation by default for all block devices. + Synchronous operation (i.e. always writing data to the host's disk + immediately) is configurable on a per-UBD basis by using a special + kernel command line option. Alternatively, you can say Y here to + turn on synchronous operation by default for all block devices. - If you're running a journalling file system (like reiserfs, for - example) in your virtual machine, you will want to say Y here. If - you care for the safety of the data in your virtual machine, Y is a - wise choice too. In all other cases (for example, if you're just - playing around with User-Mode Linux) you can choose N. + If you're running a journalling file system (like reiserfs, for + example) in your virtual machine, you will want to say Y here. If + you care for the safety of the data in your virtual machine, Y is a + wise choice too. In all other cases (for example, if you're just + playing around with User-Mode Linux) you can choose N. config BLK_DEV_COW_COMMON bool @@ -430,7 +430,7 @@ config VIRTIO_BLK depends on VIRTIO help This is the virtual block driver for virtio. It can be used with - QEMU based VMMs (like KVM or Xen). Say Y or M. + QEMU based VMMs (like KVM or Xen). Say Y or M. config BLK_DEV_RBD tristate "Rados block device (RBD)" -- 2.11.0