blk: fix a couple of trivial documentation typos

In some cases, the param variable is wrong, and in other cases we have
undocumented arguments.

Fix the docs.

Signed-off-by: Mattijs Korpershoek <mkorpershoek@baylibre.com>
Reviewed-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
This commit is contained in:
Mattijs Korpershoek 2022-10-17 09:35:04 +02:00 committed by Tom Rini
parent 59c585e9c6
commit 601d4e1af6

View file

@ -119,7 +119,7 @@ int blkcache_init(void);
* @param start - starting block number
* @param blkcnt - number of blocks to read
* @param blksz - size in bytes of each block
* @param buf - buffer to contain cached data
* @param buffer - buffer to contain cached data
*
* Return: - 1 if block returned from cache, 0 otherwise.
*/
@ -136,7 +136,7 @@ int blkcache_read(int iftype, int dev,
* @param start - starting block number
* @param blkcnt - number of blocks available
* @param blksz - size in bytes of each block
* @param buf - buffer containing data to cache
* @param buffer - buffer containing data to cache
*
*/
void blkcache_fill(int iftype, int dev,
@ -250,7 +250,7 @@ struct blk_ops {
* The MMC standard provides for two boot partitions (numbered 1 and 2),
* rpmb (3), and up to 4 addition general-purpose partitions (4-7).
*
* @desc: Block device to update
* @dev: Block device to update
* @hwpart: Hardware partition number to select. 0 means the raw
* device, 1 is the first partition, 2 is the second, etc.
* @return 0 if OK, -ve on error
@ -642,6 +642,7 @@ int blk_print_part_devnum(enum uclass_id uclass_id, int devnum);
*
* @uclass_id: Block device type
* @devnum: Device number
* @start: Start block number to read (0=first)
* @blkcnt: Number of blocks to read
* @buffer: Address to write data to
* Return: number of blocks read, or -ve error number on error
@ -654,6 +655,7 @@ ulong blk_read_devnum(enum uclass_id uclass_id, int devnum, lbaint_t start,
*
* @uclass_id: Block device type
* @devnum: Device number
* @start: Start block number to write (0=first)
* @blkcnt: Number of blocks to write
* @buffer: Address to read data from
* Return: number of blocks written, or -ve error number on error