diff --git a/share/man/man9/fpu_kern.9 b/share/man/man9/fpu_kern.9 index a0263fe0750..207e5e80542 100644 --- a/share/man/man9/fpu_kern.9 +++ b/share/man/man9/fpu_kern.9 @@ -23,8 +23,8 @@ .\" .\" $FreeBSD$ .\" -.Dd June 21, 2014 -.Dt KERN_FPU 9 +.Dd June 23, 2014 +.Dt FPU_KERN 9 .Os .Sh NAME .Nm fpu_kern @@ -47,11 +47,11 @@ The .Nm family of functions allows the use of FPU hardware in kernel code. Modern FPUs are not limited to providing hardware implementation for -floating point arithmetic, they offer advanced accelerators for cryptography +floating point arithmetic; they offer advanced accelerators for cryptography and other computational-intensive algorithms. These facilities share registers with the FPU hardware. .Pp -Typical kernel code does not need to access to the FPU. +Typical kernel code does not need access to the FPU. Saving a large register file on each entry to the kernel would waste time. When kernel code uses the FPU, the current FPU state must be saved to @@ -80,6 +80,7 @@ without sleep. .It 0 No special handling is required. .El +.Pp The function returns the allocated context area, or .Va NULL if the allocation failed. @@ -121,6 +122,7 @@ The function correctly handles such contexts. .El .El +.Pp The function does not sleep or block. It could cause the .Nm Device Not Available @@ -173,7 +175,7 @@ and false otherwise. .Sh NOTES The .Nm -is currently implemented only for i386 and amd64 architectures. +is currently implemented only for the i386 and amd64 architectures. .Pp There is no way to handle floating point exceptions raised from kernel mode.