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-rw-r--r--doc/hurd.texi9
-rw-r--r--doc/navigating6
2 files changed, 4 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/doc/hurd.texi b/doc/hurd.texi
index 070daed4..dbd5b451 100644
--- a/doc/hurd.texi
+++ b/doc/hurd.texi
@@ -1912,7 +1912,7 @@ existing translators:
@itemize @bullet
@item
-Disk-based filesystem formats, such as @code{ext2fs}, @code{ufs}, and
+Disk-based filesystem formats, such as @code{ext2fs} and
@code{iso9660fs} (@pxref{Stored Filesystems}).
@item
@@ -3572,13 +3572,6 @@ FIXME: finish
FIXME: finish
-@node BSD Unix FS
-@section BSD Unix FS
-@scindex ufs
-
-FIXME: finish
-
-
@node ISO-9660 CD-ROM FS
@section ISO-9660 CD-ROM FS
@pindex iso9660fs
diff --git a/doc/navigating b/doc/navigating
index 2d836255..c000c56e 100644
--- a/doc/navigating
+++ b/doc/navigating
@@ -27,9 +27,9 @@ Most trivfs filesystems don't even do any filesystem stuff at all.
See, for example, the null translator (trans/null.c) for a simple
example of using trivfs.
-diskfs is used for disk-based filesystems, with two in existence now:
-ext2fs and ufs. If you write another diskfs-based filesystem, you
-should DEFINITELY imitate the algorithms found in ext2fs and ufs; this
+diskfs is used for disk-based filesystems, with one in existence now:
+ext2fs. If you write another diskfs-based filesystem, you
+should DEFINITELY imitate the algorithms found in ext2fs; this
is crucial to getting locking right.
netfs is used for nfs and other such things: with directories, and all