The main initialization function (rte_eal_init) has documentation
about a feature from another era: memory partition.

Curiously, this lost treasure is found only now,
suggesting there may be other interesting things to discover in the doc.
To all aspiring Indiana Jones: the hunt is open!

Signed-off-by: Thomas Monjalon <tho...@monjalon.net>
---
 lib/librte_eal/include/rte_eal.h | 8 --------
 1 file changed, 8 deletions(-)

diff --git a/lib/librte_eal/include/rte_eal.h b/lib/librte_eal/include/rte_eal.h
index 0ae12cf4fb..eaf6469e50 100644
--- a/lib/librte_eal/include/rte_eal.h
+++ b/lib/librte_eal/include/rte_eal.h
@@ -67,16 +67,8 @@ int rte_eal_iopl_init(void);
  *
  * This function is to be executed on the MAIN lcore only, as soon
  * as possible in the application's main() function.
- *
- * The function finishes the initialization process before main() is called.
  * It puts the WORKER lcores in the WAIT state.
  *
- * When the multi-partition feature is supported, depending on the
- * configuration (if CONFIG_RTE_EAL_MAIN_PARTITION is disabled), this
- * function waits to ensure that the magic number is set before
- * returning. See also the rte_eal_get_configuration() function. Note:
- * This behavior may change in the future.
- *
  * @param argc
  *   A non-negative value.  If it is greater than 0, the array members
  *   for argv[0] through argv[argc] (non-inclusive) shall contain pointers
-- 
2.28.0

Reply via email to