- * Historically, the inode was partitioned into 4 128-byte areas,
- * the last 3 being defined as unions which could have multiple
- * uses. The first 96 bytes had been completely unused until
- * an index table was added to the directory. It is now more
- * useful to describe the last 3/4 of the inode as a single
- * union. We would probably be better off redesigning the
- * entire structure from scratch, but we don't want to break
- * commonality with OS/2's JFS at this time.
+ * Historically, the inode was partitioned into 4 128-byte areas,
+ * the last 3 being defined as unions which could have multiple
+ * uses. The first 96 bytes had been completely unused until
+ * an index table was added to the directory. It is now more
+ * useful to describe the last 3/4 of the inode as a single
+ * union. We would probably be better off redesigning the
+ * entire structure from scratch, but we don't want to break
+ * commonality with OS/2's JFS at this time.