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authorRich Trott <rtrott@gmail.com>2019-12-23 23:38:38 +0300
committerRich Trott <rtrott@gmail.com>2019-12-27 08:37:24 +0300
commita5eb139df754d6c25dd70b5bd3759f01dc93f3fa (patch)
tree0b951590e2534e4a7b097be12086080d1b6e1de3 /doc
parentb5834a49b33f67410c06320edb4859f749633cc5 (diff)
doc,async_hooks: use code markup/markdown in headers
PR-URL: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/31086 Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <anna@addaleax.net> Reviewed-By: Ruben Bridgewater <ruben@bridgewater.de>
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r--doc/api/async_hooks.md32
1 files changed, 16 insertions, 16 deletions
diff --git a/doc/api/async_hooks.md b/doc/api/async_hooks.md
index 2d981652efd..893c6cc77a3 100644
--- a/doc/api/async_hooks.md
+++ b/doc/api/async_hooks.md
@@ -78,7 +78,7 @@ function destroy(asyncId) { }
function promiseResolve(asyncId) { }
```
-#### async_hooks.createHook(callbacks)
+#### `async_hooks.createHook(callbacks)`
<!-- YAML
added: v8.1.0
@@ -171,7 +171,7 @@ provided by AsyncHooks itself. The logging should then be skipped when
it was the logging itself that caused AsyncHooks callback to call. By
doing this the otherwise infinite recursion is broken.
-#### asyncHook.enable()
+#### `asyncHook.enable()`
* Returns: {AsyncHook} A reference to `asyncHook`.
@@ -187,7 +187,7 @@ const async_hooks = require('async_hooks');
const hook = async_hooks.createHook(callbacks).enable();
```
-#### asyncHook.disable()
+#### `asyncHook.disable()`
* Returns: {AsyncHook} A reference to `asyncHook`.
@@ -203,7 +203,7 @@ Key events in the lifetime of asynchronous events have been categorized into
four areas: instantiation, before/after the callback is called, and when the
instance is destroyed.
-##### init(asyncId, type, triggerAsyncId, resource)
+##### `init(asyncId, type, triggerAsyncId, resource)`
* `asyncId` {number} A unique ID for the async resource.
* `type` {string} The type of the async resource.
@@ -390,7 +390,7 @@ API the user's callback is placed in a `process.nextTick()`.
The graph only shows *when* a resource was created, not *why*, so to track
the *why* use `triggerAsyncId`.
-##### before(asyncId)
+##### `before(asyncId)`
* `asyncId` {number}
@@ -407,7 +407,7 @@ asynchronous resources like a TCP server will typically call the `before`
callback multiple times, while other operations like `fs.open()` will call
it only once.
-##### after(asyncId)
+##### `after(asyncId)`
* `asyncId` {number}
@@ -417,7 +417,7 @@ If an uncaught exception occurs during execution of the callback, then `after`
will run *after* the `'uncaughtException'` event is emitted or a `domain`'s
handler runs.
-##### destroy(asyncId)
+##### `destroy(asyncId)`
* `asyncId` {number}
@@ -429,7 +429,7 @@ made to the `resource` object passed to `init` it is possible that `destroy`
will never be called, causing a memory leak in the application. If the resource
does not depend on garbage collection, then this will not be an issue.
-##### promiseResolve(asyncId)
+##### `promiseResolve(asyncId)`
<!-- YAML
added: v8.6.0
@@ -460,7 +460,7 @@ init for PROMISE with id 6, trigger id: 5 # the Promise returned by then()
after 6
```
-#### async_hooks.executionAsyncId()
+#### `async_hooks.executionAsyncId()`
<!-- YAML
added: v8.1.0
@@ -501,7 +501,7 @@ const server = net.createServer((conn) => {
Promise contexts may not get precise `executionAsyncIds` by default.
See the section on [promise execution tracking][].
-#### async_hooks.triggerAsyncId()
+#### `async_hooks.triggerAsyncId()`
* Returns: {number} The ID of the resource responsible for calling the callback
that is currently being executed.
@@ -577,7 +577,7 @@ Library developers that handle their own asynchronous resources performing tasks
like I/O, connection pooling, or managing callback queues may use the
`AsyncWrap` JavaScript API so that all the appropriate callbacks are called.
-### Class: AsyncResource
+### Class: `AsyncResource`
The class `AsyncResource` is designed to be extended by the embedder's async
resources. Using this, users can easily trigger the lifetime events of their
@@ -615,7 +615,7 @@ asyncResource.asyncId();
asyncResource.triggerAsyncId();
```
-#### new AsyncResource(type\[, options\])
+#### `new AsyncResource(type[, options])`
* `type` {string} The type of async event.
* `options` {Object}
@@ -649,7 +649,7 @@ class DBQuery extends AsyncResource {
}
```
-#### asyncResource.runInAsyncScope(fn\[, thisArg, ...args\])
+#### `asyncResource.runInAsyncScope(fn[, thisArg, ...args])`
<!-- YAML
added: v9.6.0
-->
@@ -664,7 +664,7 @@ of the async resource. This will establish the context, trigger the AsyncHooks
before callbacks, call the function, trigger the AsyncHooks after callbacks, and
then restore the original execution context.
-#### asyncResource.emitDestroy()
+#### `asyncResource.emitDestroy()`
* Returns: {AsyncResource} A reference to `asyncResource`.
@@ -673,11 +673,11 @@ be thrown if it is called more than once. This **must** be manually called. If
the resource is left to be collected by the GC then the `destroy` hooks will
never be called.
-#### asyncResource.asyncId()
+#### `asyncResource.asyncId()`
* Returns: {number} The unique `asyncId` assigned to the resource.
-#### asyncResource.triggerAsyncId()
+#### `asyncResource.triggerAsyncId()`
* Returns: {number} The same `triggerAsyncId` that is passed to the
`AsyncResource` constructor.