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doc: standardize on "host name" in async_hooks.md
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Our docs have a mix of "hostname" and "host name" in prose.

Let's follow the usage of Unix man pages, RFCs, and most
professionally-edited sources, and use "host name" in prose and
"hostname" to refer to the command and in code.

Lint rule forthcoming.

PR-URL: #31326
Refs: #31073
Reviewed-By: Luigi Pinca <[email protected]>
Reviewed-By: Richard Lau <[email protected]>
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
Reviewed-By: Trivikram Kamat <[email protected]>
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Trott authored and codebytere committed Mar 17, 2020
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Showing 1 changed file with 3 additions and 3 deletions.
6 changes: 3 additions & 3 deletions doc/api/async_hooks.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -296,7 +296,7 @@ of propagating what resource is responsible for the new resource's existence.
`resource` is an object that represents the actual async resource that has
been initialized. This can contain useful information that can vary based on
the value of `type`. For instance, for the `GETADDRINFOREQWRAP` resource type,
`resource` provides the hostname used when looking up the IP address for the
`resource` provides the host name used when looking up the IP address for the
host in `net.Server.listen()`. The API for accessing this information is
currently not considered public, but using the Embedder API, users can provide
and document their own resource objects. For example, such a resource object
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -383,8 +383,8 @@ Timeout(7) -> TickObject(6) -> root(1)
```

The `TCPSERVERWRAP` is not part of this graph, even though it was the reason for
`console.log()` being called. This is because binding to a port without a
hostname is a *synchronous* operation, but to maintain a completely asynchronous
`console.log()` being called. This is because binding to a port without a host
name is a *synchronous* operation, but to maintain a completely asynchronous
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
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