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doc: sort os alphabetically

Reorders, with no contextual changes, the os documentation alphabetically.

PR-URL: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/3662
Reviewed-By: Evan Lucas <evanlucas@me.com>
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Jeremiah Senkpiel <fishrock123@rocketmail.com>
v5.x
Tristian Flanagan 9 years ago
committed by Rod Vagg
parent
commit
22961e011c
  1. 114
      doc/api/os.markdown

114
doc/api/os.markdown

@ -6,67 +6,16 @@ Provides a few basic operating-system related utility functions.
Use `require('os')` to access this module.
## os.tmpdir()
Returns the operating system's default directory for temporary files.
## os.homedir()
Returns the home directory of the current user.
## os.endianness()
Returns the endianness of the CPU. Possible values are `'BE'` for big endian
or `'LE'` for little endian.
## os.hostname()
Returns the hostname of the operating system.
## os.type()
Returns the operating system name. For example `'Linux'` on Linux, `'Darwin'`
on OS X and `'Windows_NT'` on Windows.
## os.platform()
## os.EOL
Returns the operating system platform. Possible values are `'darwin'`,
`'freebsd'`, `'linux'`, `'sunos'` or `'win32'`. Returns the value of
`process.platform`.
A constant defining the appropriate End-of-line marker for the operating
system.
## os.arch()
Returns the operating system CPU architecture. Possible values are `'x64'`,
`'arm'` and `'ia32'`. Returns the value of `process.arch`.
## os.release()
Returns the operating system release.
## os.uptime()
Returns the system uptime in seconds.
## os.loadavg()
Returns an array containing the 1, 5, and 15 minute load averages.
The load average is a measure of system activity, calculated by the operating
system and expressed as a fractional number. As a rule of thumb, the load
average should ideally be less than the number of logical CPUs in the system.
The load average is a very UNIX-y concept; there is no real equivalent on
Windows platforms. That is why this function always returns `[0, 0, 0]` on
Windows.
## os.totalmem()
Returns the total amount of system memory in bytes.
## os.freemem()
Returns the amount of free system memory in bytes.
## os.cpus()
Returns an array of objects containing information about each CPU/core
@ -143,6 +92,35 @@ Example inspection of os.cpus:
Note that since `nice` values are UNIX centric in Windows the `nice` values of
all processors are always 0.
## os.endianness()
Returns the endianness of the CPU. Possible values are `'BE'` for big endian
or `'LE'` for little endian.
## os.freemem()
Returns the amount of free system memory in bytes.
## os.homedir()
Returns the home directory of the current user.
## os.hostname()
Returns the hostname of the operating system.
## os.loadavg()
Returns an array containing the 1, 5, and 15 minute load averages.
The load average is a measure of system activity, calculated by the operating
system and expressed as a fractional number. As a rule of thumb, the load
average should ideally be less than the number of logical CPUs in the system.
The load average is a very UNIX-y concept; there is no real equivalent on
Windows platforms. That is why this function always returns `[0, 0, 0]` on
Windows.
## os.networkInterfaces()
Get a list of network interfaces:
@ -173,7 +151,29 @@ Get a list of network interfaces:
Note that due to the underlying implementation this will only return network
interfaces that have been assigned an address.
## os.EOL
## os.platform()
A constant defining the appropriate End-of-line marker for the operating
system.
Returns the operating system platform. Possible values are `'darwin'`,
`'freebsd'`, `'linux'`, `'sunos'` or `'win32'`. Returns the value of
`process.platform`.
## os.release()
Returns the operating system release.
## os.tmpdir()
Returns the operating system's default directory for temporary files.
## os.totalmem()
Returns the total amount of system memory in bytes.
## os.type()
Returns the operating system name. For example `'Linux'` on Linux, `'Darwin'`
on OS X and `'Windows_NT'` on Windows.
## os.uptime()
Returns the system uptime in seconds.

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