The contributor workflow is identical to that used by the main project, with pull requests and contributor licenses requried. Therefore you should familiarise yourself with the standard workflow for Apache Brooklyn:
The documents are written in kramdown a superset of Markdown which is processed into HTML using Jekyll. In addition to the standard set of options and notation available with these platforms, a number of custom plug-ins have been implemented specifically for the Brooklyn docs. These are detailed in the contributing to docs doc.
First, if you have not already done so, clone the brooklyn
repository and subprojects
and set up the remotes as described in Guide for committers.
The Brooklyn documentation uses Jekyll to process the site content into HTML.
This in turn requires Ruby and gems as described in the Gemfile
:
install RVM to manage Ruby installations and sets of Ruby gems.
\curl -sSL https://get.rvm.io | bash -s stable
Close your shell session and start a new one, to get the new
environment that RVM has configured. Change directory to the location where
you checked out your repository and then to the docs/
subdirectory (where this file is located).
RVM should detect its configuration inside Gemfile
and try to configure itself.
Most likely it will report that the required version of Ruby is not installed,
and it will show the command that you need to run to install the correct version.
Follow the instructions it shows.
Once the correct version of Ruby is installed, change to your home directory
and then change back (cd ~ ; cd -
).
This will cause RVM to re-load configuration from Gemfile
with the correct version of Ruby.
Finally, run this command to install all the required Gems at the correct versions:
bundle install
Any time you need to reset your Ruby environment for jekyll
to run correctly,
return to the _build
directory and re-run the above command.
On some platforms there may be some fiddling required before jekyll
runs without errors,
but the ecosystem is fairly mature and most problems can be resolved with a bit of googling.
Some issues we've encountered are:
- on Mac, install xcode and its command-line tools
- if ruby gets confused about versions, clean out your gems
- if
libxml2
fails, setbundle config build.nokogiri --use-system-libraries
before the install (more details here) - on Ubuntu,
sudo apt-get install libxslt-dev libxml2-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev python-minimal
If you are building the PDF documentation, this requires wkhtmltopdf. You can download it from here or use the usual apt-get / yum / brew.
To build and most of see the documentation, run this command in your docs
folder:
jekyll serve
This will start up a local web server. The URL is printed by Jekyll when the server starts,
e.g. http://localhost:4000/ . The server will continue to run until you press Ctrl+C.
Modified files will be detected and regenerated (but that might take up to 1m).
Add --no-watch
argument to turn off regeneration, or use jekyll build
instead
to generate a site in _site
without a server.
This does not generate API docs and certain other material;
see the notes on _build/build.sh
below for that.
Note that there are two interlinked micro-sites in this project:
-
/website
: this contains the main Brooklyn website, including committer instructions, download instructions, and "learn more" pages; this content has only one instance on the live website, and as changes are published they replace old content -
/guide
: this contains the user guide and information pertaining to a specific Brooklyn version, including code structure and API documentation; the live website contains a copy of the guide for each Brooklyn version, with the code coming from the corresponding branch ingit
In addition note the following folders:
-
/style
: contains JS, CSS, and image resources; on the live website, this folder is installed at the root and into archived versions of the guide. -
/_build
: contains build scripts and configuration files, and tests for some of the plugins -
/_plugins
: contains Jekyll plugins which supply tags and generation logic for the sites, including links and tables of contents -
/_layouts
: contains HTML templates used by pages -
/_includes
: contains miscellaneous content used by templates and pages
Jekyll automatically excludes any file or folder beginning with _
from direct processing, so these do not show up in the _site
folder
(except where they are embedded in other files).
A word on branches: The /website
folder can be built against any branch;
typically changes are made and published from master
, to ensure that all versions
are listed correctly.
In contrast the /guide
folder should be updated and built against the branch for which
instructions are being made, e.g. master
for latest snapshot updates,
or 0.7.0-M2
for that milestone release.
It is permitted to make changes to docs (and docs only!) after a release has
been made. In most cases, these changes should also be made to master.
The two micro-sites above are installed on the live website as follows:
/
: contains the website/v/<version>
: contains specific versions of the guide, with the special folder/v/latest
containing the recent preferred stable/milestone version
The site itself is hosted at brooklyn.apache.org
with a CNAME
record from brooklyn.io
.
Content is published to the site by updating an
Apache subversion repository, brooklyn-site-public
at
https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/brooklyn/site
.
See below for more information.
For most users, the jekyll serve
command described above is sufficient to test changes locally.
The main reason to use the build scripts (and to read this section) is to push changes to the server
(requires Apache Brooklyn commit rights), or to test generated content such as API docs.
The build is controlled by config files in _build/
and accessed through _build/build.sh
.
There are a number of different builds possible; to list these, run:
_build/build.sh help
The normal build outputs to _site/
. The three builds which are most relevant to updating the live site are:
- website-root: to build the website only, in the root
- guide-latest: to build the guide only, in
/v/latest/
- guide-version: to build the guide only, in the versioned namespace e.g.
/v/<version>/
There are some others, including test-both
, which apply slightly different configurations
useful for testing.
Supported options beyond that include --serve
, to start a web browser serving the content of _site/
,
and --skip-javadoc
, to speed up the build significantly by skipping javadoc generation.
A handy command for testing the live files, analogous to jekyll serve
but with the correct file structure, and then checking links, is:
_build/build.sh test-both --skip-javadoc --serve
And to run link-checks quickly (without validating external links), use:
htmlproof --href_ignore "https?://127.*" --alt_ignore ".*" --disable_external _site
When doing a release and changing versions:
- Before branching:
- Change the
brooklyn-stable-version
variable in_config.yml
- Update
website/meta/versions.md
with a bit of info on this release
- Change the
- In the branch, with
change-version.sh
run (e.g. fromN.SNAPSHOT
toN
) - Ensure the
guide/start/release-notes.md
file is current - Build and publish
website-root
,guide-latest
, andguide-version
- In master, with
change-version.sh
run (e.g. toN+1-SNAPSHOT
)- Clear old stuff in the
guide/start/release-notes.md
file - Optionally build and public
guide-version
- Clear old stuff in the
The Apache website publication process is based around the Subversion repository;
the generated HTML files must be checked in to Subversion, whereupon an automated process
will publish the files to the live website.
So, to push changes the live site, you will need to have the website directory checked out
from the Apache subversion repository. We recommend setting this up as a sibling to your
brooklyn
git project directory:
# verify we're in the right location and the site does not already exist
ls _build/build.sh || { echo "ERROR: you should be in the docs/ directory to run this command" ; exit 1 ; }
ls ../../brooklyn-site-public > /dev/null && { echo "ERROR: brooklyn-site-public dir already exists" ; exit 1 ; }
pushd `pwd -P`/../..
svn --non-interactive --trust-server-cert co https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/brooklyn/site brooklyn-site-public
# verify it
cd brooklyn-site-public
ls style/img/apache-brooklyn-logo-244px-wide.png || { echo "ERROR: checkout is wrong" ; exit 1 ; }
export BROOKLYN_SITE_DIR=`pwd`
popd
echo "SUCCESS: checked out site in $BROOKLYN_SITE_DIR"
With this checked out, the build.sh
script can automatically copy generated files into the right subversion sub-directories
with the --install
option. (This assumes the relative structure described above; if you have a different
structure, set BROOKLYN_SITE_DIR to point to the directory as above. Alternatively you can copy files manually,
using the instructions in build.sh
as a guide.)
A typical update consists of the following commands (or a subset),
copied to ${BROOKLYN_SITE_DIR-../../brooklyn-site-public}
:
# ensure svn repo is up-to-date (very painful otherwise)
cd ${BROOKLYN_SITE_DIR-../../brooklyn-site-public}
svn up
cd -
# versioned guide, safe for snapshots, relative to /v/<version>/
_build/build.sh guide-version --install
# main website, if desired, relative to /
_build/build.sh website-root --install
# this version as the latest guide, if desired, relative to /v/latest/
_build/build.sh guide-latest --install
(If HTML-Proofer find failures, then fix the links etc. Unfortunately, the javadoc build gives a lot of warnings. Fixing those is not part of this activity).
You can then preview the public site of localhost:4000 with:
_build/serve-public-site.sh
Next it is recommended to go to the SVN dir and
review the changes using the usual svn
commands -- status
, diff
, add
, rm
, etc.
Note in particular that deleted files need special attention (there is no analogue of
git add -A
!). Look at deletions carefully, to try to avoid breaking links, but once
you've done that these commands might be useful:
cd ${BROOKLYN_SITE_DIR-../../brooklyn-site-public}
svn add * --force
export DELETIONS=$( svn status | sed -e '/^!/!d' -e 's/^!//' )
if [ ! -z "${DELETIONS}" ] ; then svn rm ${DELETIONS} ; fi
Then check in the changes (probably picking a better message than shown here):
svn ci -m 'Update Brooklyn website'
The changes should become live within a few minutes.
SVN commits can be slow, particularly if you've regenerated javadoc.
(The date is included in all javadoc files so the commands above will cause all javadoc to be updated.)
Use _build/build.sh guide-version --install --skip-javadoc
to update master while re-using the previously installed javadoc.
That command will fail if javadoc has not been generated for that version.
We use some custom Jekyll plugins, in the _plugins
dir:
- include markdown files inside other files (see, for example, the
*.include.md
files which contain text which is used in multiple other files) - generate the site structure / menu objects
- parse JSON which we can loop over in our markdown docs (to build up models; previously used for the TOC in the guide, but now replaced with site_structure)
- trim whitespace of ends of variables
Archived versions are kept under /v/
in the website. New versions should be added with
the appropriate directory (_build/build.sh guide-version
above will do this).
These versions take their own copy of the style
files so that changes there will not affect future versions.
A list of available versions is in website/meta/versions.md
.