This repo houses the assets used to build the Flux project's landing page at https://fluxcd.io.
Note: The sources for some of Flux's documentation are housed in other repositories within https://github.com/fluxcd. Documentation issues and pull requests should be made against those repos.
Project Docs Site Github Source Flux https://fluxcd.io/flux https://github.com/fluxcd/website Flagger https://fluxcd.io/flagger https://github.com/fluxcd/website
The main landing page of this website can be modified in config.yaml
.
Almost all of the content lives in the content/en/<project>
directories. Here are some special cases.
./content/en/blog
contains all blog posts - make sure you update the front-matter for posts to show up correctly../external-sources/
defines how files from other repositories are pulled in. We currently do this for Markdown files from the/fluxcd/community
and/fluxcd/.github
repositories. (make gen-content
pulls these in.)- Flux CLI docs (
cmd
) andcomponents
docs: under./content/en/flux
but pulled in through inmake gen-content
as well. /static/_redirects
defines redirects on https://fluxcd.io. Check out https://docs.netlify.com/routing/redirects/ for the syntax definition and how to test if things work.
In order to run the Flux site locally, you need to install:
- Node.js
- The Hugo static site generator. Make sure to install the "extended" variant of Hugo with support for the Hugo Pipes feature and to check the
netlify.toml
configuration file for which version of Hugo you should install. - jq
Once those tools are installed, fetch the assets necessary to run the site:
npm install
python3 -m pip install -r requirements.txt
Then run the site in "server" mode:
make serve
Navigate to http://localhost:1313 to see the site running in your browser. As you make updates to the site, the browser will immediately update to reflect those changes.
The Flux website is published automatically by Netlify when changes are pushed to the main
branch. The site does not need to be published manually.
When you submit a pull request to this repository, Netlify builds a "deploy preview" of your changes. You can see that preview by clicking on the deploy/netlify link in the pull request window.
Run make docker-preview
and wait until the following output appears:
Environment: "development"
Serving pages from memory
Web Server is available at //localhost:1313/ (bind address 0.0.0.0)
Press Ctrl+C to stop
Visit http://localhost:1313, where any changes will be visible from inside of the running container. Markdown files updated in content/
should trigger a browser refresh as they are saved.
The docker-preview
target builds the theme, which takes a while and doesn't need to be repeated unless you are making changes to the theme. On subsequent runs, running make docker-serve
instead will skip building the theme.
This depends on the Docker image fluxcd/website:hugo-support
which should be kept updated when the website's build-time dependencies have changed; this image contains everything needed to run the docs locally.
If this doesn't work, the image may be stale. The instructions to update it are below.
This works the same as local development above, but with the Okteto CLI you do not need to run a Linux machine or virtual machine on your local development environment.
First, make sure you are permitted to deploy pods on any local or remote Kubernetes cluster. Download the Okteto CLI for Windows, Mac, or Linux.
Okteto CLI is a light-weight client-side tool that replaces Docker with a remote cluster. You can run hugo server
remotely in this way; any changes to the local clone are synchronized to the cluster. The experience is basically the same as local development, (except that you won't need to install Docker.)
Instead of make docker-serve
, type okteto up
.
You can change the behavior in okteto.yml
according to the Okteto Manifest Reference, for example adding a persistent volume can speed up the synchronization of the working directory files to the remote pod on repeated runs.
(For maintainers) Using a machine with docker
and logged in with an account that has permission to push to docker.io/fluxcd/website
repo, run make docker-push
.
The dependencies of docker-push
are explained below. If the above worked then you are done, and should not need to read any further. Rebuilding hugo
takes a long time and should be avoided when the version hasn't changed or it isn't needed; run make docker-push-support
instead to skip building hugo
.
Update the docker-support
image tag whenever build-time (or "serve"-time) dependencies have changed.
These targets as explained below are run in the appropriate order as dependencies of make docker-push
.
-
TODO
: add a system/integration test forwebsite
that verifies any changes have not brokenmake docker-serve
, for example by adding new dependencies without mentioning them in the./Dockerfile
.
The Flux website has some build-time dependencies including Python3, PyYAML, rsync
, grep
, nodejs
, npm
, curl
, jq
, (and potentially others that may be added in the future.) Flux-specific dependencies are prepared in an image that gets tagged as docker.io/fluxcd/website:hugo-support
.
This image is built from the Dockerfile
in ./
; run make docker-build-support
to rebuild it locally, (or run as make docker-push-support
to build and also push.)
The Flux website also depends on a specific version of Hugo, which unfortunately does not provide docker images for each version. So we build it from source, with the HUGO_BUILD_TAGS=extended
build arg enabled.
Run make docker-push-hugo
to build and also push this image target.
This will run make hugo
to get a shallow clone of the gohugoio/hugo
repository at the right HUGO_VERSION
and make docker-build-hugo
to build a hugo container base image. (This target compiles golibsass
which is very large, and may take a while.)
These are all the dependencies of make docker-push
.