Polymer docs are mostly in Markdown with some HTML. Jekyll is used to generate the static HTML for the site. The output is generated into a folder called _site
and served from Google App Engine.
We use Jekyll 1.0+ and Grunt to generate the documentation. You'll need to install the requirements before working on the docs (these instructions assume NPM is already installed):
sudo gem install jekyll
sudo npm install -g grunt-cli
npm install
You'll also need the App Engine dev server to preview the docs locally. Download the SDK.
Checkout this repo:
git clone https://github.com/Polymer/docs.git --recursive
Create a directory called polymer-all
and check out Polymer's tools into it:
cd docs
mkdir polymer-all; cd polymer-all
git clone https://github.com/Polymer/tools.git --recursive
Run the pull-all.sh
script:
./tools/bin/pull-all.sh
This pulls down a number of repos needed by the documentation. The first time you run this script will take several minutes.
This repo (Polymer/docs
) is where the documentation source files live. To make a change:
- Make your edits.
- To build the docs, run
grunt
in base of the docs diretory you checked out. This starts up jekyll and watches for changes as you make edits. You may need to runnpm install
in your docs directory if it's a new checkout. - Lastly, fire up the App Engine dev server in this folder (
dev_appserver.py .
) to preview the docs.
Jekyll generates the static site in a folder named _site
. Note: If you're not running jekyll to rebuild the site, you won't see your changes in the dev server.
Once your changes look good, git commit
them and push.
Note: only project owners can publish the documentation.
If you have things checked out correctly in polymer-all
using the pull-all.sh
script, you should be able to generate the documentation using:
grunt docs
This needs to be done before pushing.
Last step is to push the docs to App Engine. In your Polymer/docs
directory, run:
./scripts/deploy_site.sh
This script builds the site, api docs, runs Vulcanizer over the imports, and deploys to App Engine.