Pivotal Cloud Foundry Partners Template
This template helps partners prepare documentation for Pivotal Cloud Foundry (PCF) partner services that appear on Pivotal Network.
Overview
Every partner service in PCF is documented on our PCF documentation site. The links to these partner service docs appear on the front page under Partner Services for Pivotal Cloud Foundry.
For a good example of a partner service doc, see MongoDB Enterprise Service for PCF.
How To Use This Template
Partners use this template to develop the documentation for their PCF service. This repo currently includes templates for the following topics:
- index.html.md.erb: The index of your docs.
- installing.html.md.erb: How to install and configure your product tile.
- using.html.md.erb: How to use your product.
- release-notes.html.md.erb: Release notes for your product.
To begin using this repo to develop your documentation, perform the following steps:
- Make a fork of this repo.
- Clone your fork onto your local machine.
- Work your way through each topic, replacing the placeholders in ALL-CAPS and following the instructions in bold.
- When writing your documentation, follow the guidelines in Style Notes for Tile Authors.
- Complete the subnav by replacing the placeholders in ALL-CAPS in the subnav file at
docs-book/master_middleman/source/subnavs/myservice_subnav.erb
in this repo. - View your documentation as a live local site in a browser, by following the steps below in the How To Use Bookbinder To View Your Docs section.
- When you've finished your documentation, make a pull request to merge your fork into this repo and email the PCF Docs Team at cf-docs@pivotal.io.
How To Use Bookbinder To View Your Docs
Bookbinder is a command-line utility for stitching Markdown docs into a hostable web app. The PCF Docs Team uses Bookbinder to publish our docs site, but you can also use Bookbinder to view a live version of your documentation on your local machine.
Bookbinder draws the content for the site from docs-content
, the subnav from docs-book
, and various layout configuration and assets from docs-layout
.
To use Bookbinder to view your documentation, perform the following steps:
- Install Bookbinder by running
gem install bookbindery
. If you have trouble, consult the Zero to Bookbinder section to make sure you have the correct dependencies installed. - On your local machine,
cd
intodocs-book
in the cloned repo. - Run
bundle install
to make sure you have all the necessary gems installed. - Build your documentation site with
bookbinder
in one of the two following ways:- Run
bundle exec bookbinder watch
to build an interactive version of the docs and navigate tolocalhost:4567/myservice/
in a browser. (It may take a moment for the site to load at first.) This builds a site from your content repo atdocs-content
, and then watches that repo to update the site if you make any changes to the repo. - Run
bundle exec bookbinder bind local
to build a Rack web-app of the book. After the bind has completed,cd
into thefinal_app
directory and runrackup
. Then navigate tolocalhost:9292/myservice/
in a browser.
- Run
Zero to Bookbinder: How to Install Bookbinder and Build, View, and Edit Your Docs from Nothing
If you are reading this, Pivotal has invited you to a git repo where you can build and edit documentation in the Ruby / Markdown / HTML format that the online publishing tool Bookbinder uses to build Pivotal's documentation.
Here's how to install Bookbinder and build your docs from the repo, starting from scratch, on a Mac OS X machine.
Note: All steps below are implicitly preceded with, "If you haven't already..." You should skip any installation steps that have already contributed to your environment.
Install Ruby
In Terminal window:
-
Make and
cd
into a workspace directory.$ mkdir workspace
$ cd workspace
-
Follow the instructions at
http://brew.sh
to install brew / homebrew$ /usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
-
Install your own (non-system) ruby.
$ brew install ruby
Set up Git
-
Download and Install git by following the instructions at git-scm.com.
-
Install your own (non-system) bash-completion (optional).
$ brew install git bash-completion
-
If you don't already have one, generate a public/private RSA key pair, and save the key to your
~/.ssh
directory.$ ssh-keygen Generating public/private rsa key pair. Enter file in which to save the key (/Users/pspinrad/.ssh/id_rsa):
-
Get a Github account.
-
Add your RSA public key to your Github account / profile page.
$ cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub # copy and paste this into Github profile page as new key
Get the Correct Ruby Version for Bookbinder: Ruby 2.3.0
-
Install a Ruby manager such as chruby.
$ brew install chruby
-
Add your Ruby manager to your
~/.bashrc
by appending the following line:source /usr/local/opt/chruby/share/chruby/chruby.sh
-
Install the
ruby-install
installer.$ brew install ruby-install
-
Run
ruby-install
to install Ruby 2.3.0.$ ruby-install ruby 2.3.0
-
Select the following Ruby version.
chruby ruby-2.3.0
Install Bookbinder
-
Install
bundler
.$ gem install bundler
-
Install bookbinder (the
bookbindery
gem).$ gem install bookbindery
Build the Docs Locally
-
Clone the docs template repo you will be building from.
$ git clone git@github.com:pivotal-cf/docs-partners-template
-
cd
into thebook
subdirectory of the repo.$ cd docs-partners-template/docs-book
-
Run
bundle install
to install all book dependencies.$ bundle install
-
Run
bundle exec bookbinder watch
to build the book on your machine.$ bundle exec bookbinder watch
-
Browse to
localhost:4567
to view the book locally and "watch" any changes that you make to sourcehtml.md.erb
files. As you make and save changes to the local source files for your site, you will see them in your browser after a slight delay. -
After each session of writing or revising your docs source files, commit and push them to your github repo.
About Subnavs of Published Tile Documentation
After your tile documentation has been published, the subnav used for the live documentation is contained in this directory: https://github.com/pivotal-cf/docs-book-partners/tree/master/master_middleman/source/subnavs
However, you should also continue to maintain the local subnav file so that the subnav looks correct when you or a Pivotal writer builds your documentation locally with bookbinder for review or editing.
To edit a subnav for your tile documentation, follow these steps:
-
Make a pull request against the subnav file in https://github.com/pivotal-cf/docs-book-partners/tree/master/master_middleman/source/subnavs
-
Make the same changes in the subnav file (in /docs-book/master_middleman/source/subnavs/ of your tile repo) and make a pull request for that change too.
Happy documenting!