github.com/eikeon/docker@v1.5.0-rc4/docs/README.md (about) 1 # Docker Documentation 2 3 The source for Docker documentation is here under `sources/` and uses extended 4 Markdown, as implemented by [MkDocs](http://mkdocs.org). 5 6 The HTML files are built and hosted on `https://docs.docker.com`, and update 7 automatically after each change to the master or release branch of [Docker on 8 GitHub](https://github.com/docker/docker) thanks to post-commit hooks. The 9 `docs` branch maps to the "latest" documentation and the `master` (unreleased 10 development) branch maps to the "master" documentation. 11 12 ## Contributing 13 14 Be sure to follow the [contribution guidelines](../CONTRIBUTING.md). 15 In particular, [remember to sign your work!](../CONTRIBUTING.md#sign-your-work) 16 17 ## Getting Started 18 19 Docker documentation builds are done in a Docker container, which installs all 20 the required tools, adds the local `docs/` directory and builds the HTML docs. 21 It then starts a HTTP server on port 8000 so that you can connect and see your 22 changes. 23 24 In the root of the `docker` source directory: 25 26 $ make docs 27 .... (lots of output) .... 28 docker run --rm -it -e AWS_S3_BUCKET -p 8000:8000 "docker-docs:master" mkdocs serve 29 Running at: http://0.0.0.0:8000/ 30 Live reload enabled. 31 Hold ctrl+c to quit. 32 33 If you have any issues you need to debug, you can use `make docs-shell` and then 34 run `mkdocs serve` 35 36 ## Testing the links 37 38 You can use `make docs-test` to generate a report of missing links that are referenced in 39 the documentation - there should be none. 40 41 ## Adding a new document 42 43 New document (`.md`) files are added to the documentation builds by adding them 44 to the menu definition in the `docs/mkdocs.yml` file. 45 46 ## Style guide 47 48 If you have questions about how to write for Docker's documentation (e.g., 49 questions about grammar, syntax, formatting, styling, language, or tone) please 50 see the [style guide](sources/contributing/docs_style-guide.md). If something 51 isn't clear in the guide, please submit a PR to help us improve it. 52 53 ## Working using GitHub's file editor 54 55 Alternatively, for small changes and typos you might want to use GitHub's built- 56 in file editor. It allows you to preview your changes right on-line (though 57 there can be some differences between GitHub Markdown and [MkDocs 58 Markdown](http://www.mkdocs.org/user-guide/writing-your-docs/)). Just be 59 careful not to create many commits. And you must still [sign your 60 work!](../CONTRIBUTING.md#sign-your-work) 61 62 ## Branches 63 64 **There are two branches related to editing docs**: `master` and `docs`. You 65 should always edit the documentation on a local branch of the `master` 66 branch, and send a PR against `master`. 67 68 That way your fixes will automatically get included in later releases, and docs 69 maintainers can easily cherry-pick your changes into the `docs` release branch. 70 In the rare case where your change is not forward-compatible, you may need to 71 base your changes on the `docs` branch. 72 73 Also, now that we have a `docs` branch, we can keep the 74 [http://docs.docker.com](http://docs.docker.com) docs up to date with any bugs 75 found between Docker code releases. 76 77 > **Warning**: When *reading* the docs, the 78 > [http://docs-stage.docker.com](http://docs-stage.docker.com) documentation may 79 > include features not yet part of any official Docker release. The `beta-docs` 80 > site should be used only for understanding bleeding-edge development and 81 > `docs.docker.com` (which points to the `docs` branch`) should be used for the 82 > latest official release. 83 84 ## Publishing Documentation 85 86 To publish a copy of the documentation you need to have Docker up and running on 87 your machine. You'll also need a `docs/awsconfig` file containing the settings 88 you need to access the AWS bucket you'll be deploying to. 89 90 The release script will create an s3 if needed, and will then push the files to it. 91 92 [profile dowideit-docs] aws_access_key_id = IHOIUAHSIDH234rwf.... 93 aws_secret_access_key = OIUYSADJHLKUHQWIUHE...... region = ap-southeast-2 94 95 The `profile` name must be the same as the name of the bucket you are deploying 96 to - which you call from the `docker` directory: 97 98 make AWS_S3_BUCKET=dowideit-docs docs-release 99 100 This will publish _only_ to the `http://bucket-url/v1.2/` version of the 101 documentation. 102 103 If you're publishing the current release's documentation, you need to 104 also update the root docs pages by running 105 106 make AWS_S3_BUCKET=dowideit-docs BUILD_ROOT=yes docs-release 107 108 > **Note:** 109 > if you are using Boot2Docker on OSX and the above command returns an error, 110 > `Post http:///var/run/docker.sock/build?rm=1&t=docker-docs%3Apost-1.2.0-docs_update-2: 111 > dial unix /var/run/docker.sock: no such file or directory', you need to set the Docker 112 > host. Run `$(boot2docker shellinit)` to see the correct variable to set. The command 113 > will return the full `export` command, so you can just cut and paste. 114 115 ## Cherry-picking documentation changes to update an existing release. 116 117 Whenever the core team makes a release, they publish the documentation based 118 on the `release` branch (which is copied into the `docs` branch). The 119 documentation team can make updates in the meantime, by cherry-picking changes 120 from `master` into any of the docs branches. 121 122 For example, to update the current release's docs: 123 124 git fetch upstream 125 git checkout -b post-1.2.0-docs-update-1 upstream/docs 126 # Then go through the Merge commit linked to PR's (making sure they apply 127 to that release) 128 # see https://github.com/docker/docker/commits/master 129 git cherry-pick -x fe845c4 130 # Repeat until you have cherry picked everything you will propose to be merged 131 git push upstream post-1.2.0-docs-update-1 132 133 Then make a pull request to merge into the `docs` branch, __NOT__ into master. 134 135 Once the PR has the needed `LGTM`s, merge it, then publish to our beta server 136 to test: 137 138 git fetch upstream 139 git checkout docs 140 git reset --hard upstream/docs 141 make AWS_S3_BUCKET=beta-docs.docker.io BUILD_ROOT=yes docs-release 142 143 Then go to http://beta-docs.docker.io.s3-website-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/ 144 to view your results and make sure what you published is what you wanted. 145 146 When you're happy with it, publish the docs to our live site: 147 148 make AWS_S3_BUCKET=docs.docker.com BUILD_ROOT=yes DISTRIBUTION_ID=C2K6......FL2F docs-release 149 150 Test the uncached version of the live docs at http://docs.docker.com.s3-website-us-east-1.amazonaws.com/ 151 152 Note that the new docs will not appear live on the site until the cache (a complex, 153 distributed CDN system) is flushed. The `make docs-release` command will do this 154 _if_ the `DISTRIBUTION_ID` is set to the Cloudfront distribution ID (ask the meta 155 team) - this will take at least 15 minutes to run and you can check its progress 156 with the CDN Cloudfront Chrome addin. 157