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Docker Documentation
The source for Docker documentation is here under sources/
and uses extended
Markdown, as implemented by MkDocs.
The HTML files are built and hosted on
http://docs.docker.com, and update automatically
after each change to the docs
branch of Docker on
GitHub thanks to post-commit hooks.
Contributing
Be sure to follow the contribution guidelines. In particular, remember to sign your work!
Getting Started
Docker documentation builds are done in a Docker container, which installs all
the required tools, adds the local docs/
directory and builds the HTML docs.
It then starts a HTTP server on port 8000 so that you can connect and see your
changes.
In the root of the docker
source directory:
$ make docs
.... (lots of output) ....
docker run --rm -it -e AWS_S3_BUCKET -p 8000:8000 "docker-docs:master" mkdocs serve
Running at: http://0.0.0.0:8000/
Live reload enabled.
Hold ctrl+c to quit.
If you have any issues you need to debug, you can use make docs-shell
and then
run mkdocs serve
Testing the links
You can use make docs-test
to generate a report of missing links that are referenced in
the documentation - there should be none.
Adding a new document
New document (.md
) files are added to the documentation builds by adding them
to the menu definition in the docs/mkdocs.yml
file.
Style guide
If you have questions about how to write for Docker's documentation (e.g., questions about grammar, syntax, formatting, styling, language, or tone) please see the style guide. If something isn't clear in the guide, please submit a PR to help us improve it.
Working using GitHub's file editor
Alternatively, for small changes and typos you might want to use GitHub's built- in file editor. It allows you to preview your changes right on-line (though there can be some differences between GitHub Markdown and MkDocs Markdown). Just be careful not to create many commits. And you must still sign your work!
Branches
Branch | Description | URL (published via commit-hook) |
---|---|---|
docs |
Official release documentation | http://docs.docker.com |
master |
Unreleased development work | http://docs.master.dockerproject.com |
There are two branches related to editing docs: master
and docs
. You
should always edit the documentation on a local branch of the master
branch,
and send a PR against master
. That way your fixes will automatically get
included in later releases, and docs maintainers can easily cherry-pick your
changes into the docs
release branch. In the rare case where your change is
not forward-compatible, you may need to base your changes on the docs
branch.
Also, since there is a separate docs
branch, we can keep
http://docs.docker.com up to date with any bugs found
between Docker code releases.
Publishing Documentation
To publish a copy of the documentation you need to have Docker up and running on
your machine. You'll also need a docs/awsconfig
file containing the settings
you need to access the AWS bucket you'll be deploying to.
The release script will create an s3 if needed, and will then push the files to it.
[profile dowideit-docs]
aws_access_key_id = IHOIUAHSIDH234rwf....
aws_secret_access_key = OIUYSADJHLKUHQWIUHE......
region = ap-southeast-2
The profile
name must be the same as the name of the bucket you are deploying
to - which you call from the docker
directory:
make AWS_S3_BUCKET=dowideit-docs docs-release
This will publish only to the http://bucket-url/v1.2/
version of the
documentation.
If you're publishing the current release's documentation, you need to also update the root docs pages by running
make AWS_S3_BUCKET=dowideit-docs BUILD_ROOT=yes docs-release
Note: if you are using Boot2Docker on OSX and the above command returns an error,
Post http:///var/run/docker.sock/build?rm=1&t=docker-docs%3Apost-1.2.0-docs_update-2: dial unix /var/run/docker.sock: no such file or directory', you need to set the Docker host. Run
$(boot2docker shellinit)to see the correct variable to set. The command will return the full
export` command, so you can just cut and paste.
Cherry-picking documentation changes to update an existing release.
Whenever the core team makes a release, they publish the documentation based
on the release
branch (which is copied into the docs
branch). The
documentation team can make updates in the meantime, by cherry-picking changes
from master
into any of the docs branches.
For example, to update the current release's docs:
git fetch upstream
git checkout -b post-1.2.0-docs-update-1 upstream/docs
# Then go through the Merge commit linked to PR's (making sure they apply
to that release)
# see https://github.com/docker/docker/commits/master
git cherry-pick -x fe845c4
# Repeat until you have cherry picked everything you will propose to be merged
git push upstream post-1.2.0-docs-update-1
Then make a pull request to merge into the docs
branch, NOT into master.
Once the PR has the needed LGTM
s, merge it, then publish to our beta server
to test:
git fetch upstream
git checkout docs
git reset --hard upstream/docs
make AWS_S3_BUCKET=beta-docs.docker.io BUILD_ROOT=yes docs-release
Then go to http://beta-docs.docker.io.s3-website-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/ to view your results and make sure what you published is what you wanted.
When you're happy with it, publish the docs to our live site:
make AWS_S3_BUCKET=docs.docker.com BUILD_ROOT=yes DISTRIBUTION_ID=C2K6......FL2F docs-release
Test the uncached version of the live docs at http://docs.docker.com.s3-website-us-east-1.amazonaws.com/
Note that the new docs will not appear live on the site until the cache (a complex,
distributed CDN system) is flushed. The make docs-release
command will do this
if the DISTRIBUTION_ID
is set to the Cloudfront distribution ID (ask the meta
team) - this will take at least 15 minutes to run and you can check its progress
with the CDN Cloudfront Chrome addin.