Replicated Product Documentation
- How to Contribute to the Documentation
- Setting Up Local WYSIWYG Previews
- Folder Structure and TOC
- Topic Templates
- Filenaming
- Images
- Using Markdown with our Docusaurus CSS
- Style Guidelines
- SME and Editorial Reviews
Welcome to the repository for the Replicated documentation site.
This repository has been made public so that vendors and the open-source community can contribute to the content using the following methods:
-
Submit a PR You can submit a PR directly from a specific topic in the documentation by clicking the Create pull request or raise issue on GitHub at the bottom of the page. This method lets you edit the content directly and commit your changes on a new branch. After submitting your proposed changes, the Replicated team will verify the accuracy of the changes and perform an editorial review. If the PR is approved, it will be merged directly into the main branch.
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Open a Github Issue - To open a GitHub issue for this repository, click the Issues tab and click New Issue. This method may be more useful when you want to report a bug specifically for the documentation. If you are having an issue with the product itself, we encourage you to report it to us in a Zendesk ticket, Slack message, or by emailing [email protected].
This website is built using Docusaurus 2, a modern static website generator.
When you submit a PR in GitHub, Netlify builds a preview automatically. However, you can preview your changes locally. To do this, you must install yarn
and run a build to create a Docusaurus preview in your local browser.
The Yarn documentation recommends installing Yarn using the npm package manager, which comes bundled with Node.js when you install it on your system.
After you install npm, you can run the following both to install and upgrade Yarn:
npm install --global yarn
If you use Homebrew, you can run this command to install Yarn:
$ brew install yarn
- Install the docusaurus package using Yarn:
yarn add docusaurus
- Run the following command to start a local development server and open up a browser window. Most changes are reflected live without having to restart the server. This preview shows the formatting and styles as they would render on the live site (also known as what-you-see-is-what-you-get or WYSIWYG), which can be more helpful than viewing content in a VS Code preview.
$ yarn start
If yarn start
refuses to start, try reinstalling the yarn
CLI. You do not need to uninstall yarn
before reinstalling it. However, if you get build errors from your content, such as broken links, the Preview itself fails and error messages appear in the terminal that can help you troubleshoot the problems in the content.
The folder structure is broken into several high-level categories under the main docs
folder: vendor, enterprise, reference, release notes.
Images are under the static
> images
folder.
The TOC is managed in the sidebar.js
file. You only need to edit the sidebar.js
file when you are adding a new topic or deleting an existing topic. The sidebar.js
file is the one that causes most of the merge conflicts because many technical writers are working on content daily. You will need to accept the changes from other contributors if you are committing a PR.
Don't worry if you're not sure where in the TOC a new topic belongs. When you submit your PR, the Documentation team will edit it and help to find the right placement.
The right-hand TOC is created automatically when you add headings to a topic.
Please copy the topic templates that are located in the templates
folder to create new content. Right now we have a two templates for creating procedures:
-
A single procedure/task:
procedure.md
-
A process/workflow or tutorial that contains multiple procedures/tasks:
process-multiple-procedures.md
Save the new topic to the correct folder and be sure to follow the filenaming convention.
If you are adding a new file, it must be named following our naming conventions. The file name should always start with the feature type (such as licenses, helm, or gitops). Depending on the content type, it typically also includes a secondary descriptor and a verb. Verbs are used when you are creating a task topic.
Because we author content using Markdown, you must add the .md
the file extension to the file name.
If you are adding a new topic to an existing feature category, follow the existing naming convention for that category.
Example: Concept topic
snapshots-backup-hooks.md
Example: Task topic
releases-creating-customer.md
Example: Tutorial
tutorial-ha-cluster-deploying.md
-
Screenshots are use sparingly to minimize the maintenance of out-of-date content. However, we do include some screenshots to provide context.
-
Use a focused area of the UI, unless the entire screen is truly needed. If using a focused area, use approximately 400 pixels for the width. If capturing the entire screen, use a maximum of 600 pixels for the width.
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We only use PNG format, which renders a better quality and lossless compression.
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For privacy and legal purposes, do not reveal personal information, IP addresses, domain information, login credentials and so on in screenshots, code blocks, or text.
-
Add alt text for all images to provide accessibility. The user will hear the alt text spoken out loud by the screen reader, so it is important to use succinct text that is clear and complete. For more information about alt text formatting, see the following section.
-
For images that are difficult to see, add a link below the image where the reader can view a larger version:
[View a larger version of this image](PATH-TO-LARGER-IMAGE-FILE)
wherePATH-TO-LARGER-VERSION
is the path to the larger image in thestatic/images
folder. For an example, see the private registry diagram in Connecting to a Private Image Registry.
Replicated uses its own CSS, and Docusaurus supports its own specific Markdown syntax. The following table provides an overview of the supported syntax elements.
Element | Syntax |
---|---|
Headings | # H1 , ## H2 , ### H3 |
Bold | **bold text** |
Italic | _italicized text_ |
Ordered List | 1. First item (use 1. for each item) |
Unordered List | - or * (for each item) |
Code or command in a sentence | code |
Link - external site | [Title](https://www.example.com) |
Link - topic in same folder | [Title](filename) without file extension |
Link - topic in different folder | [Title](../folder/file-name) without file extension |
Link - section in topic in same folder | [Title](file-name#section-name) |
Link - section in topic in different folder | [Title](../folder/file-name#section-name) |
Image | ![alt text](images/<image-name>.png) |
Note: Alt text, used with image syntax, is parsed by screen readers to support accessibility.
Note admonitions are formatted as follows:
:::note
text
:::
Important admonitions, typically used as a warning, are formatted as follows:
:::important
text
:::
Traditional markdown for tables can be limiting. Instead, we use HTML tables, which lets us manage the width of the table columns. The template topic procedure.md
contains an example of the HTML formatting for tables.
Note: There are still many instances of the old markdown table formatting in the content that was carried over from the content migration, but we do not encourage the use of it going forward.
Whether you are editing existing content or adding a new topic, our goal is to make it task-based. The procedure.md
template provides the formatting guidelines that you need. You can also see a published example of a task here.
Replicated product documentation has in-house style guidelines that the Documentation team uses when reviewing your PR. Please feel free to just add the content you need, knowing that our team will be there to assist with editorial reviews and information architecture, such as TOC placement, whether to create a task, and so on. The Documentation team will actively write content, not just give editorial reviews, so we take the heavy burden off of you. We encourage your contributions in the true open-source spirit.
Replicated employees can review more information in the Documentation Style Guide in the employee handbook.
All PRs that are submitted are reviewed by the Replicated Docs team for editorial review.
Content that is submitted by our customers and the open-source community are also reviewed by our Replicated subject matter experts (SMEs) to help ensure technical accuracy.