📖 This section contains the OSM Docs
🚢 Also the website config to generate docs.openservicemesh.io
🔗 Looking for the main OSM website? Visit osm-www
docs.openservicemesh.io is a static site. The documentation content needs to be located at content/docs/
.
The content served on https://docs.openservicemesh.io is served from the latest release on this repo. Most updates should be made only in main and can be previewed at https://main--osm-docs.netlify.app/.
If it's necessary to change published release-specific docs, those changes should be made in the release-specific branch serving those docs. Once configured as described in Adding release-specific docs, PRs to that branch will auto-build just like PRs to main.
References to the osm branch, osm version, and envoy version should be parameterized unless they are in a sample output. For example, a reference to OSM's constants.go
should be parameterized as https://github.com/openservicemesh/osm/blob/{{< param osm_branch >}}/pkg/constants/constants.go
.
To ensure the docs content renders correctly in the theme, each page will need to have front matter metadata. Example front matter:
---
title: "Docs Home"
linkTitle: "Home"
description: "OSM Docs Home"
weight: 1
type: docs
---
- inclusion of
type: docs
is important for the theme to properly index the site contents - the
linkTitle
attribute allows you to simplify the name as it appears in the left-side nav bar - ideally it should be short and clear - whereas the title can handle long form names for pages/documents.
Look for a branch in the upstream repo named release-vX.Y
, where X
and Y
correspond to the major and minor version of the new release. For example, release-v0.8. If the branch already exists, move to the next step.
Identify the base commit in the main branch for the release and cut a release branch off main.
Note: Care must be taken to ensure the release branch is created from a commit meant for the release. If unsure about the commit to use to create the release branch, please open an issue in the osm repo and a maintainer will assist you with this.
$ git checkout -b release-<version> <commit-id> # ex: git checkout -b release-v0.4 0d05587
Push the release branch to the upstream repo (NOT forked), identified here by the upstream remote.
$ git push upstream release-<version> # ex: git push upstream release-v0.4
Netlify will auto-deploy the branch to a url like https://release-v0-8--osm-docs.netlify.app/. This can be used to preview and test that the branch builds correctly.
Proceed with the following steps once the release branch has been created in the OSM repo.
-
Create a new branch off of the release branch to maintain updates specific to the new version. Let's call it the patch branch. The patch branch should not be created in the upstream repo.
-
On the patch branch, update the
osm_branch
,osm_version
, andenvoy_version
in config.toml to the new release versions.osm_branch = "release-v0.8" osm_version = "v0.8.0" envoy_version = "v1.17.2"
-
Create a pull request from the patch branch to the release branch. Proceed to the next step once the pull request is approved and merged.
- Open an issue in this repo asking for a new DNS record be added to the site (via Netlify), to assign a subdomain to the deployed branch.
- When published, the newly-added branch will function like https://release-v0-8.docs.openservicemesh.io/
-
Create another patch branch off of the release branch (or use the existing patch branch after fetching and rebasing on the release branch).
-
On the patch branch, add the new release as a version parameter in config.toml with the
latest
tag. The version parameters represent all currently supported versions of OSM and are used to populate the Release drop down menu on the site. The url for the new release is formattedhttps://release-vX-Y.docs.openservicemesh.io/
.[[params.versions]] version = "v0.8 (latest)" url = "https://release-v0-8.docs.openservicemesh.io/"
-
Create a pull request from the patch branch to the release branch. Proceed to the next step once the pull request is approved and merged.
-
Update the
redirects
innetlify.toml
on the main branch to redirecthttps://docs.openservicemesh.io/
tohttps//release-vX-Y.docs.openservicemesh.io/
whererelease-vX-Y
is the newest release. -
Each previous release-specific site that is still supported needs to be able to access the latest release from the Release drop down. On the previous release branches, update the config.toml to list the new release version as shown above.
-
The
latest
tag must be removed from all previous versions. For example, thelatest
tag must be removed fromv0.7 (latest)
on therelease-v0.7
branch. -
Add the banner to a previous release specific site if it has not been configured.
-
Update the version banner parameter in
config.toml
to enable the banner at the top of each previous release-specific site that will tell visitors which version they are looking at. For example, the version banner forrelease-v0-7
would be configured as follows:[params.versionbanner] show = true archive = "v0.7"
-
Update
content/docs/releases/docs.md
to include the new release and update the inactive releases list.
Once a new OSM version has been released, update the OSM and Kubernetes support matrix. The Kubernetes version support will be the current releases of Kubernetes at the time of the OSM release.
Copy entire directory structure under content/en
to each other localization directory, such as content/zh
. Each file in each localization must be individually translated for a given release. For more details on the translation process, see Localization.
The OSM docs can be translated into multiple localizations. To ensure the most accurate content, each localization must be translated for every release and each file should be manually translated for a given localization. When a new release is published, the English version of every content file for that release is copied to each localization. Those temporary English files can then be individually translated.
If you find a technical error in the content, file a PR to the English version of the content file in the main
branch so that the fix is carried forward into future releases. Localized content for a release is not carried forward into the next release so any fixes applied directly to localized content will be lost.
To localize one or more files:
- Create a new branch off of the latest release branch, such as
release-v1.1
. - Translate the temporary English version of the file(s) in the existing localization directory, such as
content/zh/_index.md
. - File a PR targeting the latest release branch.
When you add a new localization, you need to create BOTH an initial translation for the latest release as well as the scaffold for the new localization in the main
branch.
To create the initial translation for the latest release:
- Create a branch based on the latest release branch, such as
release-v1.1
. - Add a new localization directory to the
content/
directory. - Copy the entire directory structure under
content/en
to the new localization directory. - Add a new language to
config.toml
in the[languages]
section. - Add a
Disallow
entry inthemes/dosmy/layouts/robots.txt
for your localization directory. - Optionally, you can begin translating one or more files in the new localization directory.
- File a PR targeting the latest release branch.
To create the scaffold for the new localization:
- Create a branch based on
main
. - Add the same localization directory to the
content/
directory, but only containing a.gitkeep
file. - Copy the new language configuration to
config.toml
in the[languages]
section, but comment it out. - Add a
Disallow
entry inthemes/dosmy/layouts/robots.txt
for your localization directory. - File a PR targeting the
main
branch.
- built with the Hugo static site generator
- custom theme uses Docsy as a base, with Bootstrap as the underlying css framework and some OSM custom sass
- deployed to Netlify via merges to main. (@flynnduism can grant additional access to account)
- metrics tracked via Google Analytics
- Hugo installation guide
- NPM packages are installed by running
yarn
. Install Yarn if you need to.
// install npm packages
yarn
// rebuild the site (to compile latest css/js)
hugo
// or serve the site for local dev
hugo serve
The site auto deploys the main branch via Netlify. Once pull requests are merged the changes will appear at docs.openservicemesh.io after a couple of minutes. Check the logs for details.
hugo serve
will run the site locally at localhost:1313