We use Hugo to format and generate our website, the Docsy theme for styling and site structure, and Netlify to manage the deployment of the site. Hugo is an open-source static site generator that provides us with templates, content organisation in a standard directory structure, and a website generation engine. You write the pages in Markdown (or HTML if you want), and Hugo wraps them up into a website.
All submissions, including submissions by project members, require review. We use GitHub pull requests for this purpose. Consult GitHub Help for more information on using pull requests.
Here's a quick guide to updating the docs. It assumes you're familiar with the GitHub workflow and you're happy to use the automated preview of your doc updates:
- Fork olm-docs on GitHub.
- Make your changes and send a pull request (PR).
- If you're not yet ready for a review, create a draft PR to indicate it's a work in progress. (Don't add the Hugo property "draft = true" to the page front matter, because that prevents the auto-deployment of the content preview described in the next point.)
- Wait for the automated PR workflow to do some checks. When it's ready, you should see a comment like this: deploy/netlify — Deploy preview ready!
- Click Details to the right of "Deploy preview ready" to see a preview of your updates.
- Continue updating your doc and pushing your changes until you're happy with the content.
- When you're ready for a review, remove any "WIP" markers and mark PR ready for review.
If you've just spotted something you'd like to change while using the docs, Docsy has a shortcut for you:
- Click Edit this page in the top right hand corner of the page.
- If you don't already have an up to date fork of the project repo, you are prompted to get one - click Fork this repository and propose changes or Update your Fork to get an up to date version of the project to edit. The appropriate page in your fork is displayed in edit mode.
- Follow the rest of the Quick start with Netlify process above to make, preview, and propose your changes.
If you want to run your own local Hugo server to preview your changes as you work follow this guide.
If you've found a problem in the docs, but you're not sure how to fix it yourself, please create an issue in the olm-docs repo. You can also create an issue about a specific page by clicking the Create Issue button in the top right hand corner of the page.
- Docsy user guide: All about Docsy, including how it manages navigation, look and feel, and multi-language support.
- Hugo documentation: Comprehensive reference for Hugo.