The documentation source files are under the ../content
directory in the corda-docs-portal
repository, and is written in markdown.
The HTML documentation output is generated using Hugo. You can build and edit the docs locally using npm and a markdown editor.
- Install npm.
- Install hugo.
- Install a markdown editor of your choice.
- Fork the
corda/corda-docs-portal
repository, and clone your fork. - From the root directory of the repository, run
npm install
. This installs all the required modules to build the documentation locally. - Open a new branch and create/edit the relevant markdown file(s) in the
content
directory. - Run
hugo server
to build the documentation locally. After you make changes, the content should refresh dynamically. - If the
hugo server
command didn't work, runhugo server --watch=false
. Please note that due to an existing unresolved Hugo bug that manifests for larger websites likedocs.r3.com
, it may not possible to build the documentation locally with dynamic content refresh - you need toCTRL-C
and run the build again after you make changes to your content. - Navigate to
https://localhost:1313
to view the locally built documentation. - Push your changes to GitHub and open a pull request.
To best way to keep your fork in sync with the main documentation repository is to add it an upstream
remote after you create your fork.
To add an upstream remote:
git remote add upstream https://github.com/corda/corda-docs-portal.git
The URL of a remote can be changed using the git remote set-url
command.
To view your remotes:
git remote -v
If you need to remove a remote:
git remote rm remote-name
To update your current branch, rebase on the latest changes from the upstream remote. This will protect any unmerged commits from being overwritten:
git rebase upstream/main
We would greatly appreciate your feedback about the documentation content, website, and repository.
- Chat with us on our
#docs
channel on slack. You can also join a lot of other slack channels there and have access to 1-on-1 communication with members of the R3 team and the online community. - Create a new GitHub issue in this repository - submit technical feedback, draw attention to a potential documentation bug, or share ideas for improvement and general feedback.
- Help us to improve the docs by contributing to the content directly. It's simple - just fork this repository and raise a PR of your own - R3's Technical Writers will review it and apply the relevant suggestions. Learn how to do this here.