This folder contains scripts to automatically generate documentation about the
different Special Interest Groups (SIGs), Working Groups (WGs)
and Committees of Kubernetes. The authoritative
source for SIG information is the sigs.yaml
file in the project root.
All updates must be done there.
The schema for this file should be self explanatory. However, if you need to see all the options, check out the generator code in app.go
.
The documentation follows a template and uses the values from sigs.yaml
:
- Header:
header.tmpl
- List:
list.tmpl
- SIG README:
sig_readme.tmpl
- WG README:
wg_readme.tmpl
- Committee README:
committee_readme.tmpl
Time Zone gotcha:
Time zones make everything complicated.
And Daylight Saving time makes it even more complicated.
Meetings are specified with a time zone and we generate a link to http://www.thetimezoneconverter.com/ so people can easily convert it to their local time zone.
To make this work you need to specify the time zone in a way that the web site recognizes.
Practically, that means US pacific time must be PT (Pacific Time)
.
PT
isn't good enough, unfortunately.
When an update happens to the this file, the next step is to generate the accompanying documentation. This takes the format of the following types of doc files:
sig-<sig-name>/README.md
wg-<working-group-name>/README.md
committee-<committee-name>/README.md
sig-list.md
For example, if a contributor has updated sig-cluster-lifecycle
, the
following files will be generated:
sig-cluster-lifecycle/README.md
sig-list.md
To (re)build documentation for all the SIGs in a go environment, run:
make generate
or to run this inside a docker container:
make generate-dockerized
To build docs for one SIG, run one of these commands:
make WHAT=sig-apps
make WHAT=cluster-lifecycle
make WHAT=wg-resource-management
make WHAT=container-identity
where the WHAT
var refers to the directory being built.
To generate the annual report template for a specific year:
make ANNUAL_REPORT=true
This will generate the annual report template for the previous year, as well as
drop GitHub issue templates into the generator/generated/
directory.
You can generate the issues from these templates by running:
for i in $(ls -1 generator/generated/*.md); do hub issue create -F $i && rm $i; done
You may run into rate limiting issues, which is why this command removes the files after an issue has been successfully created.
If your SIG, WG or Committee wishes to add custom content, you can do so by placing it within the following code comments:
<!-- BEGIN CUSTOM CONTENT -->
<!-- END CUSTOM CONTENT -->
Anything inside these code comments are saved by the generator and appended to newly generated content. Updating any content outside this block, however, will be overwritten the next time the generator runs.
An example might be:
<!-- BEGIN CUSTOM CONTENT -->
## Upcoming SIG goals
- Do this
- Do that
<!-- END CUSTOM CONTENT -->
Similarly, custom aliases can be added in the OWNERS_ALIASES
file by placing
it within the following code comments:
## BEGIN CUSTOM CONTENT
## END CUSTOM CONTENT