8.6 KiB
TestStudio for APIs Documentation
This repository contains the common infrastructure for building markdown documentation with Jekyll.
Deploymnet and Testing
- When a new commit is pushed to this repository, a webhook starts this Jenkins job: Deploy.Apitesting.Documentation
- The Jenkins job pulls the latest version of the documentation on the slave machine, builds the documentation, creates a deployment package and initiates deployment of this package on the Test encironment.
- You can see the deployment environments here: http://deploy.telerik.com/web/dashboard/documentation/stacks/teststudioapis.docs
- Once the deployment on the Test environment is completed, you can test it against: http://testdocs.telerik.com/teststudio-apis/
- Once testing against Test is completed, you can trigger on demand promotion to the Live environment using the deploy tool's user interface.
Installation
-
Add a new git remote to the documentation repository
-
Install Ruby 2.3.x - http://rubyinstaller.org/downloads/ - x86 platform select add to Path Variables
-
Download Ruby DEVELOPMENT KIT - http://rubyinstaller.org/downloads' and follow the instructions at 'http://github.com/oneclick/rubyinstaller/wiki/Development-Kit' x86 platform
-
Run it to extract it somewhere (permanent). Then cd to it, run ruby dk.rb init, ruby dk.rb install and devkitvars.bat to bind it to ruby installations in your path.
-
Install Visual Studio Code to edit markdown documents
-
Open a cmd terminal.
-
cd
to the directory where your markdown documentation repository is. -
Open the "_config.yml" file and set the
baseurl
andurl
attributes. The first is used for resolving the path to images and hyperlinks. The second is the online URL of the documentation and is used for creatingsitemap.xml
.url: "http://docs.telerik.com/" baseurl: "/teststudio-apis"
-
Create a Google Custom Search Engine (or ask one to be created for you). Set the
google_custom_search
attribute in "_config.yml". If you forget this step the search results will be from the Kendo UI documentation. -
Run
build.cmd
and thenrun.cmd
(from CMD, not with double-click on the bat files). After a while jekyll build the documentation and start a web server athttp://<Your Computer Name>:801/teststudio-apis/
. You can now view the documentation in your browser. -
If you want your documentation to be indexed much faster - submit your urls here - https://www.google.com/webmasters/tools/submit-url
Jekyll builds a static HTML site in the _site
directory. This contents of this directory can be deployed on a live server.
Important: Jekyll creates .html pages by default. However the documentation creates links without .html extension. A
web.config
with rewrite rules is included out of the box.
Configure documentation in IIS Server
- Install URL Rewrite Module 2.0 for IIS (x64)
- Create application Documentation under Default Web Site
- Set Physical Path to _site folder
- You can browse the documentation at
http://<Your Computer Name>/documentation/
Some Jekyll info
Jekyll is a tool for creating static html web sites. It supports markdown which makes it a good fit for our needs. It is also highly customizable which makes delivering new documentation features a breeze.
Jekyll Directory structure
_assets
Contains CSS and JavaScript files.
_includes
Contains common include files used by the layout pages. Not included in the final output in the _site
directory.
_layouts
The layout pages used by the documentation site. They define the common HTML which contains navigation, search and other common UI. Not included in the final output.
_plugins
Contains Jekyll plugins (Ruby classes) which are needed for producing the final output. Not included in the final output.
images
Contains images used in the web site.
fonts
Custom fonts used in the web site.
The following plugins are currently available:
- breadcrumb.rb - renders breadcrumb navigation
- markdown_processor.rb - creates HTML from Markdown using html-pipeline. We are not using the default markdown conversion as we need to tweak the output to our needs.
- navigation_generator.rb - creates a JSON TOC file used for the left-hand treeview navigation.
- redirect_generator.rb - creates IIS redirect rules in the
web.config
to handle theprevious_url
attribute. - sitemap_generator.rb - creates sitemap.xml which is used by search engines for crawling.
- slug.rb - gets the URL of a help article from its slug.
assets
Contains CSS, JavaScript and image files used by the documentation. Included in the final output.
Which files from the common documentation repository can be changed?
Any file can be changed per your requirements. However you will have to handle merge conflicts once you need to update to the latest documentation base changes. The following files are likely to be customized:
- _layouts/index.html
- _layouts/page.html
- assets/css/styles.css
- _config.yml
Writing markdown documents
Files and directories
You can organize your help topics in directories. The directory and filename will determine the final url of your topic. For example getting-started/introduction.md
will lead to getting-started/introduction
Markdown content
Front matter (headers)
Your markdown file must start with the so called "front matter". This is some metadata used by jekyll and the documentation. Here is an example.
---
title: Getting started
page_title: Getting started with Kendo UI
description: Installation and getting started instructions for Kendo UI
position: 0
slug: getting-started
previous_url: /introduction/start
---
The supported attributes are:
title (required)
Determines the text displayed in the TOC navigation (the treeview in the left).
page_title (optional but recommended)
The contents of the <title>
in the final output. If page_title
is not set the value of title
is usded. Blade name was meta_title
.
description (optional but recommended)
Used to set the contents of the <meta name="description">
in the final output. Improves SEO. Blade name was meta_description
.
position (optional)
The position this document will appear at in the TOC navigation. Blade name was ordinal
.
slug (optional)
The optional unique identifier of the page. Can be used to link to the current page [Getting-started]({% slug getting-started%})
previous_url
The previous URL of this page. Used to create IIS redirect rules in web.config
. Supports comma separated values if there is more than one previous url previous_url: /foo/bar, /bar/foo
.
Content
You can write markdown, plain text or html as a content. If you include code snippets use the following syntax for sleek looks:
{% highlight language
%}
...put your code in here....
{% endhighlight %}
tested language types include : c#, html, sql, xml, ruby
Customizing the TOC
The TOC displays an entry for all directories and files.
Files
The the title
attribute of the markdown file determines the text displayed for that file in the TOC. The position
attribute determines its position in the TOC. If position
is not set the file will appear in its alphabetical order after all directories.
Directories
By default directories come before the files which don't have position
set. The directory name determines the text displayed in the TOC. To change it you have to add an entry in _config.yml
under navigation
.
For example we want the introduction/getting-started
directory to appear as Getting Started
in the TOC. Open _config.yml
and find the navigation
attribute. Add a new item:
navigation
-
introduction/getting-started
title: Getting Started
Directories appear alphabetically sorted by default. You can change their position again from _config.yml
.
navigation
-
introduction/getting-started
title: Getting Started
position: 0