To visit the Open Horizon documentation site, go to open-horizon.github.io
If you would like to contribute to the project, read the following documentation for helpful information and guidelines.
All content, artwork, and code is contained in GitHub repositories. To see what assistance we need, look for open GitHub issues that have not been assigned to someone already. If you see one that you would like to work on, please add a comment to that issue and try to @mention
the person who opened the issue to let them know of your interest. Do not begin working on an issue unless and until it has been assigned to you. Likewise, do not submit a Pull Request (code fix or submission) unless it is tied to an existing open issue.
More details can be found on the following pages:
- Contribution Guidelines
- The mechanics of working on an issue
- Chat with the project team and ask any questions
- List all unassigned and open issues labelled "Good First Issue"
We appreciate and recognize all Contributors.
- Contributing to Open Horizon Pages
- Table of Contents
- Fork the Repository
- Make Necessary Changes
- Test in Local and Push Changes to GitHub
- Submit a Pull Request for Review
- Clean Up
Fork this repository by clicking on the fork button on the top of this page. This will create a copy of this repository in your account.
To make changes, clone the forked repository to your machine.
Go to your GitHub account, open the forked repository, click Code, and then copy to clipboard.
Open a terminal and run the following git command:
git clone "url you just copied"
where "url you just copied" (without the quotation marks) is the url to this repository (your fork of this project).
Change to the repository directory on your computer:
cd open-horizon.github.io
Now create a branch using the git checkout
command:
git checkout -b <name-your-new-branch-name-after-your-issue>
For example:
git checkout -b issue-329
Now, you can suggest contributions, make necessary changes to existing files, or add new files.
Some markdown pages under open-horizon.github.io/docs can have their source markdown in other repositories in the Open Horizon GitHub organization.
Use the URL path to identify if the source is open-horizon.github.io/docs or another repository. If the source is in different repository then sourced repo name is used open-horizon.github.io/docs/<SOURCE_REPO_NAME>/docs
.
/docs/anax/docs/
markdown pages are sourced from https://github.com/open-horizon/anax/tree/master/docs//docs/mgmt-hub/docs/
markdown pages are sourced from https://github.com/open-horizon/devops/blob/master/docs//docs/kubearmor-integration/docs/
markdown pages are sourced from https://github.com/open-horizon/kubearmor-integration/tree/main/docs/
It is important that any changes to docs sourced from another repository be made in the corresponding repository and not in the open-horizon.github.io
repository.
CopyDocs GitHub Actions, in each of the respective repos, will trigger on a PR merge and the source markdown files will be copied.
Before you push changes to GitHub, build this GitHub pages site locally to preview and test the changes.
This GitHub Pages site is built with Jekyll. Before you can use Jekyll to test a site, you must install Jekyll.
NOTE: Ruby 3.2.0 is incompatible at the moment. Recommend using
rbenv
and installing and usingrbenv local 3.1.1
as a workaround. On MacOS,brew install rbenv
thenrbenv install 3.1.1
first.
Change to the repository directory on your computer and execute the following command to run the Jekyll site locally.
-
To install and update all dependencies.
make init
Note: Run the above command one time before using the tools each day.
-
Start the local web server, do not build the site first
make run
Note: This runs a local web server with live reload enabled. When running the make command on Windows, an error might occur that identifies the installed command as unrecognized. This can happen when the binary path is set incorrectly.
To preview the site in your web browser navigate to http://localhost:4000.
-
To build and test the local documentation site:
make dev
-
To Build the local documentation site:
make build
-
Test the local documentation site locally:
make test
Note: This is typically done before
make run
After you have a successful testing in local with your changes, you are ready to commit those changes.
If you go to the project directory and execute the command git status
, you'll see your changes.
Add those changes to the branch you just created using the git add
command:
git add <file>
All commits should be signed off (-s
flag on git commit
). To use the -s
option, follow the guidance to make sure you configure your git name (user.name) and email address (user.email).
Now commit those changes using the git commit command:
git commit -s -m "Add README.md"
Push your changes using the command git push
:
git push origin <add-your-branch-name>
replacing <add-your-branch-name>
with the name of the branch you created earlier.
When setting up a project locally, some errors can occur. Some of those are listed below.
- Missing
webrick
andwdm
inGemfile
Change to:
Some users use the latest version of ruby
, which is >2.7
that does not have pre-added webrick
support. If they are using ruby
versions >= 3.0.0
, they might see the error listed below.
Add the following to your Gemfile to avoid polling for changes:
gem 'wdm', '>= 0.1.0' if Gem.win_platform?
Auto-regeneration: enabled for 'C:/Users/yourUserName/Desktop/open-horizon/open-horizon.github.io'
C:/Ruby30-x64/lib/ruby/gems/3.0.0/gems/jekyll-3.9.0/lib/jekyll/commands/serve/servlet.rb:3:in `require': cannot load such file -- webrick (LoadError)
from C:/Ruby30-x64/lib/ruby/gems/3.0.0/gems/jekyll-3.9.0/lib/jekyll/commands/serve/servlet.rb:3:in `<top (required)>'
from C:/Ruby30-x64/lib/ruby/gems/3.0.0/gems/jekyll-3.9.0/lib/jekyll/commands/serve.rb:184:in `require_relative'
from C:/Ruby30-x64/lib/ruby/gems/3.0.0/gems/jekyll-3.9.0/lib/jekyll/commands/serve.rb:184:in `setup'
from C:/Ruby30-x64/lib/ruby/gems/3.0.0/gems/jekyll-3.9.0/lib/jekyll/commands/serve.rb:102:in `process'
from C:/Ruby30-x64/lib/ruby/gems/3.0.0/gems/jekyll-3.9.0/lib/jekyll/commands/serve.rb:93:in `block in start'
from C:/Ruby30-x64/lib/ruby/gems/3.0.0/gems/jekyll-3.9.0/lib/jekyll/commands/serve.rb:93:in `each'
from C:/Ruby30-x64/lib/ruby/gems/3.0.0/gems/jekyll-3.9.0/lib/jekyll/commands/serve.rb:93:in `start'
from C:/Ruby30-x64/lib/ruby/gems/3.0.0/gems/jekyll-3.9.0/lib/jekyll/commands/serve.rb:75:in `block (2 levels) in init_with_program'
from C:/Ruby30-x64/lib/ruby/gems/3.0.0/gems/mercenary-0.3.6/lib/mercenary/command.rb:220:in `block in execute'
from C:/Ruby30-x64/lib/ruby/gems/3.0.0/gems/mercenary-0.3.6/lib/mercenary/command.rb:220:in `each'
from C:/Ruby30-x64/lib/ruby/gems/3.0.0/gems/mercenary-0.3.6/lib/mercenary/command.rb:220:in `execute'
from C:/Ruby30-x64/lib/ruby/gems/3.0.0/gems/mercenary-0.3.6/lib/mercenary/program.rb:42:in `go'
from C:/Ruby30-x64/lib/ruby/gems/3.0.0/gems/mercenary-0.3.6/lib/mercenary.rb:19:in `program'
from C:/Ruby30-x64/lib/ruby/gems/3.0.0/gems/jekyll-3.9.0/exe/jekyll:15:in `<top (required)>'
from C:/Ruby30-x64/bin/jekyll:25:in `load'
from C:/Ruby30-x64/bin/jekyll:25:in `<main>'
To solve this error, add webrick
and wdm
to your local Gemfile
by using the commands listed below and re-run the serve.
add webrick:
bundle add webrick
add wdm:
gem install wdm
If you go to your repository on GitHub, you'll see a Compare & pull request button
. Click on that button.
Now submit the pull request by clicking Create pull request
.
You will get a notification email after the changes have been merged.
After your Pull Request has been approved/merged, you are safe to delete the branch created earlier. Change to the repository directory on your computer and execute the following commands to delete the branch:
Delete the local branch:
git branch -d <branch-name>
Delete remote branch:
git push origin :<branch-name>
Connect your local repository to the original, upstream repository by adding it as a remote. You should pull in changes from upstream often, so that you stay up-to-date. This helps avoid merge conflicts when you submit pull requests.
For more information, see Sync a fork of a repository to keep it up-to-date with the upstream repository.