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Contribute to CockroachDB Docs

The CockroachDB docs are open source just like the database itself. We welcome your contributions!

Setup

This section helps you set up the tools you'll need to write the docs and build parts of the CockroachDB documentation locally.

These instructions assume that you use macOS. If you use Linux, use your default package manager to install the packages mentioned in these steps, rather than Homebrew. If you use Windows, use Chocolatey or a similar command-line package manager.

  1. Install Homebrew, a macOS package manager you'll use for a few different installations.

    /bin/bash -c "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install.sh)"
    
  2. Install Ruby, the language required by Jekyll, our website generator, and Gem, which is a package manager for Ruby.

    brew update
    brew install ruby
    brew install brew-gem
    

    You can find instructions to install Ruby for Linux or other operating systems.

  3. Update your $PATH variable to use Ruby from Homebrew. The following example configures ZSH. Homebrew detects your shell and provides the exact command to use as part of installing Ruby.

    echo 'export PATH="/opt/homebrew/opt/ruby/bin:$PATH"' >> ~/.zshrc
    
  4. Install the latest version of Git from Homebrew.

    brew install git
    

    You can find instructions to install git for Linux or other operating systems.

  5. Install the latest version of htmltest.

    brew install htmltest
    

    You can find instructions to install htmltest for Linux or other operating systems.

  6. Fork the CockroachDB docs repository.

  7. Create a local clone of your fork.

  8. Use Gem from Homebrew to install Jekyll, the tool we use to transform Markdown and layout files into a complete, static HTML site. Use the brew-gem command. If you use gem, you'll be using the outdated version of Ruby that installs with macOS.

    sudo brew-gem install jekyll bundler
    

    If you get a permission error, make sure you're using brew-gem and Ruby from Homebrew, rather than /usr/bin/gem and /usr/bin/ruby.

  9. Learn the essentials of our Docs Structure.

  10. Review our Style Guide.

Get started

Once you're ready to contribute:

  1. Create a new local branch for your work:

    $ cd path/to/docs
    $ git checkout -b "<your branch name>"
  2. Make your changes in the text editor of your choice (e.g., Visual Studio Code, Sublime Text).

    Each documented version/area of CockroachDB has a docs subdirectory within the src directory or the src/current directory. For example, docs for CockroachDB v23.1 are in the src/current/v23.1 directory, whereas docs for our interactive tutorials are in the src/interactive-tutorials directory.

    If a version/area of the docs exists in src/current, its included content (_includes) and images (images) will also be found within src/current. Otherwise, it will be in the same subfolder as the content in src.

    Archived docs content lives in src/archived.

  3. Check the files you've changed:

    git status
    
  4. Stage your changes for commit:

    git add <filename>
    
  5. Commit your changes:

    git commit -m "<concise message describing changes>"
    
  6. Use Jekyll to build a specific part of the site locally so you can view your changes in a browser:

    cd src/<docs area to build>
    make cockroachdb
    

    Note: The archived folder is not configured to use Jekyll or any make commands.

  7. Push your local branch to your remote fork.

  8. Back in your fork of the CockroachDB docs repo in the GitHub UI, open a pull request and assign it to cockroachdb/docs-prs. If you check the Allow edits from maintainers option when creating your pull request, we'll be able to make minor edits or fixes directly, if it seems easier than commenting and asking you to make those revisions, which can streamline the review process.

Someone in the group will review your changes, providing feedback and guidance as necessary. Also, Netlify, the system we use to automate tests, will run the markdown files through Jekyll and then run a series of automated tests, including htmltest, against the resulting HTML output to check for errors. If all automated tests pass, Netlify will attempt to provide a deploy preview link in a comment in the pull request.

Keep contributing

If you want to regularly contribute to the CockroachDB docs, there are a few things we recommend:

  1. Make it easy to bring updated docs into your fork by tracking us upstream:

    $ git remote add --track main upstream https://github.com/cockroachdb/docs.git
  2. When you're ready to make your next round of changes, get our latest docs:

    $ git fetch upstream
    $ git merge upstream/main
  3. Repeat the write, build, push, pull flow from the Get Started section above.

Build and Test the Docs Locally

Once you've installed Jekyll and have a local clone of the docs repository, you can build and test the docs as follows:

  1. From one of the subdirectories of the src directory of your clone (except for src/archived):

    • To build the CockroachDB docs, run make cockroachdb.
  2. Point your browser to the server address provided in the command line and manually check your changes.

    • If the page you want to test isn't listed in the sidebar, just point to it directly, for example, http://127.0.0.1:4000/docs/dev/new-page.html.

    • When you make additional changes, Jekyll automatically regenerates the HTML content. No need to stop and re-start Jekyll; just refresh your browser after the file says it's been successfully updated.

    Once you're done viewing your changes, use CTRL-C to stop the Jekyll server.

Docs structure

Pages

We provide documentation for each major version of CockroachDB, as well as documentation for CockroachCloud, the CockroachDB API, releases, advisories, and interactive toturials. The pages for each docs area are found in a directory named for the docs area. For example, docs for CockroachDB v23.1 are in the src/current/v23.1 directory, whereas docs for the CockroachDB API are in the src/api directory.

Within each version directory and docs area directory, each page must be an .md file written in the Redcarpet dialect of Markdown. File names should be lowercase with a dash (-) between words and should be brief but descriptive.

Example:

  • name-of-your-file.md

Markdown pages must start with the following YAML front matter:

---
title: Title of Page
summary: Short description of page for SEO
---
Field Description Default
title Used as the h1 header and written in title-case. Nothing
summary Used as the page's meta description for SEO. Keep this under 155 characters. Consider using the first sentence of the page, or something similar. The summary must be between 50-160 characters. Nothing

Optionally, you can specify other fields in the front matter:

Field Description Default
toc Adds an auto-generated table of contents to the right of the page body (on standard screens) or at the top of the page (on smaller screens). true
toc_not_nested Limits a page's TOC to h2 headers only. false
allowed_hashes Specifies a list of allowed hashes that do not correspond to a section heading on the page. Nothing
feedback Adds "Yes/No" feedback buttons at the bottom of the page. See Feedback Widget for more details. true
contribute Adds "Contribute" options at the top-right of the page. See Contributing Options for more details. true
twitter Adds code required to track the page as part of a Twitter campaign false
no_sidebar If true, removes the sidebar from a page. See Sidebar for more details. Nothing
block_search If true, adds meta tags to the header that excludes the page from search indexing/caching. Nothing
back_to_top If true, adds a back-to-top button to the page. This is only helpful in cases where the page is very long and there is no page toc, e.g., the Full SQL Grammar page.
docs_area For page analytics. Set this to the main sidenav area where the page is found, e.g., get_started, develop, deploy, manage, migrate, stream_data, reference, releases. For reference, also indicate the subsection, e.g., reference.sql, reference.cli, reference.api. These values will likely change over time. Nothing
product_area For page analytics. Set this to the Product Area primary responsible for the page. This field is currently not used, pending team discussion.

Page TOC

The CockroachDB Jekyll theme can auto-generate a page-level table of contents listing all h2 and h3 headers or just all h2 headers on the page. Related files: js/toc.js and _includes/toc.html.

  • To add a page TOC, set toc: true in the page's front matter.

  • To omit a page TOC from the page, set toc: false in the page's front matter.

  • By default, a page TOC includes h2 and h3 headers. To limit a page TOC to h2 headers only, set toc_not_nested: true in the page's front matter.

Auto-included content

Some pages auto-include content from the _includes directory. For example, the build-a-python-app-with-cockroachdb-sqlalchemy.md tutorial includes code samples from _includes/<version>/setup/sample-setup-certs.md.

The syntax for including content is {% include {{ page.version.version }}/<filepath> %} (e.g., {% include {{ page.version.version }}/app/retry-errors.md %}).

Version tags

New and changed features should be called out in the documentation using version tags.

  • To add a version tag to a paragraph, place {% include_cached new-in.html version="<version>" %} at the start of the paragraph, e.g:

    {% include_cached new-in.html version="v22.2" %} The [**Databases**](#databases), [table details](#table-details), and [index details](#index-details) pages show recommendations to drop indexes based on index usage. You can traverse the **Databases** page and **Tables** view to determine which indexes have recommendations.
    
  • To add a version tag to a heading, place <span class="version-tag">New in vX.X</span> to the right of the heading, for example:

    ## SQL Shell Welcome <div class="version-tag">New in v2.1</div>
    

When calling out a change, rather than something new, use <span class="version-tag">Changed in vXY.Z</span>

Allowed hashes

In a page's front matter, you can specify a list of allowed hashes that do not correspond to a section heading on the page. This is currently used for pages with JavaScript toggle buttons, where the toggle to activate by default can be specified in the URL hash. If you attempt to link to, for example, page-with-toggles.html#toggle-id without listing toggle-id in allowed_hashes, our HTML tester will complain that toggle-id does not exist on the page. Listing a hash in allowed_hashes will generate a placeholder element with that ID at the top of the page, which satisfies our HTML tester.

Here's an example from a page with OS toggles:

allowed_hashes: [os-mac, os-linux, os-windows]

Images

For information about how we use images in our docs, see Images in our Style Guide.

Feedback widget

We show thumbs-up and thumbs-down feedback buttons after a page's TOC on the bottom-right portion every page by default. To remove these buttons from a page, set feedback: false in the page's front matter.

Contributing options

We show "Contribute" options in the top-right of every page by default. To remove these options from a page, set contribute: false in the page's front matter.

Sidebar

For each documented version of CockroachDB (vXY.Z), a JSON file in the _includes directory defines the pages that appear in the docs sidebar. For example, the sidebar for CockroachDB v23.1 is defined by _includes/sidebar-data-v23.1.json.

If you're adding a page that you think should appear in the sidebar, please mention this in your pull request.

In the JSON file for a version's sidebar, there are three possible fields:

Field Type Description
title String At the top level, this field defines the title for a section of the sidenav, e.g., Get Started. Within the items field, title defines either the title for a subsection or the title for a page, which can be different from the actual page title. See the JSON Example below for more clarity.
items Array of objects The pages in a section of the sidenav.
urls Array of strings The URLs for a page in the sidenav, each formatted as /${VERSION}/<page-name>.html, e.g., /${VERSION}/learn-cockroachdb-sql.html. The first URL is the page to link to. The subsequent URLs are pages that should highlight this title in the sidebar.

JSON example

This example shows some of the first section of the sidenav, Get Started:

  • The first title field defines the section title.
  • The first items field contains multiple objects, each defining pages in the section:
    • The first object defines the title and URL for the first page in the section, Install CockroachDB.
    • The second object is more complex. It defines a subsection titled Start a Local Cluster. This object contains its own items field, which in turn contains multiple objects, each defining the title and URL for a page.
  • Instead of using v23.1 as the named version, we use the ${VERSION} string interpolation.
[
  {
    "title": "Get Started",
    "items": [
      {
        "title": "Install CockroachDB",
        "urls": [
          "/${VERSION}/install-cockroachdb.html"
        ]
      },
      {
        "title": "Start a Local Cluster",
        "items": [
          {
            "title": "From Binary",
            "urls": [
              "/${VERSION}/start-a-local-cluster.html",
              "/${VERSION}/secure-a-cluster.html"
            ]
          },
          {
            "title": "In Docker",
            "urls": [
              "/${VERSION}/start-a-local-cluster-in-docker.html"
            ]
          }
        ]
      },
      ...
    ]
  }
]

Style guide

See Style Guide for more details.