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mirror of https://github.com/primer/css.git synced 2024-12-29 17:12:27 +03:00
css/docs
2019-01-11 14:29:22 -08:00
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lib nix the whats-new directory and changelog sync plugin 2019-01-11 14:28:35 -08:00
pages fix html link 2019-01-11 14:29:22 -08:00
script add script/check-local-links for fast markdown checks 2019-01-11 14:29:22 -08:00
src fix status key link in package header 2019-01-11 14:29:22 -08:00
static add static assets (favicon, touch icon, analytics.js) 2019-01-11 14:29:22 -08:00
test list redirects explicitly in docs path test 2019-01-11 14:29:22 -08:00
.eslintrc.json add settings.react to .eslintrc.json 2018-12-17 15:26:50 -08:00
.gitignore move before.txt -> test/fixtures/path-cache.txt 2019-01-11 14:29:22 -08:00
next.config.js simplify next.config.js 2018-12-17 15:26:50 -08:00
now.json run node 8 on now 2019-01-04 10:34:53 -08:00
package-lock.json add script/check-local-links for fast markdown checks 2019-01-11 14:29:22 -08:00
package.json add script/check-local-links for fast markdown checks 2019-01-11 14:29:22 -08:00
prettier.config.js add eslint + prettier configs 2018-12-17 15:26:09 -08:00
README.md link to Metalsmith again 2018-12-21 11:10:29 -08:00

Primer CSS docs site

This directory hosts a Next site that pulls in Primer CSS documentation from the modules directory.

Running the site

First, make sure that you've bootstrapped the monorepo from the top-level directory. The fresh run-script will ensure that all node_modules or package-lock.json files are removed first:

# in the repo root
npm run fresh

Then, navigate to this directory (cd docs) and run:

# in the docs directory
npm run dev

This should start up the Next dev server and a background task that will keep the pages directory up-to-date whenever you change the source files in modules/primer*.

Syncing the docs

If, for whatever reason, the dev server isn't syncing files, you have two choices:

  1. Stop the server (ctrl-C) and restart it (npm run dev), which will re-sync the files and clear Next's cache.

  2. Run script/sync manually:

    # in the docs directory
    script/sync
    

    If you find yourself needing to do this often, please file an issue and tag @shawnbot. 🙇

The pages directory

The pages directory contains all of the files that map to URLs on the site. Because we plan to host the site at primer.style/css (and because of the way that Now's path aliasing feature works), we nest all of our documentation under the additional css directory.

The sync task maintains a listing of files that it's copied from the modules directory in pages/css/.gitignore, which ensures that none of these files are checked into git.

If you find yourself editing a file,

Sync internals

We use Metalsmith to sync the source docs to the pages directory and transform them in the following ways:

  1. We filter the list of files to only Markdown documents and package.json files
  2. Many package README.mds wrap the actual documentation content in <!-- %docs --> HTML comments that usually include YAML frontmatter. In these instances, we extract the content that portion and reformat the frontmatter.
  3. We filter out any Markdown files that don't include a path frontmatter key, and rename the destination file to match the path (e.g. path: foo/bar writes to pages/css/foo/bar.md).
  4. We set the source frontmatter key to a fully-qualified github.com URL for the source file so that we can link directly to it.
  5. A limited list of fields for all packages is extracted into a single file (pages/css/packages.json), which serves as a light-weight dependency graph.
  6. We read the changelog and write it to whats-new/changelog.md with some additional frontmatter.
  7. We read the list of files from pages/css/.gitignore and delete them from the filesystem, then write the new list of paths so that they aren't committed to git.

All of the logic for syncing the source docs (and transforming them in transit) is controlled in lib/sync.js, and each "step" in the transformation (as well as the watching) is implemented as a Metalsmith plugin.

Why Metalsmith? We're glad you asked! @shawnbot likes the simplicity of Metalsmith's core and how easy it is to write powerful plugins.