Welcome to the repo for our documentation. This is the source for https://docs.docker.com/.
Feel free to send us pull requests and file issues. Our docs are completely open source and we deeply appreciate contributions from our community!
We really want your feedback, and we've made it easy. You can edit, rate, or file an issue at the bottom of every page on https://docs.docker.com/.
Only file issues about the documentation in this repository. One way to think about this is that you should file a bug here if your issue is that you don't see something that should be in the docs, or you see something incorrect or confusing in the docs.
-
If your problem is a general question about how to configure or use Docker, ask in https://forums.docker.com instead.
-
If you have an idea for a new feature or behavior change in a specific aspect of Docker, or have found a bug in part of Docker, file that issue in the project's code repository.
We value your documentation contributions, and we want to make it as easy as possible to work in this repository. One of the first things to decide is which branch to base your work on. If you get confused, just ask and we will help. If a reviewer realizes you have based your work on the wrong branch, we'll let you know so that you can rebase it.
Note: To contribute code to Docker projects, see the Contribution guidelines.
Files and directories listed in the path:
keys in
.NOT_EDITED_HERE.yaml
are maintained in other
repositories and should not be edited in this one. Pull requests against these
files will be rejected. Make your edits to the files in the repository and path
in the source:
key in the YAML file.
Most commits will be made against the master
branch. This include:
- Conceptual and task-based information not specific to new features
- Restructuring / rewriting
- Doc bug fixing
- Typos and grammar errors
One quirk of this project is that the master
branch is where the live docs are
published from, so upcoming features can't be documented there. See
Specific new features for a project
for how to document upcoming features. These feature branches will be periodically
merged with master
, so don't worry about fixing typos and documentation bugs
there.
Do you enjoy creating graphics? Good graphics are key to great documentation, and we especially value contributions in this area.
Our docs cover many projects which release at different times. If, and only if,
your pull request relates to a currently unreleased feature of a project, base
your work on that project's vnext
branch. These branches were created by
cloning master
and then importing a project's master
branch's docs into it
(at the time of the migration), in a way that preserved the commit history. When
a project has a release, its vnext
branch will be merged into master
and your
work will be visible on https://docs.docker.com/.
The following vnext
branches currently exist:
-
vnext-engine: docs for upcoming features in the docker/docker project
-
vnext-compose: docs for upcoming features in the docker/compose project
-
vnext-distribution: docs for upcoming features in the docker/distribution project
-
vnext-swarm: docs for upcoming features in the docker/swarm project
-
vnext-toolbox: docs for upcoming features in the docker/toolbox project
For every PR against master
and all the long-lived branches, a staged version
of the site is built using Netlify. If the site builds, you will see
deploy/netlify — Deploy preview ready. Otherwise, you will see an error.
Click Details to review the staged site or the errors that prevented it from
building. Review the staged site and amend your commit if necessary. Reviewers
will also check the staged site before merging the PR, to protect the integrity
of https://docs.docker.com/.
You have three options:
-
On your local machine, clone this repo and run our staging container:
git clone --recursive https://github.com/docker/docker.github.io.git cd docker.github.io docker-compose up
If you haven't got Docker Compose installed, follow these installation instructions.
The container runs in the background and incrementally rebuilds the site each time a file changes. You can keep your browser open to http://localhost:4000/ and refresh to see your changes. The container runs in the foreground, but you can use
CTRL+C
to get the command prompt back. To stop the container, issue the following command:docker-compose down
-
Install Jekyll and GitHub Pages on your local machine.
a. Clone this repo by running:
git clone --recursive https://github.com/docker/docker.github.io.git
b. Install Ruby 2.3 or later as described in Installing Ruby.
c. Install Bundler:
gem install bundler
d. If you use Ubuntu, install packages required for the Nokogiri HTML parser:
sudo apt-get install ruby-dev zlib1g-dev liblzma-dev
e. Install Jekyll and other required dependencies:
bundle install
Note: You may need to install some packages manually.
f. Change the directory to
docker.github.io
.g. Use the
jekyll serve
command to continuously build the HTML output.The
jekyll serve
process runs in the foreground, and starts a web server running on http://localhost:4000/ by default. To stop it, useCTRL+C
. You can continue working in a second terminal and Jekyll will rebuild the website incrementally. Refresh the browser to preview your changes.
To read the docs offline, you can use either a standalone container or a swarm service.
To see all available tags, go to
Docker Cloud.
The following examples use the latest
tag:
-
Run a single container:
docker run -it -p 4000:4000 docs/docker.github.io:latest
-
Run a swarm service:
docker service create -p 4000:4000 --name localdocs --replicas 1 docs/docker.github.io:latest
This example uses only a single replica, but you could run as many replicas as you'd like.
Either way, you can now access the docs at port 4000 on your Docker host.
/_data/toc.yaml
defines the left-hand navigation for the docs/js/menu.js
defines most of the docs-specific JS such as TOC generation and menu syncing/css/documentation.css
defines the docs-specific style rules/_layouts/docs.html
is the HTML template file, which defines the header and footer, and includes all the JS/CSS that serves the docs content
Feel free to link to ../foo.md
so that the docs are readable in GitHub, but keep in mind that Jekyll templating notation
{% such as this %}
will render in raw text and not be processed. In general it's best to assume the docs are being read
directly on https://docs.docker.com/.
If you want to test a style change, or if you want to see how to achieve a
particular outcome with Markdown, Bootstrap, JQuery, or something else, have
a look at test.md
(which renders in the site at /test/
).
The front-matter of a given page is in a section at the top of the Markdown file that starts and ends with three hyphens. It includes YAML content. The following keys are supported. The title, description, and keywords are required.
Key | Required | Description |
---|---|---|
title | yes | The page title. This is added to the HTML output as a <h1> level header. |
description | yes | A sentence that describes the page contents. This is added to the HTML metadata. |
keywords | yes | A comma-separated list of keywords. These are added to the HTML metadata. |
redirect_from | no | A YAML list of pages which should redirect to THIS page. At build time, each page listed here is created as a HTML stub containing a 302 redirect to this page. |
notoc | no | Either true or false . If true , no in-page TOC is generated for the HTML output of this page. Defaults to false . Appropriate for some landing pages that have no in-page headings. |
toc_min | no | Ignored if notoc is set to true . The minimum heading level included in the in-page TOC. Defaults to 2 , to show <h2> headings as the minimum. |
toc_max | no | Ignored if notoc is set to false . The maximum heading level included in the in-page TOC. Defaults to 3 , to show <h3> headings. Set to the same as toc_min to only show toc_min level of headings. |
tree | no | Either true or false . Set to false to disable the left-hand site-wide navigation for this page. Appropriate for some pages like the search page or the 404 page. |
no_ratings | no | Either true or false . Set to true to disable the page-ratings applet for this page. Defaults to false . |
The following is an example of valid (but contrived) page metadata. The order of the metadata elements in the front-matter is not important.
---
description: Instructions for installing Docker on Ubuntu
keywords: requirements, apt, installation, ubuntu, install, uninstall, upgrade, update
redirect_from:
- /engine/installation/ubuntulinux/
- /installation/ubuntulinux/
- /engine/installation/linux/ubuntulinux/
title: Get Docker for Ubuntu
toc_min: 1
toc_max: 6
tree: false
no_ratings: true
---
The use of tabs, as on pages like https://docs.docker.com/engine/api/, requires
the use of HTML. The tabs use Bootstrap CSS/JS, so refer to those docs for more
advanced usage. For a basic horizontal tab set, copy/paste starting from this
code and implement from there. Keep an eye on those href="#id"
and id="id"
references as you rename, add, and remove tabs.
<ul class="nav nav-tabs">
<li class="active"><a data-toggle="tab" data-target="#tab1">TAB 1 HEADER</a></li>
<li><a data-toggle="tab" data-target="#tab2">TAB 2 HEADER</a></li>
</ul>
<div class="tab-content">
<div id="tab1" class="tab-pane fade in active">TAB 1 CONTENT</div>
<div id="tab2" class="tab-pane fade">TAB 2 CONTENT</div>
</div>
For more info and a few more permutations, see test.md
.
If you need to run custom Javascript within a page, and it depends upon JQuery
or Bootstrap, make sure the <script>
tags are at the very end of the page,
after all the content. Otherwise the script may try to run before JQuery and
Bootstrap JS are loaded.
Note: In general, this is a bad idea.
All the images described below are automatically built using Docker Cloud. To build the site manually, from scratch, including all utility and archive images, see the README in the publish-tools branch.
- Some utility images are built from Dockerfiles in the
publish-tools
branch. See its README for details. - Each archive branch automatically builds an image tagged
docs/docker.github.io:v<VERSION>
when a change is merged into that branch. - The
master
branch has a Dockerfile which uses the static HTML from each archive image, in combination with the Markdown files inmaster
and some upstream resources which are fetched at build-time, to create the full site at https://docs.docker.com/. All of the long-running branches, such asvnext-engine
,vnext-compose
, etc, use the same logic.
When a new Docker CE Stable version is released, the previous state of master
is archived into a version-specific branch like v17.09
, by doing the following:
-
Create branch based off the commit hash before the new version was released.
$ git checkout <HASH> $ git checkout -b v17.09
-
Run the
_scripts/fetch-upstream-resources.sh
script. This puts static copies of the files in place that themaster
build typically fetches each build.$ _scripts/fetch-upstream/resources.sh
-
Overwrite the
Dockerfile
with theDockerfile.archive
(usecp
rather thanmv
so you don't inadvertently remove either file). Edit the resultingDockerfile
and set theVER
build argument to the appropriate value, likev17.09
.$ mv Dockerfile.archive Dockerfile $ vi Dockerfile < edit the variable and save >
-
Do
git status
and add all changes, being careful not to add anything extra by accident. Commit your work.$ git status $ git add <filename> $ git add <filename> (etc etc etc) $ git commit -m "Creating archive for 17.09 docs"
-
Make sure the archive builds.
$ docker build -t docker build -t docs/docker.github.io:v17.09 . $ docker run --rm -it -p 4000:4000 docs/docker.github.io:v17.09
After the
docker run
command, browse tohttp://localhost:4000/
and verify that the archive is self-browseable. -
Push the branch to the upstream repository. Do not create a pull request as there is no reference branch to compare against.
$ git push upstream v17.09
Code and documentation copyright 2017 Docker, inc, released under the Apache 2.0 license.