- Fork the repo
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-docs
) - Ensure ruby and bundler (
gem install bundler
) are installed - Install ruby dependencies (
bundle
) - You can install them in the local folder, instead of globally for the system with (
bundle install --path vendor/bundle
) - Install JS dependencies (
npm install
)
You're ready to make some changes to the documentation!
.
├── _api/ # Auto-generated API documentation - don't edit by hand!
├── _faq/ # Various FAQ pages
├── _includes/ # Jekyll snippets (headers, footers, etc.)
├── _layouts/ # Jekyll layouts (overall page structure)
├── _tutorials/ # Tutorials / How-to Articles
│ ├── src/ # Docco source files for "side-by-side" tutorials
│ ├── *.html # Auto-generated docco tutorials - don't by edit by hand!
│ ├── *.md # Newer markdown tutorials
├── css/ # Stylesheets (SCSS)
├── examples/ # Raw javascript examples of jasmine tests (rare)
├── pages/ # Various documentation pages
Note the auto-generated files _api/**
and _tutorials/*.html
, don't edit these files as any
changes you make to them will be lost the next time the documentation is generated.
First, update the jasmine API docs:
- Update local copies of jasmine using
bundle exec rake update_edge_jasmine
andbundle exec rake update_edge_jasmine_browser
- Run
npm run jsdoc
to update the API documentation
Then, regenerate the tutorials:
bundle exec rake tutorials
Now preview your changes locally:
bundle exec rake serve
To archive the API docs for an older version of jasmine-core, add archived: true
to the YAML at the top of _api/<version>/global.html
. This will remove the
version from the listing on the docs home page. It will still be published at the
same URLs and can still be reached through the All versions link.
- Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some docs'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-docs
) - Create new Pull Request
If you're making complicated or potentially controversial changes to the documentation, it may make sense to provide a live demo that the reviewer can use to compare side-by-side with the current production site.
From the terminal in your local fork of jasmine.github.io
, create the branch gh-pages
:
git checkout master
git checkout -b gh-pages
git push -u origin HEAD
Next, enable GitHub Pages for your fork:
- Open your browser and navigate to your fork in GitHub
- Click the
Settings
link - Under the
GitHub Pages
header, selectSource
->gh-pages branch
- The page will reload. Wait a few minutes, then click the link provided
- You now have a personal live demo under
https://<username>.github.io/jasmine.github.io/
Now that you've configured your live demo link to show the gh-pages
branch, you can
update what is shown at any time by resetting that branch to your newest changes. For example,
if you've just pushed up the branch my-complicated-change
, update your live demo
by entering the following in your terminal:
git checkout gh-pages
git reset --hard my-complicated-change
git push -f
Wait a few minutes, and you live demo will now be showing your changes in the my-complicated-change
branch. You can then include a link to the demo in your pull request.