3.1 KiB
Generating the website
Prerequisites
You will need:
- The
documentation-xml-website
branch of the Edelhirsch QSkinny repository at https://github.com/edelhirsch/qskinny/tree/documentation-xml-website . - A recent version of doxygen; The currently used version is 1.9.1 built from
github sources. The
doxygen
binary needs to be in the $PATH. - A recent version of doxybook2 with some custom patches. The script
generate-website.sh
should download and build the right version, however the script might need some adaptation of paths. For reference, the required version can be found at https://github.com/edelhirsch/doxybook2/tree/jekyll . - A recent version of Jekyll (see https://jekyllrb.com/), which will generate
the static html pages. This and other required packages can be installed via
There might be some packages missing from the list above; in this case the Gemfile in the qskinny-website repository might help.gem install jekyll:3.9.0 gem install bundler:2.1.4
- Checkout the current website repository via
git clone git@github.com:qskinny/qskinny.github.io.git
Generating the website
Generating the static HTML sites is done with the generate-website.sh
script
in the qskinny/doc
directory. The script has some hardcoded paths and probably
needs some adaptation to run correctly.
It will do the following:
- Generate HTML from doxygen. This step is needed because for some reason when
generating XML from doxygen there are no images with dependency graphs.
Note: This step is only executed if the
html
folder doesn't exist, because otherwise it would take too long. - Generate XML from doxygen. The generated XML is used with doxybook2 in the
next step.
Note: This step is only executed if the
xml
folder doesn't exist, because otherwise it would take too long. - Generate markdown from XML with doxybook2. This markdown will be used by Jekyll to either server the website content locally or generate static HTML from it, see below.
Generating the website locally
When the command line switch -local
is used with the generate-website.sh
script, it will generate the content to a local folder doxybook-out
. This is
meant to be able to copy selected files to the website directory at
~/dev/qskinny-website
.
Otherwise, the script will copy the content to the website repository for
uploading (again, paths are hardcoded as of now). So when generating content
for the first time, just run the script without any switches, which should
generate the website to ~/dev/qskinny-website
.
Testing the website locally
After having generated the website as described above, go to
~/dev/qskinny-website
and run jekyll serve --livereload
. This should start
a browser at http://127.0.0.1:4000/, which will display the website.
Generating the website publicly
When the command line switch -publish
is used, the script will automatically
generate a new version of the homepage and publish it at
https://qskinny.github.io . This wil only work with the proper user rights of
course.