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diff --git a/doc/start/documenting-ceph.rst b/doc/start/documenting-ceph.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..93b266d16 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/start/documenting-ceph.rst @@ -0,0 +1,793 @@ +================== + Documenting Ceph +================== + +The **easiest way** to help the Ceph project is to contribute to the +documentation. As the Ceph user base grows and the development pace quickens, an +increasing number of people are updating the documentation and adding new +information. Even small contributions like fixing spelling errors or clarifying +instructions will help the Ceph project immensely. + +The Ceph documentation source resides in the ``ceph/doc`` directory of the Ceph +repository, and Python Sphinx renders the source into HTML and manpages. The +http://ceph.com/docs link currently displays the ``master`` branch by default, +but you may view documentation for older branches (e.g., ``argonaut``) or future +branches (e.g., ``next``) as well as work-in-progress branches by substituting +``master`` with the branch name you prefer. + +Another way to suggest a documentation correction is to make a pull request. +The instructions for making a pull request against the Ceph documentation are +in the section :ref:`making_contributions`. + +If this is your first time making an improvement to the documentation or +if you have noticed a small mistake (such as a spelling error or a typo), +it will be easier to send an email than to make a pull request. You will +be credited for the improvement unless you instruct Ceph Upstream +Documentation not to credit you. + +Location of the Documentation in the Repository +=============================================== + +The Ceph documentation source is in the ``ceph/doc`` directory of the Ceph +repository. Python Sphinx renders the source into HTML and manpages. + +Viewing Old Ceph Documentation +============================== +The https://docs.ceph.com link displays the latest release branch by default +(for example, if "Quincy" is the most recent release, then by default +https://docs.ceph.com displays the documentation for Quincy), but you can view +the documentation for older versions of Ceph (for example, ``pacific``) by +replacing the version name in the url (for example, ``quincy`` in +`https://docs.ceph.com/en/pacific <https://docs.ceph.com/en/quincy>`_) with the +branch name you prefer (for example, ``pacific``, to create a URL that reads +`https://docs.ceph.com/en/pacific/ <https://docs.ceph.com/en/pacific/>`_). + +.. _making_contributions: + +Making Contributions +==================== + +Making a documentation contribution generally involves the same procedural +sequence as making a code contribution, except that you must build documentation +source instead of compiling program source. The sequence includes the following +steps: + +#. `Get the Source`_ +#. `Select a Branch`_ +#. `Make a Change`_ +#. `Build the Source`_ +#. `Commit the Change`_ +#. `Push the Change`_ +#. `Make a Pull Request`_ +#. `Notify Us`_ + +Get the Source +-------------- + +Ceph documentation lives in the Ceph repository right alongside the Ceph source +code under the ``ceph/doc`` directory. For details on github and Ceph, +see :ref:`Get Involved`. + +The most common way to make contributions is to use the `Fork and Pull`_ +approach. You must: + +#. Install git locally. For Debian/Ubuntu, execute: + + .. prompt:: bash $ + + sudo apt-get install git + + For Fedora, execute: + + .. prompt:: bash $ + + sudo yum install git + + For CentOS/RHEL, execute: + + .. prompt:: bash $ + + sudo yum install git + +#. Ensure your ``.gitconfig`` file has your name and email address. : + + .. code-block:: ini + + [user] + email = {your-email-address} + name = {your-name} + + For example: + + .. prompt:: bash $ + + git config --global user.name "John Doe" + git config --global user.email johndoe@example.com + + +#. Create a `github`_ account (if you don't have one). + +#. Fork the Ceph project. See https://github.com/ceph/ceph. + +#. Clone your fork of the Ceph project to your local host. + + +Ceph organizes documentation into an information architecture primarily by its +main components. + +- **Ceph Storage Cluster:** The Ceph Storage Cluster documentation resides + under the ``doc/rados`` directory. + +- **Ceph Block Device:** The Ceph Block Device documentation resides under + the ``doc/rbd`` directory. + +- **Ceph Object Storage:** The Ceph Object Storage documentation resides under + the ``doc/radosgw`` directory. + +- **Ceph File System:** The Ceph File System documentation resides under the + ``doc/cephfs`` directory. + +- **Installation (Quick):** Quick start documentation resides under the + ``doc/start`` directory. + +- **Installation (Manual):** Manual installation documentation resides under + the ``doc/install`` directory. + +- **Manpage:** Manpage source resides under the ``doc/man`` directory. + +- **Developer:** Developer documentation resides under the ``doc/dev`` + directory. + +- **Images:** If you include images such as JPEG or PNG files, you should + store them under the ``doc/images`` directory. + + +Select a Branch +--------------- + +When you make small changes to the documentation, such as fixing typographical +errors or clarifying explanations, use the ``main`` branch (default). You +should also use the ``main`` branch when making contributions to features that +are in the current release. ``main`` is the most commonly used branch. : + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + git checkout main + +When you make changes to documentation that affect an upcoming release, use +the ``next`` branch. ``next`` is the second most commonly used branch. : + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + git checkout next + +When you are making substantial contributions such as new features that are not +yet in the current release; if your contribution is related to an issue with a +tracker ID; or, if you want to see your documentation rendered on the Ceph.com +website before it gets merged into the ``main`` branch, you should create a +branch. To distinguish branches that include only documentation updates, we +prepend them with ``wip-doc`` by convention, following the form +``wip-doc-{your-branch-name}``. If the branch relates to an issue filed in +http://tracker.ceph.com/issues, the branch name incorporates the issue number. +For example, if a documentation branch is a fix for issue #4000, the branch name +should be ``wip-doc-4000`` by convention and the relevant tracker URL will be +http://tracker.ceph.com/issues/4000. + +.. note:: Please do not mingle documentation contributions and source code + contributions in a single commit. When you keep documentation + commits separate from source code commits, it simplifies the review + process. We highly recommend that any pull request that adds a feature or + a configuration option should also include a documentation commit that + describes the changes. + +Before you create your branch name, ensure that it doesn't already exist in the +local or remote repository. : + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + git branch -a | grep wip-doc-{your-branch-name} + +If it doesn't exist, create your branch: + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + git checkout -b wip-doc-{your-branch-name} + + +Make a Change +------------- + +Modifying a document involves opening a reStructuredText file, changing +its contents, and saving the changes. See `Documentation Style Guide`_ for +details on syntax requirements. + +Adding a document involves creating a new reStructuredText file within the +``doc`` directory tree with a ``*.rst`` +extension. You must also include a reference to the document: a hyperlink +or a table of contents entry. The ``index.rst`` file of a top-level directory +usually contains a TOC, where you can add the new file name. All documents must +have a title. See `Headings`_ for details. + +Your new document doesn't get tracked by ``git`` automatically. When you want +to add the document to the repository, you must use ``git add +{path-to-filename}``. For example, from the top level directory of the +repository, adding an ``example.rst`` file to the ``rados`` subdirectory would +look like this: + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + git add doc/rados/example.rst + +Deleting a document involves removing it from the repository with ``git rm +{path-to-filename}``. For example: + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + git rm doc/rados/example.rst + +You must also remove any reference to a deleted document from other documents. + + +Build the Source +---------------- + +To build the documentation, navigate to the ``ceph`` repository directory: + + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + cd ceph + +.. note:: + The directory that contains ``build-doc`` and ``serve-doc`` must be included + in the ``PATH`` environment variable in order for these commands to work. + + +To build the documentation on Debian/Ubuntu, Fedora, or CentOS/RHEL, execute: + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + admin/build-doc + +To scan for the reachability of external links, execute: + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + admin/build-doc linkcheck + +Executing ``admin/build-doc`` will create a ``build-doc`` directory under +``ceph``. You may need to create a directory under ``ceph/build-doc`` for +output of Javadoc files: + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + mkdir -p output/html/api/libcephfs-java/javadoc + +The build script ``build-doc`` will produce an output of errors and warnings. +You MUST fix errors in documents you modified before committing a change, and +you SHOULD fix warnings that are related to syntax you modified. + +.. important:: You must validate ALL HYPERLINKS. If a hyperlink is broken, + it automatically breaks the build! + +Once you build the documentation set, you may start an HTTP server at +``http://localhost:8080/`` to view it: + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + admin/serve-doc + +You can also navigate to ``build-doc/output`` to inspect the built documents. +There should be an ``html`` directory and a ``man`` directory containing +documentation in HTML and manpage formats respectively. + +Build the Source (First Time) +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Ceph uses Python Sphinx, which is generally distribution agnostic. The first +time you build Ceph documentation, it will generate a doxygen XML tree, which +is a bit time consuming. + +Python Sphinx does have some dependencies that vary across distributions. The +first time you build the documentation, the script will notify you if you do not +have the dependencies installed. To run Sphinx and build documentation successfully, +the following packages are required: + +.. raw:: html + + <style type="text/css">div.body h3{margin:5px 0px 0px 0px;}</style> + <table cellpadding="10"><colgroup><col width="30%"><col width="30%"><col width="30%"></colgroup><tbody valign="top"><tr><td><h3>Debian/Ubuntu</h3> + +- gcc +- python3-dev +- python3-pip +- python3-sphinx +- pytnon3-venv +- libxml2-dev +- libxslt1-dev +- doxygen +- graphviz +- ant +- ditaa + +.. raw:: html + + </td><td><h3>Fedora</h3> + +- gcc +- python-devel +- python-pip +- python-docutils +- python-jinja2 +- python-pygments +- python-sphinx +- libxml2-devel +- libxslt1-devel +- doxygen +- graphviz +- ant +- ditaa + +.. raw:: html + + </td><td><h3>CentOS/RHEL</h3> + +- gcc +- python-devel +- python-pip +- python-docutils +- python-jinja2 +- python-pygments +- python-sphinx +- libxml2-dev +- libxslt1-dev +- doxygen +- graphviz +- ant + +.. raw:: html + + </td></tr></tbody></table> + + +Install each dependency that is not installed on your host. For Debian/Ubuntu +distributions, execute the following: + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + sudo apt-get install gcc python-dev python-pip libxml2-dev libxslt-dev doxygen graphviz ant ditaa + sudo apt-get install python-sphinx + +For Fedora distributions, execute the following: + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + sudo yum install gcc python-devel python-pip libxml2-devel libxslt-devel doxygen graphviz ant + sudo pip install html2text + sudo yum install python-jinja2 python-pygments python-docutils python-sphinx + sudo yum install jericho-html ditaa + +For CentOS/RHEL distributions, it is recommended to have ``epel`` (Extra +Packages for Enterprise Linux) repository as it provides some extra packages +which are not available in the default repository. To install ``epel``, execute +the following: + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + sudo yum install -y https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/epel-release-latest-7.noarch.rpm + +For CentOS/RHEL distributions, execute the following: + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + sudo yum install gcc python-devel python-pip libxml2-devel libxslt-devel doxygen graphviz ant + sudo pip install html2text + +For CentOS/RHEL distributions, the remaining python packages are not available +in the default and ``epel`` repositories. So, use http://rpmfind.net/ to find +the packages. Then, download them from a mirror and install them. For example: + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + wget http://rpmfind.net/linux/centos/7/os/x86_64/Packages/python-jinja2-2.7.2-2.el7.noarch.rpm + sudo yum install python-jinja2-2.7.2-2.el7.noarch.rpm + wget http://rpmfind.net/linux/centos/7/os/x86_64/Packages/python-pygments-1.4-9.el7.noarch.rpm + sudo yum install python-pygments-1.4-9.el7.noarch.rpm + wget http://rpmfind.net/linux/centos/7/os/x86_64/Packages/python-docutils-0.11-0.2.20130715svn7687.el7.noarch.rpm + sudo yum install python-docutils-0.11-0.2.20130715svn7687.el7.noarch.rpm + wget http://rpmfind.net/linux/centos/7/os/x86_64/Packages/python-sphinx-1.1.3-11.el7.noarch.rpm + sudo yum install python-sphinx-1.1.3-11.el7.noarch.rpm + +Ceph documentation makes extensive use of `ditaa`_, which is not presently built +for CentOS/RHEL7. You must install ``ditaa`` if you are making changes to +``ditaa`` diagrams so that you can verify that they render properly before you +commit new or modified ``ditaa`` diagrams. You may retrieve compatible required +packages for CentOS/RHEL distributions and install them manually. To run +``ditaa`` on CentOS/RHEL7, following dependencies are required: + +- jericho-html +- jai-imageio-core +- batik + +Use http://rpmfind.net/ to find compatible ``ditaa`` and the dependencies. +Then, download them from a mirror and install them. For example: + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + wget http://rpmfind.net/linux/fedora/linux/releases/22/Everything/x86_64/os/Packages/j/jericho-html-3.3-4.fc22.noarch.rpm + sudo yum install jericho-html-3.3-4.fc22.noarch.rpm + wget http://rpmfind.net/linux/centos/7/os/x86_64/Packages/jai-imageio-core-1.2-0.14.20100217cvs.el7.noarch.rpm + sudo yum install jai-imageio-core-1.2-0.14.20100217cvs.el7.noarch.rpm + wget http://rpmfind.net/linux/centos/7/os/x86_64/Packages/batik-1.8-0.12.svn1230816.el7.noarch.rpm + sudo yum install batik-1.8-0.12.svn1230816.el7.noarch.rpm + wget http://rpmfind.net/linux/fedora/linux/releases/22/Everything/x86_64/os/Packages/d/ditaa-0.9-13.r74.fc21.noarch.rpm + sudo yum install ditaa-0.9-13.r74.fc21.noarch.rpm + +Once you have installed all these packages, build the documentation by following +the steps given in `Build the Source`_. + + +Commit the Change +----------------- + +Ceph documentation commits are simple, but follow a strict convention: + +- A commit SHOULD have 1 file per commit (it simplifies rollback). You MAY + commit multiple files with related changes. Unrelated changes SHOULD NOT + be put into the same commit. +- A commit MUST have a comment. +- A commit comment MUST be prepended with ``doc:``. (strict) +- The comment summary MUST be one line only. (strict) +- Additional comments MAY follow a blank line after the summary, + but should be terse. +- A commit MAY include ``Fixes: #{bug number}``. +- Commits MUST include ``Signed-off-by: Firstname Lastname <email>``. (strict) + +.. tip:: Follow the foregoing convention particularly where it says + ``(strict)`` or you will be asked to modify your commit to comply with + this convention. + +The following is a common commit comment (preferred):: + + doc: Fixes a spelling error and a broken hyperlink. + + Signed-off-by: John Doe <john.doe@gmail.com> + + +The following comment includes a reference to a bug. :: + + doc: Fixes a spelling error and a broken hyperlink. + + Fixes: #1234 + + Signed-off-by: John Doe <john.doe@gmail.com> + + +The following comment includes a terse sentence following the comment summary. +There is a carriage return between the summary line and the description:: + + doc: Added mon setting to monitor config reference + + Describes 'mon setting', which is a new setting added + to config_opts.h. + + Signed-off-by: John Doe <john.doe@gmail.com> + + +To commit changes, execute the following: + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + git commit -a + + +An easy way to manage your documentation commits is to use visual tools for +``git``. For example, ``gitk`` provides a graphical interface for viewing the +repository history, and ``git-gui`` provides a graphical interface for viewing +your uncommitted changes, staging them for commit, committing the changes and +pushing them to your forked Ceph repository. + + +For Debian/Ubuntu, execute: + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + sudo apt-get install gitk git-gui + +For Fedora/CentOS/RHEL, execute: + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + sudo yum install gitk git-gui + +Then, execute: + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + cd {git-ceph-repo-path} + gitk + +Finally, select **File->Start git gui** to activate the graphical user interface. + + +Push the Change +--------------- + +Once you have one or more commits, you must push them from the local copy of the +repository to ``github``. A graphical tool like ``git-gui`` provides a user +interface for pushing to the repository. If you created a branch previously: + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + git push origin wip-doc-{your-branch-name} + +Otherwise: + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + git push + + +Make a Pull Request +------------------- + +As noted earlier, you can make documentation contributions using the `Fork and +Pull`_ approach. + + + +Notify Us +--------- + +After you make a pull request, please email ceph-docs@redhat.com. + + + +Documentation Style Guide +========================= + +One objective of the Ceph documentation project is to ensure the readability of +the documentation in both native restructuredText format and its rendered +formats such as HTML. Navigate to your Ceph repository and view a document in +its native format. You may notice that it is generally as legible in a terminal +as it is in its rendered HTML format. Additionally, you may also notice that +diagrams in ``ditaa`` format also render reasonably well in text mode. : + +.. prompt:: bash $ + + less doc/architecture.rst + +Review the following style guides to maintain this consistency. + + +Headings +-------- + +#. **Document Titles:** Document titles use the ``=`` character overline and + underline with a leading and trailing space on the title text line. + See `Document Title`_ for details. + +#. **Section Titles:** Section tiles use the ``=`` character underline with no + leading or trailing spaces for text. Two carriage returns should precede a + section title (unless an inline reference precedes it). See `Sections`_ for + details. + +#. **Subsection Titles:** Subsection titles use the ``_`` character underline + with no leading or trailing spaces for text. Two carriage returns should + precede a subsection title (unless an inline reference precedes it). + + +Text Body +--------- + +As a general rule, we prefer text to wrap at column 80 so that it is legible in +a command line interface without leading or trailing white space. Where +possible, we prefer to maintain this convention with text, lists, literal text +(exceptions allowed), tables, and ``ditaa`` graphics. + +#. **Paragraphs**: Paragraphs have a leading and a trailing carriage return, + and should be 80 characters wide or less so that the documentation can be + read in native format in a command line terminal. + +#. **Literal Text:** To create an example of literal text (e.g., command line + usage), terminate the preceding paragraph with ``::`` or enter a carriage + return to create an empty line after the preceding paragraph; then, enter + ``::`` on a separate line followed by another empty line. Then, begin the + literal text with tab indentation (preferred) or space indentation of 3 + characters. + +#. **Indented Text:** Indented text such as bullet points + (e.g., ``- some text``) may span multiple lines. The text of subsequent + lines should begin at the same character position as the text of the + indented text (less numbers, bullets, etc.). + + Indented text may include literal text examples. Whereas, text indentation + should be done with spaces, literal text examples should be indented with + tabs. This convention enables you to add an additional indented paragraph + following a literal example by leaving a blank line and beginning the + subsequent paragraph with space indentation. + +#. **Numbered Lists:** Numbered lists should use autonumbering by starting + a numbered indent with ``#.`` instead of the actual number so that + numbered paragraphs can be repositioned without requiring manual + renumbering. + +#. **Code Examples:** Ceph supports the use of the + ``.. code-block::<language>`` role, so that you can add highlighting to + source examples. This is preferred for source code. However, use of this + tag will cause autonumbering to restart at 1 if it is used as an example + within a numbered list. See `Showing code examples`_ for details. + + +Paragraph Level Markup +---------------------- + +The Ceph project uses `paragraph level markup`_ to highlight points. + +#. **Tip:** Use the ``.. tip::`` directive to provide additional information + that assists the reader or steers the reader away from trouble. + +#. **Note**: Use the ``.. note::`` directive to highlight an important point. + +#. **Important:** Use the ``.. important::`` directive to highlight important + requirements or caveats (e.g., anything that could lead to data loss). Use + this directive sparingly, because it renders in red. + +#. **Version Added:** Use the ``.. versionadded::`` directive for new features + or configuration settings so that users know the minimum release for using + a feature. + +#. **Version Changed:** Use the ``.. versionchanged::`` directive for changes + in usage or configuration settings. + +#. **Deprecated:** Use the ``.. deprecated::`` directive when CLI usage, + a feature or a configuration setting is no longer preferred or will be + discontinued. + +#. **Topic:** Use the ``.. topic::`` directive to encapsulate text that is + outside the main flow of the document. See the `topic directive`_ for + additional details. + + +Table of Contents (TOC) and Hyperlinks +--------------------------------------- + +The documents in the Ceph documentation suite follow certain conventions that +are explained in this section. + +Every document (every ``.rst`` file) in the Sphinx-controlled Ceph +documentation suite must be linked either (1) from another document in the +documentation suite or (2) from a table of contents (TOC). If any document in +the documentation suite is not linked in this way, the ``build-doc`` script +generates warnings when it tries to build the documentation. + +The Ceph project uses the ``.. toctree::`` directive. See `The TOC tree`_ for +details. When rendering a table of contents (TOC), specify the ``:maxdepth:`` +parameter so that the rendered TOC is not too long. + +Use the ``:ref:`` syntax where a link target contains a specific unique +identifier (for example, ``.. _unique-target-id:``). A link to the section +designated by ``.. _unique-target-id:`` looks like this: +``:ref:`unique-target-id```. If this convention is followed, the links within +the ``.rst`` source files will work even if the source files are moved within +the ``ceph/doc`` directory. See `Cross referencing arbitrary locations`_ for +details. + +.. _start_external_hyperlink_example: + +External Hyperlink Example +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +It is also possible to create a link to a section of the documentation and to +have custom text appear in the body of the link. This is useful when it is more +important to preserve the text of the sentence containing the link than it is +to refer explicitly to the title of the section being linked to. + +For example, RST that links to the Sphinx Python Document Generator homepage +and generates a sentence reading "Click here to learn more about Python +Sphinx." looks like this: + +:: + + ``Click `here <https://www.sphinx-doc.org>`_ to learn more about Python + Sphinx.`` + +And here it is, rendered: + +Click `here <https://www.sphinx-doc.org>`_ to learn more about Python Sphinx. + +Pay special attention to the underscore after the backtick. If you forget to +include it and this is your first day working with RST, there's a chance that +you'll spend all day wondering what went wrong without realizing that you +omitted that underscore. Also, pay special attention to the space between the +substitution text (in this case, "here") and the less-than bracket that sets +the explicit link apart from the substition text. The link will not render +properly without this space. + +Linking Customs +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +By a custom established when Ceph was still being developed by Inktank, +contributors to the documentation of the Ceph project preferred to use the +convention of putting ``.. _Link Text: ../path`` links at the bottom of the +document and linking to them using references of the form ``:ref:`path```. This +convention was preferred because it made the documents more readable in a +command line interface. As of 2023, though, we have no preference for one over +the other. Use whichever convention makes the text easier to read. + +Quirks of ReStructured Text +--------------------------- + +External Links +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +.. _external_link_with_inline_text: + +This is the formula for links to addresses external to the Ceph documentation: + +:: + + `inline text <http:www.foo.com>`_ + +.. note:: Do not fail to include the space between the inline text and the + less-than sign. + + Do not fail to include the underscore after the final backtick. + + To link to addresses that are external to the Ceph documentation, include a + space between the inline text and the angle bracket that precedes the + external address. This is precisely the opposite of :ref:`the convention for + inline text that links to a location inside the Ceph + documentation<internal_link_with_inline_text>`. If this seems inconsistent + and confusing to you, then you're right. It is inconsistent and confusing. + +See also ":ref:`External Hyperlink Example<start_external_hyperlink_example>`". + +Internal Links +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +To link to a section in the Ceph documentation, you must (1) define a target +link before the section and then (2) link to that target from another location +in the documentation. Here are the formulas for targets and links to those +targets: + +Target:: + + .. _target: + + Title of Targeted Section + ========================= + + Lorem ipsum... + +Link to target:: + + :ref:`target` + +.. _internal_link_with_inline_text: + +Link to target with inline text:: + + :ref:`inline text<target>` + +.. note:: + + There is no space between "inline text" and the angle bracket that + immediately follows it. This is precisely the opposite of :ref:`the + convention for inline text that links to a location outside of the Ceph + documentation<external_link_with_inline_text>`. If this seems inconsistent + and confusing to you, then you're right. It is inconsistent and confusing. + + +.. _Python Sphinx: https://www.sphinx-doc.org +.. _restructuredText: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html +.. _Fork and Pull: https://help.github.com/articles/using-pull-requests +.. _github: http://github.com +.. _ditaa: http://ditaa.sourceforge.net/ +.. _Document Title: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/docs/user/rst/quickstart.html#document-title-subtitle +.. _Sections: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/docs/user/rst/quickstart.html#sections +.. _Cross referencing arbitrary locations: http://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/master/usage/restructuredtext/roles.html#role-ref +.. _The TOC tree: http://sphinx-doc.org/markup/toctree.html +.. _Showing code examples: http://sphinx-doc.org/markup/code.html +.. _paragraph level markup: http://sphinx-doc.org/markup/para.html +.. _topic directive: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/docs/ref/rst/directives.html#topic |