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diff --git a/docs/guidelines.md b/docs/guidelines.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..6c1c3ba7c --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/guidelines.md @@ -0,0 +1,772 @@ +<!-- +title: "Contribute to the documentation" +sidebar_label: "to Documentation" +custom_edit_url: "https://github.com/netdata/netdata/blob/master/docs/guidelines.md" +sidebar_position: "10000" +learn_status: "Published" +learn_topic_type: "Custom" +learn_rel_path: "Contribute" +learn_docs_purpose: "TBD" +--> + +import Tabs from '@theme/Tabs'; import TabItem from '@theme/TabItem'; + +Welcome to our docs developer guidelines! + +This document will guide you to the process of contributing to our +docs (**learn.netdata.cloud**) + +## Documentation architecture + +Netdata docs follows has two principals. + +1. Keep the documentation of each component _as close as you can to the codebase_ +2. Every component is analyzed via topic related docs. + +To this end: + +1. Documentation lives in every possible repo in the netdata organization. At the moment we contribute to: + - netdata/netdata + - netdata/learn (final site) + - netdata/go.d.plugin + - netdata/agent-service-discovery + + In each of these repos you will find markdown files. These markdown files may or not be part of the final docs. You + understand what documents are part of the final docs in the following section:[_How to update documentation of + learn.netdata.cloud_](#how-to-update-documentation-of-learn-netdata-cloud) + +2. Netdata docs processes are inspired from + the [DITA 1.2 guidelines](http://docs.oasis-open.org/dita/v1.2/os/spec/archSpec/dita-1.2_technicalContent_overview.html) + for Technical content. + +## Topic types + +### Concepts + +A concept introduces a single feature or concept. A concept should answer the questions: + +- What is this? +- Why would I use it? + +Concept topics: + +- Are abstract ideas +- Explain meaning or benefit +- Can stay when specifications change +- Provide background information + +### Tasks + +Concept and reference topics exist to support tasks. _The goal for users … is not to understand a concept but to +complete a task_. A task gives instructions for how to complete a procedure. + +Much of the uncertainty whether a topic is a concept or a reference disappears, when you have strong, solid task topics +in place, furthermore topics directly address your users and their daily tasks and help them to get their job done. A +task **must give an answer** to the **following questions**: + +- How do I create cool espresso drinks with my new coffee machine? +- How do I clean the milk steamer? + +For the title text, use the structure active verb + noun. For example, for instance _Deploy the Agent_. + +### References + +The reference document and information types provide for the separation of fact-based information from concepts and +tasks. \ +Factual information may include tables and lists of specifications, parameters, parts, commands, edit-files and other +information that the users are likely to look up. The reference information type allows fact-based content to be +maintained by those responsible for its accuracy and consistency. + +## Contribute to the documentation of learn.netdata.cloud + +### Encapsulate topics into markdown files. + +Netdata uses markdown files to document everything. To implement concrete sections of these [Topic types](#topic-types) +we encapsulate this logic as follows. Every document is characterized by its topic type ('learn_topic_type' metadata +field). To avoid breaking every single netdata concept into numerous small markdown files each document can be either a +single `Reference` or `Concept` or `Task` or a group of `References`, `Concepts`, `Tasks`. + +To this end, every single topic is encapsulated into a `Heading 3 (###)` section. That means, when you have a single +file you only make use of `Headings 4` and lower (`4, 5, 6`, for templated section or subsection). In case you want to +includ multiple (`Concepts` let's say) in a single document, you use `Headings 3` to seperate each concept. `Headings 2` +are used only in case you want to logically group topics inside a document. + +For instance: + +```markdown + +Small introduction of the document. + +### Concept A + +Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna +aliqua. + +#### Field from template 1 + +Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. + +#### Field from template 1 + +Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. + +##### Subsection 1 + +. . . + +### Concept A + +Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum. + +#### Field from template 1 + +. . . + + +``` + +This approach gives a clean and readable outlook in each document from a single sidebar. + +Here you can find the preferred templates for each topic type: + + +<Tabs> + <TabItem value="Concept" label="Concept" default> + + ```markdown + Small intro, give some context to the user of what you will cover on this document + + ### concept title (omit if the document describes only one concept) + + A concept introduces a single feature or concept. A concept should answer the questions: + + 1. What is this? + 2. Why would I use it? + + ``` + + </TabItem> + <TabItem value="Task" label="Tasks"> + + ```markdown + Small intro, give some context to the user of what you will cover on this document + + ### Task title (omit if the document describes only one task) + + #### Prerequisite + + Unordered list of what you will need. + + #### Steps + + Exact list of step the user must follow + + #### Expected result + + What you expect to see when you complete the steps above + + #### Example + + Example configuration/actions of the task + + #### Related reference documentation + + List of reference docs user needs to be aware of. + ``` + + </TabItem> + <TabItem value="Reference-collectors" label="Reference-collectors"> + + ```markdown + Small intro, give some context to the user of what you will cover on this document + + ### Reference name (omit if the document describes only one reference) + + #### Requirements + + Document any dependencies needed to run this module + + #### Requirements on the monitored component + + Document any steps user must take to sucessful monitor application, + for instance (create a user) + + #### Configuration files + + table with path and configuration files purpose + Columns: File name | Description (Purpose in a nutshell) + + #### Data collection + + To make changes, see `the ./edit-config task <link>` + + #### Auto discovery + + ##### Single node installation + + . . . we autodetect localhost:port and what configurations are defaults + + ##### Kubernetes installations + + . . . Service discovery, click here + + #### Metrics + + Columns: Metric (Context) | Scope | description (of the context) | dimensions | units (of the context) | Alert triggered + + + #### Alerts + + Collapsible content for every alert, just like the alert guides + + #### Configuration options + + Table with all the configuration options available. + + Columns: name | description | default | file_name + + #### Configuration example + + Default configuration example + + #### Troubleshoot + + backlink to the task to run this module in debug mode (here you provide the debug flags) + + +``` + + </TabItem> +</Tabs> + +### Metadata fields + +All Docs that are supposed to be part of learn.netdata.cloud have **hidden** sections in the begining of document. These +sections are plain lines of text and we call them metadata. Their represented as `key : "Value"` pairs. Some of them are +needed from our statice website builder (docusaurus) others are needed for our internal pipelines to build docs +(have prefix `learn_`). + +So let's go through the different necessary metadata tags to get a document properly published on Learn: + +| metadata_key | Value(s) | Frontmatter effect | Mandatory | Limitations | +|:---------------------:|---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|:-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------:|:---------:|:---------------------------------------:| +| `title` | `String` | Title in each document | yes | | +| `custom_edit_url` | `String` | The source GH link of the file | yes | | +| `description` | `String or multiline String` | - | yes | | +| `sidebar_label` | `String or multiline String` | Name in the TOC tree | yes | | +| `sidebar_position` | `String or multiline String` | Global position in the TOC tree (local for per folder) | yes | | +| `learn_status` | [`Published`, `Unpublished`, `Hidden`] | `Published`: Document visible in learn,<br/> `Unpublished`: Document archived in learn, <br/>`Hidden`: Documentplaced under learn_rel_path but it's hidden] | yes | | +| `learn_topic_type` | [`Concepts`, `Tasks`, `References`, `Getting Started`] | | yes | | +| `learn_rel_path` | `Path` (the path you want this file to appear in learn<br/> without the /docs prefix and the name of the file | | yes | | +| `learn_autogenerated` | `Dictionary` (for internal use) | | no | Keys in the dictionary must be in `' '` | + +:::important + +1. In case any mandatory tags are missing or falsely inputted the file will remain unpublished. This is by design to + prevent non-properly tagged files from getting published. +2. All metadata values must be included in `" "`. From `string` noted text inside the fields use `' ''` + + +While Docusaurus can make use of more metadata tags than the above, these are the minimum we require to publish the file +on Learn. + +::: + +### Placing a document in learn + +Here you can see how the metadata are parsed and create a markdown file in learn. + +![](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/12612986/207310336-f7cc150b-543c-4f13-be98-5058a4d29284.png) + +### Before you get started + +Anyone interested in contributing to documentation should first read the [Netdata style guide](#styling-guide) further +down below and the [Netdata Community Code of Conduct](https://github.com/netdata/.github/blob/main/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md). + +Netdata's documentation uses Markdown syntax. If you're not familiar with Markdown, read +the [Mastering Markdown](https://guides.github.com/features/mastering-markdown/) guide from GitHub for the basics on +creating paragraphs, styled text, lists, tables, and more, and read further down about some special +occasions [while writing in MDX](#mdx-and-markdown). + +### Making your first contribution + +The easiest way to contribute to Netdata's documentation is to edit a file directly on GitHub. This is perfect for small +fixes to a single document, such as fixing a typo or clarifying a confusing sentence. + +Click on the **Edit this page** button on any published document on [Netdata Learn](https://learn.netdata.cloud). Each +page has two of these buttons: One beneath the table of contents, and another at the end of the document, which take you +to GitHub's code editor. Make your suggested changes, keeping the [Netdata style guide](#styling-guide) +in mind, and use the ***Preview changes*** button to ensure your Markdown syntax works as expected. + +Under the **Commit changes** header, write descriptive title for your requested change. Click the **Commit changes** +button to initiate your pull request (PR). + +Jump down to our instructions on [PRs](#making-a-pull-request) for your next steps. + +**Note**: If you wish to contribute documentation that is more tailored from your specific infrastructure +monitoring/troubleshooting experience, please consider submitting a blog post about your experience. Check +the [README](https://github.com/netdata/blog/blob/master/README.md) in our blog repo! Any blog submissions that have +widespread or universal application will be integrated into our permanent documentation. + +### Edit locally + +Editing documentation locally is the preferred method for complex changes that span multiple documents or change the +documentation's style or structure. + +Create a fork of the Netdata Agent repository by visit the [Netdata repository](https://github.com/netdata/netdata) and +clicking on the **Fork** button. + +GitHub will ask you where you want to clone the repository. When finished, you end up at the index of your forked +Netdata Agent repository. Clone your fork to your local machine: + +```bash +git clone https://github.com/YOUR-GITHUB-USERNAME/netdata.git +``` + +Create a new branch using `git checkout -b BRANCH-NAME`. Use your favorite text editor to make your changes, keeping +the [Netdata style guide](https://github.com/netdata/netdata/blob/master/docs/contributing/style-guide.md) in mind. Add, commit, and push changes to your fork. When you're +finished, visit the [Netdata Agent Pull requests](https://github.com/netdata/netdata/pulls) to create a new pull request +based on the changes you made in the new branch of your fork. + +### Making a pull request + +Pull requests (PRs) should be concise and informative. See our [PR guidelines](/contribute/handbook#pr-guidelines) for +specifics. + +- The title must follow the [imperative mood](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperative_mood) and be no more than ~50 + characters. +- The description should explain what was changed and why. Verify that you tested any code or processes that you are + trying to change. + +The Netdata team will review your PR and assesses it for correctness, conciseness, and overall quality. We may point to +specific sections and ask for additional information or other fixes. + +After merging your PR, the Netdata team rebuilds the [documentation site](https://learn.netdata.cloud) to publish the +changed documentation. + +## Styling guide + +The *Netdata style guide* establishes editorial guidelines for any writing produced by the Netdata team or the Netdata +community, including documentation, articles, in-product UX copy, and more. Both internal Netdata teams and external +contributors to any of Netdata's open-source projects should reference and adhere to this style guide as much as +possible. + +Netdata's writing should **empower** and **educate**. You want to help people understand Netdata's value, encourage them +to learn more, and ultimately use Netdata's products to democratize monitoring in their organizations. To achieve these +goals, your writing should be: + +- **Clear**. Use simple words and sentences. Use strong, direct, and active language that encourages readers to action. +- **Concise**. Provide solutions and answers as quickly as possible. Give users the information they need right now, + along with opportunities to learn more. +- **Universal**. Think of yourself as a guide giving a tour of Netdata's products, features, and capabilities to a + diverse group of users. Write to reach the widest possible audience. + +You can achieve these goals by reading and adhering to the principles outlined below. + +If you're not familiar with Markdown, read +the [Mastering Markdown](https://guides.github.com/features/mastering-markdown/) guide from GitHub for the basics on +creating paragraphs, styled text, lists, tables, and more. + +The following sections describe situations in which a specific syntax is required. + +#### Syntax standards (`remark-lint`) + +The Netdata team uses [`remark-lint`](https://github.com/remarkjs/remark-lint) for Markdown code styling. + +- Use a maximum of 120 characters per line. +- Begin headings with hashes, such as `# H1 heading`, `## H2 heading`, and so on. +- Use `_` for italics/emphasis. +- Use `**` for bold. +- Use dashes `-` to begin an unordered list, and put a single space after the dash. +- Tables should be padded so that pipes line up vertically with added whitespace. + +If you want to see all the settings, open the +[`remarkrc.js`](https://github.com/netdata/netdata/blob/master/.remarkrc.js) file in the `netdata/netdata` repository. + +#### MDX and markdown + +While writing in Docusaurus, you might want to take leverage of it's features that are supported in MDX formatted files. +One of those that we use is [Tabs](https://docusaurus.io/docs/next/markdown-features/tabs). They use an HTML syntax, +which requires some changes in the way we write markdown inside them. + +In detail: + +Due to a bug with docusaurus, we prefer to use `<h1>heading</h1> instead of # H1` so that docusaurus doesn't render the +contents of all Tabs on the right hand side, while not being able to navigate +them [relative link](https://github.com/facebook/docusaurus/issues/7008). + +You can use markdown syntax for every other styling you want to do except Admonitions: +For admonitions, follow [this](https://docusaurus.io/docs/markdown-features/admonitions#usage-in-jsx) guide to use +admonitions inside JSX. While writing in JSX, all the markdown stylings have to be in HTML format to be rendered +properly. + +#### Admonitions + +Use admonitions cautiously. Admonitions may draw user's attention, to that end we advise you to use them only for side +content/info, without significantly interrupting the document flow. + +You can find the supported admonitions in the docusaurus's [documentation](https://docusaurus.io/docs/markdown-features/admonitions). + +#### Images + +Don't rely on images to convey features, ideas, or instructions. Accompany every image with descriptive alt text. + +In Markdown, use the standard image syntax, `![](/docs/agent/contributing)`, and place the alt text between the +brackets `[]`. Here's an example using our logo: + +```markdown +![The Netdata logo](/docs/agent/web/gui/static/img/netdata-logomark.svg) +``` + +Reference in-product text, code samples, and terminal output with actual text content, not screen captures or other +images. Place the text in an appropriate element, such as a blockquote or code block, so all users can parse the +information. + +#### Syntax highlighting + +Our documentation site at [learn.netdata.cloud](https://learn.netdata.cloud) uses +[Prism](https://v2.docusaurus.io/docs/markdown-features#syntax-highlighting) for syntax highlighting. Netdata can use +any of +the [supported languages by prism-react-renderer](https://github.com/FormidableLabs/prism-react-renderer/blob/master/src/vendor/prism/includeLangs.js) +. + +If no language is specified, Prism tries to guess the language based on its content. + +Include the language directly after the three backticks (```` ``` ````) that start the code block. For highlighting C +code, for example: + +````c +```c +inline char *health_stock_config_dir(void) { + char buffer[FILENAME_MAX + 1]; + snprintfz(buffer, FILENAME_MAX, "%s/health.d", netdata_configured_stock_config_dir); + return config_get(CONFIG_SECTION_DIRECTORIES, "stock health config", buffer); +} +``` +```` + +And the prettified result: + +```c +inline char *health_stock_config_dir(void) { + char buffer[FILENAME_MAX + 1]; + snprintfz(buffer, FILENAME_MAX, "%s/health.d", netdata_configured_stock_config_dir); + return config_get(CONFIG_SECTION_DIRECTORIES, "stock health config", buffer); +} +``` + +Prism also supports titles and line highlighting. See +the [Docusaurus documentation](https://v2.docusaurus.io/docs/markdown-features#code-blocks) for more information. + +## Language, grammar, and mechanics + +#### Voice and tone + +One way we write empowering, educational content is by using a consistent voice and an appropriate tone. + +*Voice* is like your personality, which doesn't really change day to day. + +*Tone* is how you express your personality. Your expression changes based on your attitude or mood, or based on who +you're around. In writing, your reflect tone in your word choice, punctuation, sentence structure, or even the use of +emoji. + +The same idea about voice and tone applies to organizations, too. Our voice shouldn't change much between two pieces of +content, no matter who wrote each, but the tone might be quite different based on who we think is reading. + +For example, a [blog post](https://www.netdata.cloud/blog/) and a [press release](https://www.netdata.cloud/news/) +should have a similar voice, despite most often being written by different people. However, blog posts are relaxed and +witty, while press releases are focused and academic. You won't see any emoji in a press release. + +##### Voice + +Netdata's voice is authentic, passionate, playful, and respectful. + +- **Authentic** writing is honest and fact-driven. Focus on Netdata's strength while accurately communicating what + Netdata can and cannot do, and emphasize technical accuracy over hard sells and marketing jargon. +- **Passionate** writing is strong and direct. Be a champion for the product or feature you're writing about, and let + your unique personality and writing style shine. +- **Playful** writing is friendly, thoughtful, and engaging. Don't take yourself too seriously, as long as it's not at + the expense of Netdata or any of its users. +- **Respectful** writing treats people the way you want to be treated. Prioritize giving solutions and answers as + quickly as possible. + +##### Tone + +Netdata's tone is fun and playful, but clarity and conciseness comes first. We also tend to be informal, and aren't +afraid of a playful joke or two. + +While we have general standards for voice and tone, we do want every individual's unique writing style to reflect in +published content. + +#### Universal communication + +Netdata is a global company in every sense, with employees, contributors, and users from around the world. We strive to +communicate in a way that is clear and easily understood by everyone. + +Here are some guidelines, pointers, and questions to be aware of as you write to ensure your writing is universal. Some +of these are expanded into individual sections in +the [language, grammar, and mechanics](#language-grammar-and-mechanics) section below. + +- Would this language make sense to someone who doesn't work here? +- Could someone quickly scan this document and understand the material? +- Create an information hierarchy with key information presented first and clearly called out to improve scannability. +- Avoid directional language like "sidebar on the right of the page" or "header at the top of the page" since + presentation elements may adapt for devices. +- Use descriptive links rather than "click here" or "learn more". +- Include alt text for images and image links. +- Ensure any information contained within a graphic element is also available as plain text. +- Avoid idioms that may not be familiar to the user or that may not make sense when translated. +- Avoid local, cultural, or historical references that may be unfamiliar to users. +- Prioritize active, direct language. +- Avoid referring to someone's age unless it is directly relevant; likewise, avoid referring to people with age-related + descriptors like "young" or "elderly." +- Avoid disability-related idioms like "lame" or "falling on deaf ears." Don't refer to a person's disability unless + it’s directly relevant to what you're writing. +- Don't call groups of people "guys." Don't call women "girls." +- Avoid gendered terms in favor of neutral alternatives, like "server" instead of "waitress" and "businessperson" + instead of "businessman." +- When writing about a person, use their communicated pronouns. When in doubt, just ask or use their name. It's OK to + use "they" as a singular pronoun. + +> Some of these guidelines were adapted from MailChimp under the Creative Commons license. + +To ensure Netdata's writing is clear, concise, and universal, we have established standards for language, grammar, and +certain writing mechanics. However, if you're writing about Netdata for an external publication, such as a guest blog +post, follow that publication's style guide or standards, while keeping +the [preferred spelling of Netdata terms](#netdata-specific-terms) in mind. + +#### Active voice + +Active voice is more concise and easier to understand compared to passive voice. When using active voice, the subject of +the sentence is action. In passive voice, the subject is acted upon. A famous example of passive voice is the phrase +"mistakes were made." + +| | | +| --------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | +| Not recommended | When an alarm is triggered by a metric, a notification is sent by Netdata. | +| **Recommended** | When a metric triggers an alarm, Netdata sends a notification to your preferred endpoint. | + +#### Second person + +Use the second person ("you") to give instructions or "talk" directly to users. + +In these situations, avoid "we," "I," "let's," and "us," particularly in documentation. The "you" pronoun can also be +implied, depending on your sentence structure. + +One valid exception is when a member of the Netdata team or community wants to write about said team or community. + +| | | +| ------------------------------ | ------------------------------------------------------------ | +| Not recommended | To install Netdata, we should try the one-line installer... | +| **Recommended** | To install Netdata, you should try the one-line installer... | +| **Recommended**, implied "you" | To install Netdata, try the one-line installer... | + +#### "Easy" or "simple" + +Using words that imply the complexity of a task or feature goes against our policy +of [universal communication](#universal-communication). If you claim that a task is easy and the reader struggles to +complete it, you may inadvertently discourage them. + +However, if you give users two options and want to relay that one option is genuinely less complex than another, be +specific about how and why. + +For example, don't write, "Netdata's one-line installer is the easiest way to install Netdata." Instead, you might want +to say, "Netdata's one-line installer requires fewer steps than manually installing from source." + +#### Slang, metaphors, and jargon + +A particular word, phrase, or metaphor you're familiar with might not translate well to the other cultures featured +among Netdata's global community. We recommended you avoid slang or colloquialisms in your writing. + +In addition, don't use abbreviations that have not yet been defined in the content. See our section on +[abbreviations](#abbreviations-acronyms-and-initialisms) for additional guidance. + +If you must use industry jargon, such as "mean time to resolution," define the term as clearly and concisely as you can. + +> Netdata helps you reduce your organization's mean time to resolution (MTTR), which is the average time the responsible +> team requires to repair a system and resolve an ongoing incident. + +#### Spelling + +While the Netdata team is mostly *not* American, we still aspire to use American spelling whenever possible, as it is +the standard for the monitoring industry. + +See the [word list](#word-list) for spellings of specific words. + +#### Capitalization + +Follow the general [English standards](https://owl.purdue.edu/owl/general_writing/mechanics/help_with_capitals.html) for +capitalization. In summary: + +- Capitalize the first word of every new sentence. +- Don't use uppercase for emphasis. (Netdata is the BEST!) +- Capitalize the names of brands, software, products, and companies according to their official guidelines. (Netdata, + Docker, Apache, NGINX) +- Avoid camel case (NetData) or all caps (NETDATA). + +Whenever you refer to the company Netdata, Inc., or the open-source monitoring agent the company develops, capitalize +**Netdata**. + +However, if you are referring to a process, user, or group on a Linux system, use lowercase and fence the word in an +inline code block: `` `netdata` ``. + +| | | +| --------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | +| Not recommended | The netdata agent, which spawns the netdata process, is actively maintained by netdata, inc. | +| **Recommended** | The Netdata Agent, which spawns the `netdata` process, is actively maintained by Netdata, Inc. | + +##### Capitalization of document titles and page headings + +Document titles and page headings should use sentence case. That means you should only capitalize the first word. + +If you need to use the name of a brand, software, product, and company, capitalize it according to their official +guidelines. + +Also, don't put a period (`.`) or colon (`:`) at the end of a title or header. + +| | | +| --------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | +| Not recommended | Getting Started Guide <br />Service Discovery and Auto-Detection: <br />Install netdata with docker | +| ** +Recommended** | Getting started guide <br />Service discovery and auto-detection <br />Install Netdata with Docker | + +#### Abbreviations (acronyms and initialisms) + +Use abbreviations (including [acronyms and initialisms](https://www.dictionary.com/e/acronym-vs-abbreviation/)) in +documentation when one exists, when it's widely accepted within the monitoring/sysadmin community, and when it improves +the readability of a document. + +When introducing an abbreviation to a document for the first time, give the reader both the spelled-out version and the +shortened version at the same time. For example: + +> Use Netdata to monitor Extended Berkeley Packet Filter (eBPF) metrics in real-time. After you define an abbreviation, don't switch back and forth. Use only the abbreviation for the rest of the document. + +You can also use abbreviations in a document's title to keep the title short and relevant. If you do this, you should +still introduce the spelled-out name alongside the abbreviation as soon as possible. + +#### Clause order + +When instructing users to take action, give them the context first. By placing the context in an initial clause at the +beginning of the sentence, users can immediately know if they want to read more, follow a link, or skip ahead. + +| | | +| --------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | +| Not recommended | Read the reference guide if you'd like to learn more about custom dashboards. | +| **Recommended** | If you'd like to learn more about custom dashboards, read the reference guide. | + +#### Oxford comma + +The Oxford comma is the comma used after the second-to-last item in a list of three or more items. It appears just +before "and" or "or." + +| | | +| --------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- | +| Not recommended | Netdata can monitor RAM, disk I/O, MySQL queries per second and lm-sensors. | +| **Recommended** | Netdata can monitor RAM, disk I/O, MySQL queries per second, and lm-sensors. | + +#### Future releases or features + +Do not mention future releases or upcoming features in writing unless they have been previously communicated via a +public roadmap. + +In particular, documentation must describe, as accurately as possible, the Netdata Agent _as of +the [latest commit](https://github.com/netdata/netdata/commits/master) in the GitHub repository_. For Netdata Cloud, +documentation must reflect the *current state* of [production](https://app.netdata.cloud). + +#### Informational links + +Every link should clearly state its destination. Don't use words like "here" to describe where a link will take your +reader. + +| | | +| --------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | +| Not recommended | To install Netdata, click [here](https://github.com/netdata/netdata/blob/master/packaging/installer/README.md). | +| **Recommended** | To install Netdata, read the [installation instructions](https://github.com/netdata/netdata/blob/master/packaging/installer/README.md). | + +Use links as often as required to provide necessary context. Blog posts and guides require less hyperlinks than +documentation. See the section on [linking between documentation](#linking-between-documentation) for guidance on the +Markdown syntax and path structure of inter-documentation links. + +#### Contractions + +Contractions like "you'll" or "they're" are acceptable in most Netdata writing. They're both authentic and playful, and +reinforce the idea that you, as a writer, are guiding users through a particular idea, process, or feature. + +Contractions are generally not used in press releases or other media engagements. + +#### Emoji + +Emoji can add fun and character to your writing, but should be used sparingly and only if it matches the content's tone +and desired audience. + +#### Switching Linux users + +Netdata documentation often suggests that users switch from their normal user to the `netdata` user to run specific +commands. Use the following command to instruct users to make the switch: + +```bash +sudo su -s /bin/bash netdata +``` + +#### Hostname/IP address of a node + +Use `NODE` instead of an actual or example IP address/hostname when referencing the process of navigating to a dashboard +or API endpoint in a browser. + +| | | +| --------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | +| Not recommended | Navigate to `http://example.com:19999` in your browser to see Netdata's dashboard. <br />Navigate to `http://203.0.113.0:19999` in your browser to see Netdata's dashboard. | +| ** +Recommended** | Navigate to `http://NODE:19999` in your browser to see Netdata's dashboard. | + +If you worry that `NODE` doesn't provide enough context for the user, particularly in documentation or guides designed +for beginners, you can provide an explanation: + +> With the Netdata Agent running, visit `http://NODE:19999/api/v1/info` in your browser, replacing `NODE` with the IP +> address or hostname of your Agent. + +#### Paths and running commands + +When instructing users to run a Netdata-specific command, don't assume the path to said command, because not every +Netdata Agent installation will have commands under the same paths. When applicable, help them navigate to the correct +path, providing a recommendation or instructions on how to view the running configuration, which includes the correct +paths. + +For example, the [configuration](https://github.com/netdata/netdata/blob/master/docs/configure/nodes.md) doc first teaches users how to find the Netdata config directory +and navigate to it, then runs commands from the `/etc/netdata` path so that the instructions are more universal. + +Don't include full paths, beginning from the system's root (`/`), as these might not work on certain systems. + +| | | +| --------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | +| Not recommended | Use `edit-config` to edit Netdata's configuration: `sudo /etc/netdata/edit-config netdata.conf`. | +| ** +Recommended** | Use `edit-config` to edit Netdata's configuration by first navigating to your [Netdata config directory](https://github.com/netdata/netdata/blob/master/docs/configure/nodes.md#the-netdata-config-directory), which is typically at `/etc/netdata`, then running `sudo edit-config netdata.conf`. | + +#### `sudo` + +Include `sudo` before a command if you believe most Netdata users will need to elevate privileges to run it. This makes +our writing more universal, and users on `sudo`-less systems are generally already aware that they need to run commands +differently. + +For example, most users need to use `sudo` with the `edit-config` script, because the Netdata config directory is owned +by the `netdata` user. Same goes for restarting the Netdata Agent with `systemctl`. + +| | | +| --------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | +| Not recommended | Run `edit-config netdata.conf` to configure the Netdata Agent. <br />Run `systemctl restart netdata` to restart the Netdata Agent. | +| ** +Recommended** | Run `sudo edit-config netdata.conf` to configure the Netdata Agent. <br />Run `sudo systemctl restart netdata` to restart the Netdata Agent. | + +## Deploy and test docs + +<!-- +TODO: Update this section after implemeting a _docker-compose_ for builting and testing learn +--> + +The Netdata team aggregates and publishes all documentation at [learn.netdata.cloud](/) using +[Docusaurus](https://v2.docusaurus.io/) over at the [`netdata/learn` repository](https://github.com/netdata/learn). + +## Netdata-specific terms + +Consult the [Netdata Glossary](https://github.com/netdata/netdata/blob/master/docs/glossary.md) Netdata specific terms
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