Documentation Guidelines

OPEA Project content is written using the markdown (.md) with MyST extensions and reStructuredText markup language (.rst) with Sphinx extensions, and processed using Sphinx to create a formatted stand-alone website. Developers can view this content either in its raw form as .md and .rst markup files, or (with Sphinx installed) they can build the documentation using the Makefile (on Linux systems) to generate the HTML content. The HTML content can then be viewed using a web browser. These .md and .rst files are maintained in the project’s GitHub repos and processed to create the OPEA Project documentation website.

Note

While GitHub supports viewing .md and .rst content with your browser on the github.com site, markdown and reST extensions are not recognized there, so the best viewing experience is through the OPEA Project documentation github.io website.

You can read details about reStructuredText and Sphinx extensions, and markdown and MyST extensions from their respective websites.

This document provides a quick reference for commonly used markdown and reST with MyST and Sphinx-defined directives and roles used to create the documentation you’re reading.

Markdown vs. RestructuredText

Both markdown and ReStructureText (reST) let you create individual documentation files that GitHub can render when viewing them in your browser on github.com. Markdown is popular because of it’s familarity with developers and is the default markup language for StackOverflow, Reddit, GitHub, and others. ReStructuredText came from the Python community in 2001 and became noticed outside that community with the release of Sphinx in 2008. These days, reST is supported by GitHub and major projects use it for their documentation, including the Linux kernel, OpenCV and LLVM/Clang.

ReStructuredText is more fully-featured, much more standardized and uniform, and has built-in support for extensions. The markdown language has no standard way to implement complete documentation systems and doesnt have a standard extension mechanism, which leads to many different “flavors” of markdown. If you stick to the core and common markdown syntax (headings, paragraphs, lists, and such), using markdown is just fine. However, slipping in raw HTML to do formatting (such as centering) or using HTML for tables creates problems when publishing to the https://opea-project.github.io site. The MyST parser provides extensions to markdown that integrated well with Sphinx, so we use this as a bridge for the markdown content within the OPEA project.

Within the OPEA documentation, we use both markdown and reST files for the documentation “leaves”. We rely on reST for the documentation organization trunk and branches, through the use of the reST toctree directives.

Documentation Organization

Documentation is maintained and updated the same as the project’s code within the opea-project GitHub repos. There are many README.md files within the various repos along with the other files for those components. This is good because it keeps the relevent documentation and code for that component together.

We use the docs repo to organize the presentation of all these README.md files, along with other project related documents that are maintained in the docs repo. The root of the generated documentation starts with the docs/index.rst file that starts off the organizational structure that’s shown as the left navigation in the generated HTML site at https://opea-project.github.io. That index.rst file uses a toctree directive to point to other documents that may include additional toctree directives of their own, ultimately collecting all the content into an organizational structure you can navigate.

Headings

In reST, document sections are identified through their heading titles, indicated with an underline below the title text. (While reST allows use of both and overline and matching underline to indicate a heading, we use only an underline indicator for headings.) For consistency in our documentation, we define the order of characters used to indicate the nested levels in the table of contents:

  • Use # for the Document title underline character (H1)

  • Use * for the First sub-section heading level (H2)

  • Use = for the Second sub-section heading level (H3)

  • Use - for the Third sub-section heading level (H4)

Additional heading-level depth is discouraged, but if needed, use % (H5), + (H6), and @ (H7).

The heading underline must be at least as long as the title it’s under.

Here’s an example of nested heading levels and the appropriate underlines to use:

Document Title heading
######################

Section 1 heading
*****************

Section 2 heading
*****************

Section 2.1 heading
===================

Section 2.1.1 heading
---------------------

Section 2.2 heading
===================

Section 3 heading
*****************

Content Highlighting

Some common reST and markdown inline markup samples:

  • one asterisk: *text* for emphasis (italics),

  • two asterisks: **text** for strong emphasis (boldface)

  • two back quotes: ``text`` for inline code samples.

ReST rules for inline markup try to be forgiving to account for common cases of using these marks. For example, using an asterisk to indicate multiplication, such as 2 * (x + y) will not be interpreted as an unterminated italics section.

For inline markup, the characters between the beginning and ending characters must not start or end with a space, so *this is italics*, (this is italics) while * this isn't* (* this isn’t*).

If an asterisk or back quote appears in running text and could be confused with inline markup delimiters, you can eliminate the confusion by adding a backslash (\) before it.

Lists

For bullet lists, place an asterisk (*) or hyphen (-) at the start of a paragraph and indent continuation lines with two spaces.

The first item in a list (or sublist) must have a blank line before it and should be indented at the same level as the preceding paragraph (and not indented itself).

For numbered lists start with a 1. or a) for example, and continue with autonumbering by using a # sign and a . or ) as used in the first list item. Indent continuation lines with spaces to align with the text of first list item:

* This is a bulleted list.
* It has two items, the second
  item and has more than one line of reST text.  Additional lines
  are indented to the first character of the
  text of the bullet list.

1. This is a new numbered list. If there wasn't a blank line before it,
   it would be a continuation of the previous list (or paragraph).
#. It has two items too.

a) This is a numbered list using alphabetic list headings
#) It has three items (and uses autonumbering for the rest of the list)
#) Here's the third item.  Use consistent punctuation on the list
   number.

#. This is an autonumbered list (default is to use numbers starting
   with 1).

   #. This is a second-level list under the first item (also
      autonumbered).  Notice the indenting.
   #. And a second item in the nested list.
#. And a second item back in the containing list.  No blank line
   needed, but it wouldn't hurt for readability.

Definition lists (with one or more terms and their definition) are a convenient way to document a word or phrase with an explanation. For example, this reST content:

The Makefile has targets that include:

``html``
   Build the HTML output for the project

``clean``
   Remove all generated output, restoring the folders to a
   clean state.

Would be rendered as:

The Makefile has targets that include:

html

Build the HTML output for the project

clean

Remove all generated output, restoring the folders to a clean state.

Multi-Column Lists

In reST, if you have a long bullet list of items, where each item is short, you can indicate that the list items should be rendered in multiple columns with a special .. rst-class:: rst-columns directive. The directive will apply to the next non-comment element (for example, paragraph) or to content indented under the directive. For example, this unordered list:

.. rst-class:: rst-columns

* A list of
* short items
* that should be
* displayed
* horizontally
* so it doesn't
* use up so much
* space on
* the page

would be rendered as:

  • A list of

  • short items

  • that should be

  • displayed

  • horizontally

  • so it doesn’t

  • use up so much

  • space on

  • the page

A maximum of three columns will be displayed if you use rst-columns (or rst-columns3), and two columns for rst-columns2. The number of columns displayed can be reduced based on the available width of the display window, reducing to one column on narrow (phone) screens if necessary.

Note

We’ve deprecated use of the hlist directive because it misbehaves on smaller screens.

Tables

There are a few ways to create tables, each with their limitations or quirks. Grid tables offer the most capability for defining merged rows and columns (where content spans multiple rows or columns, but are hard to maintain because the grid characters must be aligned throughout the table:

+------------------------+------------+----------+----------+
| Header row, column 1   | Header 2   | Header 3 | Header 4 |
| (header rows optional) |            |          |          |
+========================+============+==========+==========+
| body row 1, column 1   | column 2   | column 3 | column 4 |
+------------------------+------------+----------+----------+
| body row 2             | ...        | ...      | you can  |
+------------------------+------------+----------+ easily   +
| body row 3 with a two column span   | ...      | span     |
+------------------------+------------+----------+ rows     +
| body row 4             | ...        | ...      | too      |
+------------------------+------------+----------+----------+

This example would render as:

Header row, column 1 (header rows optional)

Header 2

Header 3

Header 4

body row 1, column 1

column 2

column 3

column 4

body row 2

you can easily span rows too

body row 3 with a two column span

body row 4

For reST, List tables are much easier to maintain, but don’t support row or column spans:

.. list-table:: Table title
   :widths: 15 20 40
   :header-rows: 1

   * - Heading 1
     - Heading 2
     - Heading 3
   * - body row 1, column 1
     - body row 1, column 2
     - body row 1, column 3
   * - body row 2, column 1
     - body row 2, column 2
     - body row 2, column 3

This example would render as:

Table 1 Table title

Heading 1

Heading 2

Heading 3

body row 1, column 1

body row 1, column 2

body row 1, column 3

body row 2, column 1

body row 2, column 2

body row 2, column 3

The :widths: parameter lets you define relative column widths. The default is equal column widths. If you have a three-column table and you want the first column to be half as wide as the other two equal-width columns, you can specify :widths: 1 2 2. If you’d like the browser to set the column widths automatically based on the column contents, you can use :widths: auto.

File Names and Commands

Sphinx extends reST by supporting additional inline markup elements (called “roles”) used to tag text with special meanings and enable output formatting. (You can refer to the Sphinx Inline Markup documentation for the full list).

For example, there are roles for marking filenames (:file:`name`) and command names such as make (:command:`make`). You can also use the ``inline code`` markup (double backticks) to indicate a filename.

Don’t use items within a single backtick, for example `word`. Instead use double backticks: ``word``.

Internal Cross-Reference Linking

Traditional reST links are supported only within the current file using the notation:

refer to the `internal-linking`_ documentation

which renders as,

refer to the internal-linking documentation

Note the use of a trailing underscore indicates an outbound link. In this example, the label was added immediately before a heading, so the text that’s displayed is the heading text itself.

With Sphinx, we can create link-references to any tagged text within the project documentation.

Target locations within documents are defined with a label directive:

.. _my label name:

Note the leading underscore indicating an inbound link. The content immediately following this label is the target for a :ref:`my label name` reference from anywhere within the documentation set. The label must be added immediately before a heading so that there’s a natural phrase to show when referencing this label (for example, the heading text).

This directive is also used to define a label that’s a reference to a URL:

.. _Hypervisor Wikipedia Page:
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypervisor

To enable easy cross-page linking within the site, each file should have a reference label before its title so that it can be referenced from another file.

Note

These reference labels must be unique across the whole site, so generic names such as “samples” or “introduction” should be avoided.

For example, the top of this document’s .rst file is:

.. _doc_guidelines:

Documentation Guidelines
########################

Other .rst documents can link to this document using the :ref:`doc_guidelines` tag, and it will appear as Documentation Guidelines. This type of internal cross-reference works across multiple files. The link text is obtained from the document source, so if the title changes, the link text will automatically update as well.

There may be times when you’d like to change the link text that’s shown in the generated document. In this case, you can specify alternate text using :ref:`alternate text <doc_guidelines>` (renders as alternate text).

Non-ASCII Characters

You can insert non-ASCII characters such as a Trademark symbol (™) by using the notation |trade|. (It’s also allowed to use the UTF-8 characters directly.) Available replacement names are defined in an include file used during the Sphinx processing of the reST files. The names of these replacement characters are the same as those used in HTML entities to insert special characters such as &trade; and are defined in the file sphinx_build/substitutions.txt as listed here:

.. |br|     raw:: html        .. force a line break in HTML output (blank lines needed here)

   <br style="clear:both" />

.. These are replacement strings for non-ASCII characters used within the project
   using the same name as the html entity names (e.g., &copy;) for that character

.. |copy|   unicode:: U+000A9 .. COPYRIGHT SIGN
   :ltrim:
.. |trade|  unicode:: U+02122 .. TRADEMARK SIGN
   :ltrim:
.. |reg|    unicode:: U+000AE .. REGISTERED TRADEMARK SIGN
   :ltrim:
.. |deg|    unicode:: U+000B0 .. DEGREE SIGN
   :ltrim:
.. |plusminus|  unicode:: U+000B1 .. PLUS-MINUS SIGN
   :rtrim:
.. |micro|  unicode:: U+000B5 .. MICRO SIGN
   :rtrim:
.. |check|  unicode:: U+02714 .. HEAVY CHECK MARK
   :rtrim:
.. |oplus|  unicode:: U+02295 .. CIRCLED PLUS SIGN
.. |rarr|   unicode:: U+02192 .. RIGHTWARDS ARROW

We’ve kept the substitutions list small but you can add others as needed by submitting a change to the substitutions.txt file.

Include Content from Other Files

You can directly incorporate a document fragment from another file into your reST or markdown content by using an include directive.

Important

Be aware that references to content within the included content are relative to the file doing the including. For example a relative reference to an image must be correct from the point-of-view of the file doing the inclusion, not the point-of-view of the included file. Also, the included file must be appropriate in the current document’s context at the point of the directive. If an included document fragment contains section structure, the title structure must match and be consistent in context.

In reST, you incorporate content from another file using an include directive. Unless options are given, the included file is parsed in the current document’s context:

Here is some text in the reST document.

.. include::  path/to/file

And now we're back to the original document after the content in the
included file, as if that content were directly in the current file.

You can use options to alter how the included file is processed:

:code: language

The included content is treated as a code-block with language highlighting.

:parser: text

By default, the included content is parsed the same as the current document (e.g., rst). This option specifies another parser such as :parser: myst_parser.sphinx_ if the included file is markdown.

:start-after: text

Only the content after the first occurance of the specified text in the external file will be included.

:end-before:

Only the content before the first occurance of the specified text in the external file will be included.

These and other options described in the docutils include directive documentation.

Code and Command Examples

Use the reST code-block directive to create a highlighted block of fixed-width text, typically used for showing formatted code or console commands and output. Smart syntax highlighting is also supported (using the Pygments package). You can also directly specify the highlighting language. For example:

.. code-block:: c

   struct _k_object {
      char *name;
      u8_t perms[CONFIG_MAX_THREAD_BYTES];
      u8_t type;
      u8_t flags;
      u32_t data;
   } __packed;

Note that there is a blank line between the code-block directive and the first line of the code-block body, and the body content is indented three spaces (to the first non-blank space of the directive name).

This example would render as:

struct _k_object {
   char *name;
   u8_t perms[CONFIG_MAX_THREAD_BYTES];
   u8_t type;
   u8_t flags;
   u32_t data;
} __packed;

You can specify other languages for the code-block directive, including c, python, and rst, and also console, bash, or shell. If you want no syntax highlighting, specify none. For example:

.. code-block:: none

   This block of text would be styled with a background
   and box, but with no syntax highlighting.

Would display as:

This block of text would be styled with a background
and box, but with no syntax highlighting.

There’s a shorthand for writing code blocks, too: end the introductory paragraph with a double colon (::) and indent the code block content by three spaces. On output, only one colon will appear.

Note

The highlighting package makes a best guess at the type of content in the block, which can lead to odd highlighting in the generated output.

Images

The image file name specified is relative to the document source file. We recommend putting images into an images folder where the document source is found. The usual image formats handled by a web browser are supported: JPEG, PNG, GIF, and SVG. Keep the image size only as large as needed, generally at least 500 px wide but no more than 1000 px, and no more than 250 KB unless a particularly large image is needed for clarity.

You can also specify an URL to an image file if needed.

In reST, images are placed the document using an image directive:

.. image:: ../images/opea-horizontal-color-w200.png
   :align: center
   :alt: alt text for the image

or if you’d like to add an image caption, use the figure directive:

.. figure:: ../images/opea-horizontal-color-w200.png
   :alt: image description

   Caption for the figure

In markdown, images are placed in documentation using this syntax:

![OPEA Logo](../images/opea-horizontal-color-w200.png)

Tabs, Spaces, and Indenting

Indenting is significant in reST file content, and using spaces is preferred. Extra indenting can (unintentionally) change the way content is rendered, too. For lists and directives, indent the content text to the first non-blank space in the preceding line. For example:

* List item that spans multiple lines of text
  showing where to indent the continuation line.

1. And for numbered list items, the continuation
   line should align with the text of the line above.

.. code-block::

   The text within a directive block should align with the
   first character of the directive name.

Keep the line length for documentation fewer than 80 characters to make it easier for reviewing in GitHub. Long lines due to URL references are an allowed exception.

Background Colors

We’ve defined some CSS styles for use as background colors for paragraphs. These styles can be applied using the .. rst-class directive using one of these style names. You can also use the defined centered style to place the text centered within the element, useful for centering text within a table cell or column span:

.. rst-class:: bg-opea-lightorange centered

.. rst-class:: bg-opea-darkorange centered

Drawings

In reST, we’ve included the graphviz Sphinx extension to enable that text description language to render drawings. For more information, see Drawings Using Graphviz.

We’v ealso included an extension providing mermaid support that also enables that text description language to render drawings using:

.. mermaid::

   graph LR;
     A--> B & C;
     B--> A & C;
     C--> A & B;

This will be rendered into this graph drawing:

graph LR; A--> B & C; B--> A & C; C--> A & B;

See the Mermaid User Guide for more information.

Alternative Tabbed Content

In ResST, instead of creating multiple documents with common material except for some specific sections, you can write one document and provide alternative content to the reader via a tabbed interface. When the reader clicks a tab, the content for that tab is displayed. For example:

.. tabs::

   .. tab:: Apples

      Apples are green, or sometimes red.

   .. tab:: Pears

      Pears are green.

   .. tab:: Oranges

      Oranges are orange.

will display as:

Apples are green, or sometimes red.

Tabs can also be grouped so that changing the current tab in one area changes all tabs with the same name throughout the page. For example:

Linux Line 1

Linux Line 2

In this latter case, we’re using a .. group-tab:: directive instead of a .. tab:: directive. Under the hood, we’re using the sphinx-tabs extension that’s included in the OPEA docs (requirements.txt) setup. Within a tab, you can have most any content other than a heading (code-blocks, ordered and unordered lists, pictures, paragraphs, and such).

Instruction Steps

In reST, a numbered instruction steps style makes it easy to create tutorial guides with clearly identified steps. Add the .. rst-class:: numbered-step directive immediately before a second-level heading (by project convention, a heading underlined with asterisks ******, and it will be displayed as a numbered step, sequentially numbered within the document. (Second-level headings without this rst-class directive will not be numbered.) For example:

.. rst-class:: numbered-step

Put your right hand in
**********************

First Instruction Step

This is the first instruction step material. You can do the usual paragraph and pictures as you’d use in normal document writing. Write the heading to be a summary of what the step is (the step numbering is automated so you can move steps around easily if needed).

Second Instruction Step

This is the second instruction step.

Note

As implemented, only one set of numbered steps is intended per document and the steps must be level 2 headings.

Documentation Generation

For instructions on building the documentation, see OPEA Documentation Generation.