Reorganize doc guidelines into multiple pages; update style guide

The existing doc guidelines page attempts to combine too many different
topics at once and includes information that does not pertain directly
to the documentation. This reorganization is intended to make each type
of information easier to find. For example, some have found it difficult
to find the documentation style guidelines (see, e.g.,
QubesOS/qubes-issues#6701#issuecomment-875875610). This reorganization
allows us to assign more specific titles to each page.

General changes:
- Create new page for contribution instructions
- Create new page for website style guide
- Create new page for continuous integration
- Rename existing "style guide" to "visual style guide" in order to
  avoid ambiguity with new doc and website style guides
- Retain existing page solely for doc style guide
- Update page names and permalinks
- Update existing links
- Improve language

Doc style guide changes:
- Add section on using sentence case in headings
  (see QubesOS/qubes-issues#6756 and #1173)
- Improve section organization
- Clarify language

In order to better preserve the Git history of each file, file renames
will be handled in a separate commit.
This commit is contained in:
Andrew David Wong 2021-07-08 07:41:19 -07:00
parent c4f59952f5
commit c29cf40910
No known key found for this signature in database
GPG Key ID: 8CE137352A019A17
15 changed files with 481 additions and 411 deletions

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@ -1,8 +1,12 @@
# Contributing to `qubes-doc`
Thank you for your interest in contributing to `qubes-doc`, the Qubes OS
Project's dedicated documentation repository! Please take a moment to read our
[Documentation Guidelines](https://www.qubes-os.org/doc/doc-guidelines/) before
you begin writing. These guidelines are important to maintaining high quality
documentation, and following them will increase the likelihood that your
contribution will be accepted.
Project's dedicated documentation repository! Please see [how to edit the
documentation](https://www.qubes-os.org/doc/how-to-edit-the-documentation/) for
detailed contribution instructions.
In addition, please take a moment to read our [documentation style
guide](https://www.qubes-os.org/doc/documentation-style-guide/) before
contributing. These guidelines are important to maintaining high standards of
quality, and following them will increase the likelihood that your contribution
will be accepted.

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@ -7,5 +7,5 @@ stored as plain text files in this dedicated repository. By cloning and
regularly pulling from this repo, users can maintain their own up-to-date
offline copy of all Qubes documentation rather than relying solely on the Web.
For more information about the documentation, including how to contribute,
please see the [Documentation Guidelines](https://www.qubes-os.org/doc/doc-guidelines/).
To contribute, please see [how to edit the
documentation](https://www.qubes-os.org/doc/how-to-edit-the-documentation/).

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@ -0,0 +1,34 @@
---
lang: en
layout: doc
permalink: /doc/continuous-integration/
title: Continuous Integration (CI)
---
This page explains the [continuous integration
(CI)](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continuous_integration) infrastructure that
the Qubes OS Project uses.
## Website and documentation
The following commands may be useful as a way to interact with our CI
infrastructure on website
([qubesos.github.io](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubesos.github.io)) and
documentation ([qubes-doc](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-doc)) pull requests
(PRs). Note that special permissions may be required to use some of these
commands. These commands are generally issued by adding a comment to a PR
containing only the command.
- `PipelineRetry`: Attempts to run the entire build pipeline over again. This
can be useful if CI incorrectly uses a stale branch instead of testing the PR
as if it were merged into `master`.
- `TestDeploy`: Deploys a test website, which is a live version of the Qubes
website as if this PR had been merged. This can be useful for previewing a PR
on a live public website. **Note:** You must wait for the site to finish
building before issuing this command, or else it will deploy an empty
website. To find the URL of the test website, look for text similar to "This
branch was successfully deployed" and a button named something like "View
deployment." Note that there are two different testing sites: `wwwtest` is
manually updated, whereas `wwwpreview` is managed by the `TestDeploy`
command.

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@ -1,196 +1,203 @@
---
lang: en
layout: doc
permalink: /doc/doc-guidelines/
permalink: /doc/documentation-style-guide/
redirect_from:
- /doc/doc-guidelines/
- /en/doc/doc-guidelines/
- /wiki/DocStyle/
- /doc/DocStyle/
ref: 30
title: Documentation Guidelines
title: Documentation Style Guide
---
All Qubes OS documentation pages are stored as plain text files in the
dedicated [qubes-doc](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-doc) repository. By
cloning and regularly pulling from this repo, users can maintain their own
up-to-date offline copy of all Qubes documentation rather than relying solely
on the web.
Qubes OS documentation pages are stored as plain text Markdown files in the
[qubes-doc](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-doc) repository. By cloning and
regularly pulling from this repo, users can maintain their own up-to-date
offline copy of all Qubes documentation rather than relying solely on the web.
The documentation is a community effort. Volunteers work hard trying to keep
everything accurate and comprehensive. If you notice a problem or some way it
can be improved, please [edit the documentation](#how-to-contribute)!
The documentation is a volunteer community effort. People like you are
constantly working to make it better. If you notice something that can be fixed
or improved, please [edit the
documentation](/doc/how-to-edit-the-documentation/)!
## Security
This page explains the standards we follow for writing, formatting, and
organizing the documentation. Please follow these guidelines and conventions
when editing the documentation. For the standards governing the website as a
whole, please see the [website style guide](/doc/website-style-guide).
*Also see: [Should I trust this website?](/faq/#should-i-trust-this-website)*
## Markdown conventions
All pull requests (PRs) against
[qubes-doc](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-doc) must pass review prior to be
merged, except in the case of [external
documentation](/doc/#external-documentation) (see
[#4693](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-issues/issues/4693)). This process is
designed to ensure that contributed text is accurate and non-malicious. This
process is a best effort that should provide a reasonable degree of assurance,
but it is not foolproof. For example, all text characters are checked for ANSI
escape sequences. However, binaries, such as images, are simply checked to
ensure they appear or function the way they should when the website is
rendered. They are not further analyzed in an attempt to determine whether they
are malicious.
All the documentation is written in Markdown for maximum accessibility. When
making contributions, please observe the following style conventions. If you're
not familiar with Markdown syntax,
[this](https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/) is a great resource.
Once a pull request passes review, the reviewer should add a signed comment
stating, "Passed review as of `<latest_commit>`" (or similar). The
documentation maintainer then verifies that the pull request is mechanically
sound (no merge conflicts, broken links, ANSI escapes, etc.). If so, the
documentation maintainer then merges the pull request, adds a PGP-signed tag to
the latest commit (usually the merge commit), then pushes to the remote. In
cases in which another reviewer is not required, the documentation maintainer
may review the pull request (in which case no signed comment is necessary,
since it would be redundant with the signed tag).
### Relative vs. absolute links
## Questions, problems, and improvements
Always use relative rather than absolute paths for internal website links. For
example, use `/doc/documentation-style-guide/` instead of
`https://www.qubes-os.org/doc/documentation-style-guide/`. You may use absolute
URLs in the following cases:
If you have a question about something you read in the documentation, please
send it to the appropriate [mailing list](/support/). If you see that something
in the documentation should be fixed or improved, please
[contribute](#how-to-contribute) the change yourself. To report an issue with
the documentation, please follow our standard [issue reporting
guidelines](/doc/issue-tracking/). (If you report an issue with the
documentation, you will likely be asked to address it, unless there is a clear
indication in your report that you are not willing or able to do so.)
- External links
- URLs that appear inside code blocks (e.g., in comments and document
templates, and the plain text reproductions of [QSBs](/security/qsb/) and
[Canaries](/security/canary/)), since they're not hyperlinks
- Git repo files like `README.md` and `CONTRIBUTING.md`, since they're not part
of the website itself but rather of the auxiliary infrastructure supporting
the website.
## How to contribute
This rule is important because using absolute URLs for internal website links
breaks:
Editing the documentation is easy, so if you see that a change should be made,
please contribute it!
- Serving the website offline
- Website localization
- Generating offline documentation
- Automatically redirecting Tor Browser visitors to the correct page on the
onion service mirror
A few notes before we get started:
### Image linking
- Since Qubes is a security-oriented project, every documentation change will
be [reviewed](#security) before it's accepted. This allows us to maintain
quality control and protect our users.
See [how to add images](/doc/how-to-edit-the-documentation/#how-to-add-images).
- We don't want you to spend time and effort on a contribution that we can't
accept. If your contribution would take a lot of time, please [file an
issue](/doc/issue-tracking/) for it first so that we can make sure we're on
the same page before significant works begins.
Link only to images in
[qubes-attachment](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-attachment). Do not link to
images on other websites.
- Alternatively, you may already have written content that doesn't conform to
these guidelines, but you'd be willing to modify it so that it does. In this
case, you can still submit it by following the instructions below. Just make
a note in your pull request (PR) that you're aware of the changes that need
to be made and that you're just asking for the content to be reviewed before
you spend time making those changes.
### HTML and CSS
- Finally, if you've written something that doesn't belong in qubes-doc but that
would be beneficial to the Qubes community, please consider adding it to the
[external documentation](/doc/doc-guidelines/#core-vs-external-documentation).
Do not write HTML inside Markdown documents (except in rare, unavoidable cases,
such as alerts). In particular, never include HTML or CSS for styling,
formatting, or white space control. That belongs in the (S)CSS files instead.
As mentioned above, we keep all the documentation in a dedicated [Git
repository](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-doc) hosted on
[GitHub](https://github.com/). Thanks to GitHub's interface, you can edit the
documentation even if you don't know Git at all! The only thing you need is a
GitHub account, which is free.
### Headings
(**Note:** If you're already familiar with GitHub or wish to work from the
command line, you can skip the rest of this section. All you need to do to
contribute is to [fork and
clone](https://guides.github.com/activities/forking/) the
[qubes-doc](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-doc) repo, make your changes, then
[submit a pull
request](https://help.github.com/articles/using-pull-requests/).)
Do not use `h1` headings (single `#` or `======` underline). These are
automatically generated from the `title:` line in the YAML frontmatter.
Ok, let's start. Every documentation page has a "Page Source on GitHub" button.
Depending on the size of your screen, it may either be on the side (larger
screens) or on the bottom (smaller screens).
Use Atx-style syntax for headings: `##h 2`, `### h3`, etc. Do not use
underlining syntax (`-----`).
[![page-source-button](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_01_page-source-button.png)](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_01_page-source-button.png)
### Hyperlink syntax
When you click on it, you'll be taken to the source file --- usually a Markdown
(`.md`) file --- on GitHub. On this page, there will be a button to edit the
file.
Use non-reference-style links like `[website](https://example.com/)`. Do *not*
use reference-style links like `[website][example]`, `[website][]` or
`[website]`. This facilitates the localization process.
[![github-edit](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_02_github-edit.png)](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_02_github-edit.png)
### Indentation
You'll be prompted to sign in with your GitHub username and password
(if you aren't already logged in). You can also create a free account from here.
Use spaces instead of tabs. Use hanging indentations where appropriate.
[![github-sign-in](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_03_sign-in.png)](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_03_sign-in.png)
### Lists
If this is your first contribution to the documentation, you need to "fork" the
repository (make your own copy). It's easy --- just click the big green button
on the next page. This step is only needed the first time you make a
contribution.
If appropriate, make numerals in numbered lists match between Markdown source
and HTML output. Some users read the Markdown source directly, and this makes
numbered lists easier to follow.
[![fork](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_04_fork.png)](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_04_fork.png)
### Code blocks
Now you can make your modifications. You can also preview the changes to see
how they'll be formatted by clicking the "Preview changes" tab. If you want to
add images, please see [How to add images](#how-to-add-images). If you're
making formatting changes, please [render the site
locally](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubesos.github.io#instructions) to verify
that everything looks correct before submitting any changes.
When writing code blocks, use [syntax
highlighting](https://github.github.com/gfm/#info-string) where possible (see
[here](https://github.com/jneen/rouge/wiki/List-of-supported-languages-and-lexers)
for a list of supported languages). Use `[...]` for anything omitted.
[![edit](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_05_edit.png)](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_05_edit.png)
### Line wrapping
Once you're finished, describe your changes at the bottom and click "Propose
file change".
Hard wrap Markdown lines at 80 characters, unless the line can't be broken
(e.g., code or a URL).
[![commit](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_06_commit-msg.png)](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_06_commit-msg.png)
## Writing guidelines
After that, you'll see exactly what modifications you've made. At this stage,
those changes are still in your own copy of the documentation ("fork"). If
everything looks good, send those changes to us by pressing the "Create pull
request" button.
### Correct use of terminology
[![pull-request](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_07_review-changes.png)](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_07_review-changes.png)
Familiarize yourself with the terms defined in the [glossary](/doc/glossary/).
Use these terms consistently and accurately throughout your writing.
You will be able to adjust the pull request message and title there. In most
cases, the defaults are ok, so you can just confirm by pressing the "Create
pull request" button again. However, if you're not ready for your PR to be
reviewed or merged yet, please [make a draft PR
instead](https://github.blog/2019-02-14-introducing-draft-pull-requests/).
### Sentence case in headings
[![pull-request-confirm](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_08_create-pull-request.png)](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_08_create-pull-request.png)
Use sentence case (rather than title case) in headings for the reasons
explained
[here](https://www.sallybagshaw.com.au/articles/sentence-case-v-title-case/).
In particular, since the authorship of the Qubes documentation is decentralized
and widely distributed among users from around the world, many contributors
come from regions with different conventions for implementing title case, not
to mention that there are often differing style guide recommendations even
within a single region. It is much easier for all of us to implement sentence
case consistently across our growing body of pages, which is very important for
managing the ongoing maintenance burden and sustainability of the
documentation.
If any of your changes should be reflected in the [documentation index (a.k.a.
table of contents)](/doc/) --- for example, if you're adding a new page,
changing the title of an existing page, or removing a page --- please see [How
to edit the documentation index](#how-to-edit-the-documentation-index).
### Writing command-line examples
That's all! We will review your changes. If everything looks good, we'll pull
them into the official documentation. Otherwise, we may have some questions for
you, which we'll post in a comment on your pull request. (GitHub will
automatically notify you if we do.) If, for some reason, we can't accept your
pull request, we'll post a comment explaining why we can't.
When providing command-line examples:
[![done](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_09_done.png)](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_09_done.png)
- Tell the reader where to open a terminal (dom0 or a specific domU), and show
the command along with its output (if any) in a code block, e.g.:
### How to edit the documentation index
~~~markdown
Open a terminal in dom0 and run:
```shell_session
$ cd test
$ echo Hello
Hello
```
~~~
The source file for the [documentation index (a.k.a. table of contents)](/doc/)
lives here:
- Precede each command with the appropriate command prompt: At a minimum, the
prompt should contain a trailing `#` (for the user `root`) or `$` (for other
users) on Linux systems and `>` on Windows systems, respectively.
<https://github.com/QubesOS/qubesos.github.io/blob/master/_data/doc-index.yml>
- Don't try to add comments inside the code block. For example, *don't* do
this:
Editing this file will change what appears on the documentation index. If your
pull request (PR) adds, removes, or edits anything that should be reflected in
the documentation index, please make sure you also submit an associated pull
request against this file.
~~~markdown
Open a terminal in dom0 and run:
```shell_session
# Navigate to the new directory
$ cd test
# Generate a greeting
$ echo Hello
Hello
```
~~~
### How to add images
The `#` symbol preceding each comment is ambiguous with a root command
prompt. Instead, put your comments *outside* of the code block in normal
prose.
To add an image to a page, use the following syntax in the main document. This
will make the image a hyperlink to the image file, allowing the reader to click
on the image in order to view the image by itself.
### Variable names in commands
```
[![Image Title](/attachment/doc/image.png)](/attachment/doc/image.png)
```
Syntactically distinguish variables in commands. For example, this is
ambiguous:
Then, submit your image(s) in a separate pull request to the
[qubes-attachment](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-attachment) repository
using the same path and filename. This is the only permitted way to include
images. Do not link to images on other websites.
$ qvm-run --dispvm=disposable-template --service qubes.StartApp+xterm
It should instead be:
$ qvm-run --dispvm=<DISPOSABLE_TEMPLATE> --service qubes.StartApp+xterm
Note that we syntactically distinguish variables in three ways:
1. Surrounding them in angled brackets (`< >`)
2. Using underscores (`_`) instead of spaces between words
3. Using all capital letters
We have observed that many novices make the mistake of typing the surrounding
angled brackets (`< >`) on the command line, even after substituting the
desired real value between them. Therefore, in documentation aimed at novices,
we also recommend clarifying that the angled brackets should not be typed. This
can be accomplished in one of several ways:
- Explicitly say something like "without the angled brackets."
- Provide an example command using real values that excludes the angled
brackets.
- If you know that almost all users will want to use (or should use) a specific
command containing all real values and no variables, you might consider
providing exactly that command and forgoing the version with variables.
Novices may not realize which parts of the command they can substitute with
different values, but if you've correctly judged that they should use the
command you've provided as is, then this shouldn't matter.
## Organizational guidelines
@ -284,7 +291,7 @@ background information.
### Version-specific documentation
*See [#5308](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-issues/issues/5308) for potential
*See [#5308](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-issues/issues/5308) for pending
changes to this policy.*
We maintain only one set of documentation for Qubes OS. We do not maintain a
@ -418,245 +425,7 @@ search results wouldn't be populated with out-of-date information.)
For further discussion about version-specific documentation in Qubes, see
[here](https://groups.google.com/d/topic/qubes-users/H9BZX4K9Ptk/discussion).
## Style guidelines
### Correct use of terminology
Familiarize yourself with the terms defined in the [glossary](/doc/glossary/).
Use these terms consistently and accurately throughout your writing.
### Variables in commands
Syntactically distinguish variables in commands. For example, this is
ambiguous:
$ qvm-run --dispvm=disposable-template --service qubes.StartApp+xterm
It should instead be:
$ qvm-run --dispvm=<DISPOSABLE_TEMPLATE> --service qubes.StartApp+xterm
Note that we syntactically distinguish variables in three ways:
1. Surrounding them in angled brackets (`< >`)
2. Using underscores (`_`) instead of spaces between words
3. Using all capital letters
We have observed that many novices make the mistake of typing the surrounding
angled brackets (`< >`) on the command line, even after substituting the
desired real value between them. Therefore, in documentation aimed at novices,
we also recommend clarifying that the angled brackets should not be typed. This
can be accomplished in one of several ways:
- Explicitly say something like "without the angled brackets."
- Provide an example command using real values that excludes the angled
brackets.
- If you know that almost all users will want to use (or should use) a specific
command containing all real values and no variables, you might consider
providing exactly that command and forgoing the version with variables.
Novices may not realize which parts of the command they can substitute with
different values, but if you've correctly judged that they should use the
command you've provided as is, then this shouldn't matter.
## Markdown conventions
All the documentation is written in Markdown for maximum accessibility. When
making contributions, please observe the following style conventions. If you're
not familiar with Markdown syntax,
[this](https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/) is a great resource.
### Indentation
Use spaces instead of tabs. Each indentation step should be exactly two (2)
spaces.
### HTML and CSS
Do not write HTML inside Markdown documents (except in rare, unavoidable cases,
such as alerts). In particular, never include HTML or CSS for styling,
formatting, or white space control. That belongs in the (S)CSS files instead.
### Image linking
Link only to images in
[qubes-attachment](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-attachment) (see
[instructions above](#how-to-add-images)). Do not link to images on other
websites.
### Relative vs. absolute links
Always use relative rather than absolute paths for internal website links. For
example, use `/doc/doc-guidelines/` instead of
`https://www.qubes-os.org/doc/doc-guidelines/`. Places where it's fine to use
absolute URLs:
- External links
- URLs that appear inside code blocks (e.g., in comments and document
templates, and the plain text reproductions of [QSBs](/security/qsb/) and
[Canaries](/security/canary/)), since they're not hyperlinks
- Git repo files like `README.md` and `CONTRIBUTING.md`, since they're not part
of the website itself but rather of the auxiliary infrastructure supporting
the website.
This rule is important, because using absolute URLs for internal website links
is known to break the following:
- Serving the website offline
- Website localization
- Generating offline documentation
- Automatically redirecting Tor Browser visitors to the correct page on the
onion service mirror.
### Source formatting and syntax
- Do not use `h1` headings (single `#` or `======` underline). These are
automatically generated from the `title:` line in the YAML frontmatter.
- Use Atx-style headings: , `##h 2`, `### h3`, etc.
- Use non-reference-style links like `[website](https://example.com/)`. Do
*not* use reference links like `[website][example]`, `[website][]` or
`[website]`.
- If appropriate, make numerals in numbered lists match between Markdown source
and HTML output. (Rationale: In the event that a user is required to read the
Markdown source directly, this will make it easier to follow, e.g., numbered
steps in a set of instructions.)
- When writing code blocks, use [syntax
highlighting](https://github.github.com/gfm/#info-string) where
[possible](https://github.com/jneen/rouge/wiki/List-of-supported-languages-and-lexers)
and use `[...]` for anything omitted.
- Use hanging indentations where appropriate.
### Writing command-line examples
When providing command line examples:
- Tell the reader where to open a terminal (dom0 or a specific domU), and show
the command along with its output (if any) in a code block, e.g.:
~~~markdown
Open a terminal in dom0 and run:
```shell_session
$ cd test
$ echo Hello
Hello
```
~~~
- Precede each command with the appropriate command prompt: At a minimum, the
prompt should contain a trailing `#` (for the user `root`) or `$` (for other
users) on Linux systems and `>` on Windows systems, respectively.
- Don't try to add comments inside the code block. For example, *don't* do
this:
~~~markdown
Open a terminal in dom0 and run:
```shell_session
# Navigate to the new directory
$ cd test
# Generate a greeting
$ echo Hello
Hello
```
~~~
The `#` symbol preceding each comment is ambiguous with a root command
prompt. Instead, put your comments *outside* of the code block in normal
prose.
### Line wrapping
Hard wrap Markdown lines at 80 characters, unless the line can't be broken
(e.g., code or a URL).
## Coding conventions
The following conventions apply to the website as a whole, including everything
written in HTML, CSS, YAML, and Liquid. These conventions are intended to keep
the codebase consistent when multiple collaborators are working on it. They
should be understood as a practical set of rules for maintaining order in this
specific codebase rather than as a statement of what is objectively right or
good.
### General practices
- Use comments to indicate the purposes of different blocks of code. This makes
the file easier to understand and navigate.
- Use descriptive variable names. Never use one or two letter variable names.
Avoid obscure abbreviations and made-up words.
- In general, make it easy for others to read your code. Your future self will
thank you, and so will your collaborators!
- [Don't Repeat Yourself
(DRY)!](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don%27t_repeat_yourself) Instead of
repeating the same block of code multiple times, abstract it out into a
separate file and `include` that file where you need it.
### Whitespace
- Always use spaces. Never use tabs.
- Each indentation step should be exactly two (2) spaces.
- Whenever you add an opening tag, indent the following line. (Exception: If
you open and close the tag on the same line, do not indent the following
line.)
- Indent Liquid the same way as HTML.
- In general, the starting columns of every adjacent pair of lines should be no
more than two spaces apart (example below).
- No blank or empty lines. (Hint: When you feel you need one, add a comment on
that line instead.)
#### Indentation example
Here's an example that follows the indentation rules:
{% raw %}
```html
<table>
<tr>
<th title="Anchor Link"><span class="fa fa-link"></span></th>
{% for item in secs.htmlsections[0].columns %}
<th>{{ item.title }}</th>
{% endfor %}
</tr>
{% for canary in site.data.sec-canary reversed %}
<tr id="{{ canary.canary }}">
<td><a href="#{{ canary.canary }}" class="fa fa-link black-icon" title="Anchor link to Qubes Canary row: Qubes Canary #{{ canary.canary }}"></a></td>
<td>{{ canary.date }}</td>
<td><a href="https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-secpack/blob/master/canaries/canary-{{ canary.canary }}-{{ canary.date | date: '%Y' }}.txt">Qubes Canary #{{ canary.canary }}</a></td>
</tr>
{% endfor %}
</table>
```
{% endraw %}
## Git conventions
Please try to write good commit messages, according to the [instructions in our
coding style guidelines](/doc/coding-style/#commit-message-guidelines).
## Continuous Integration (CI)
The following commands may be useful as a way to interact with our CI
infrastructure. Note that special permissions may be required to use some of
these commands. These commands are generally issued by adding a comment to a
pull request (PR) containing only the command.
- `PipelineRetry`: Attempts to run the entire build pipeline over again. This
can be useful if CI incorrectly uses a stale branch instead of testing the PR
as if it were merged into `master`.
- `TestDeploy`: Deploys a test website, which is a live version of the Qubes
website as if this PR had been merged. This can be useful for previewing a PR
on a live public website. **Note:** You must wait for the site to finish
building before issuing this command, or else it will deploy an empty
website. To find the URL of the test website, look for text similar to "This
branch was successfully deployed" and a button named something like "View
deployment." Note that there are two different testing sites: `wwwtest` is
manually updated, whereas `wwwpreview` is managed by the `TestDeploy`
command.
Please follow our [Git commit message
guidelines](/doc/coding-style/#commit-message-guidelines).

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@ -0,0 +1,190 @@
---
lang: en
layout: doc
permalink: /doc/how-to-edit-the-documentation/
title: How to Edit the Documentation
---
Qubes OS documentation pages are stored as plain text Markdown files in the
[qubes-doc](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-doc) repository. By cloning and
regularly pulling from this repo, users can maintain their own up-to-date
offline copy of all Qubes documentation rather than relying solely on the web.
The documentation is a volunteer community effort. People like you are
constantly working to make it better. If you notice something that can be fixed
or improved, please follow the steps below to open a pull request!
## How to submit a pull request
We keep all the documentation in
[qubes-doc](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-doc), a dedicated Git repository
hosted on [GitHub](https://github.com/). Thanks to GitHub's easy web interface,
you can edit the documentation even if you're not familiar with Git or the
command line! All you need is a free GitHub account.
A few notes before we get started:
- Since Qubes is a security-oriented project, every documentation change will
be [reviewed](#security) before it's accepted. This allows us to maintain
quality control and protect our users.
- To give your contribution a better chance of being accepted, please follow
our [documentation style guide](/doc/documentation-style-guide/).
- We don't want you to spend time and effort on a contribution that we can't
accept. If your contribution would take a lot of time, please [file an
issue](/doc/issue-tracking/) for it first so that we can make sure we're on
the same page before significant works begins.
- Alternatively, you may already have written content that doesn't conform to
these guidelines, but you'd be willing to modify it so that it does. In this
case, you can still submit it by following the instructions below. Just make
a note in your pull request (PR) that you're aware of the changes that need
to be made and that you're just asking for the content to be reviewed before
you spend time making those changes.
- Finally, if you've written something that doesn't belong in qubes-doc but
that would be beneficial to the Qubes community, please consider adding it to
the [external
documentation](/doc/documentation-style-guide/#core-vs-external-documentation).
(**Advanced users:** If you're already familiar with GitHub or wish to work
from the command line, you can skip the rest of this section. All you need to
do to contribute is to [fork and
clone](https://guides.github.com/activities/forking/) the
[qubes-doc](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-doc) repo, make your changes, then
[submit a pull
request](https://help.github.com/articles/using-pull-requests/).)
Ok, let's begin. Every documentation page has a "Page Source on GitHub" button.
Depending on the size of your screen, it may either be on the side (larger
screens) or on the bottom (smaller screens).
[![page-source-button](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_01_page-source-button.png)](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_01_page-source-button.png)
When you click on it, you'll be taken to the source file --- usually a Markdown
(`.md`) file --- on GitHub. On this page, there will be a button to edit the
file.
[![github-edit](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_02_github-edit.png)](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_02_github-edit.png)
You'll be prompted to sign in with your GitHub username and password
(if you aren't already logged in). You can also create a free account from here.
[![github-sign-in](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_03_sign-in.png)](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_03_sign-in.png)
If this is your first contribution to the documentation, you need to "fork" the
repository (make your own copy). It's easy --- just click the big green button
on the next page. This step is only needed the first time you make a
contribution.
[![fork](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_04_fork.png)](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_04_fork.png)
Now you can make your modifications. You can also preview the changes to see
how they'll be formatted by clicking the "Preview changes" tab. If you want to
add images, please see [How to add images](#how-to-add-images). If you're
making formatting changes, please [render the site
locally](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubesos.github.io#instructions) to verify
that everything looks correct before submitting any changes.
[![edit](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_05_edit.png)](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_05_edit.png)
Once you're finished, describe your changes at the bottom and click "Propose
file change".
[![commit](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_06_commit-msg.png)](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_06_commit-msg.png)
After that, you'll see exactly what modifications you've made. At this stage,
those changes are still in your own copy of the documentation ("fork"). If
everything looks good, send those changes to us by pressing the "Create pull
request" button.
[![pull-request](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_07_review-changes.png)](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_07_review-changes.png)
You will be able to adjust the pull request message and title there. In most
cases, the defaults are ok, so you can just confirm by pressing the "Create
pull request" button again. However, if you're not ready for your PR to be
reviewed or merged yet, please [make a draft PR
instead](https://github.blog/2019-02-14-introducing-draft-pull-requests/).
[![pull-request-confirm](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_08_create-pull-request.png)](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_08_create-pull-request.png)
If any of your changes should be reflected in the [documentation index (a.k.a.
table of contents)](/doc/) --- for example, if you're adding a new page,
changing the title of an existing page, or removing a page --- please see [How
to edit the documentation index](#how-to-edit-the-documentation-index).
That's all! We will review your changes. If everything looks good, we'll pull
them into the official documentation. Otherwise, we may have some questions for
you, which we'll post in a comment on your pull request. (GitHub will
automatically notify you if we do.) If, for some reason, we can't accept your
pull request, we'll post a comment explaining why we can't.
[![done](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_09_done.png)](/attachment/doc/doc-pr_09_done.png)
## How to edit the documentation index
The source file for the [documentation index (a.k.a. table of contents)](/doc/)
lives here:
<https://github.com/QubesOS/qubesos.github.io/blob/master/_data/doc-index.yml>
Editing this file will change what appears on the documentation index. If your
pull request (PR) adds, removes, or edits anything that should be reflected in
the documentation index, please make sure you also submit an associated pull
request against this file.
## How to add images
To add an image to a page, use the following syntax in the main document. This
will make the image a hyperlink to the image file, allowing the reader to click
on the image in order to view the image by itself.
```
[![Image Title](/attachment/doc/image.png)](/attachment/doc/image.png)
```
Then, submit your image(s) in a separate pull request to the
[qubes-attachment](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-attachment) repository
using the same path and filename. This is the only permitted way to include
images. Do not link to images on other websites.
## Security
*Also see: [Should I trust this website?](/faq/#should-i-trust-this-website)*
All pull requests (PRs) against
[qubes-doc](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-doc) must pass review prior to be
merged, except in the case of [external
documentation](/doc/#external-documentation) (see
[#4693](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-issues/issues/4693)). This process is
designed to ensure that contributed text is accurate and non-malicious. This
process is a best effort that should provide a reasonable degree of assurance,
but it is not foolproof. For example, all text characters are checked for ANSI
escape sequences. However, binaries, such as images, are simply checked to
ensure they appear or function the way they should when the website is
rendered. They are not further analyzed in an attempt to determine whether they
are malicious.
Once a pull request passes review, the reviewer should add a signed comment
stating, "Passed review as of `<LATEST_COMMIT>`" (or similar). The
documentation maintainer then verifies that the pull request is mechanically
sound (no merge conflicts, broken links, ANSI escapes, etc.). If so, the
documentation maintainer then merges the pull request, adds a PGP-signed tag to
the latest commit (usually the merge commit), then pushes to the remote. In
cases in which another reviewer is not required, the documentation maintainer
may review the pull request (in which case no signed comment is necessary,
since it would be redundant with the signed tag).
## Questions, problems, and improvements
If you have a question about something you read in the documentation or about
how to edit the documentation, please post it on the
[forum](https://forum.qubes-os.org/) or send it to the appropriate [mailing
list](/support/). If you see that something in the documentation should be
fixed or improved, please [contribute](#how-to-submit-a-pull-request) the
change yourself. To report an issue with the documentation, please follow our
standard [issue reporting guidelines](/doc/issue-tracking/). (If you report an
issue with the documentation, you will likely be asked to submit a pull request
for it, unless there is a clear indication in your report that you are not
willing or able to do so.)

View File

@ -1,7 +1,9 @@
---
lang: en
layout: doc
permalink: /doc/style-guide/
permalink: /doc/visual-style-guide/
redirect_from:
- /doc/style-guide/
ref: 27
title: Style Guide
title: Visual Style Guide
---

View File

@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ title: Usability & UX
Software that is too complicated to use, is often unused. Because we want as many people as possible to benefit from its unique security properties, the usability and user experience of Qubes OS is an utmost priority!
We ask anyone developing for Qubes OS to please read through this guide to better understand the user experience we strive to achieve. We also ask them to review [our style guide](/doc/style-guide/) for other design related information.
We ask anyone developing for Qubes OS to please read through this guide to better understand the user experience we strive to achieve. We also ask them to review [our visual style guide](/doc/visual-style-guide/) for other design related information.
---

View File

@ -0,0 +1,78 @@
---
lang: en
layout: doc
permalink: /doc/website-style-guide/
title: Website Style Guide
---
This page explains the standards we follow for building and maintaining the
website. Please follow these guidelines and conventions when modifying the
website. For the standards governing the documentation in particular, please
see the [documentation style guide](/doc/documentation-style-guide/).
## Coding conventions
The following conventions apply to the website as a whole, including everything
written in HTML, CSS, YAML, and Liquid. These conventions are intended to keep
the codebase consistent when multiple collaborators are working on it. They
should be understood as a practical set of rules for maintaining order in this
specific codebase rather than as a statement of what is objectively right or
good.
### General practices
- Use comments to indicate the purposes of different blocks of code. This makes
the file easier to understand and navigate.
- Use descriptive variable names. Never use one or two letter variable names.
Avoid obscure abbreviations and made-up words.
- In general, make it easy for others to read your code. Your future self will
thank you, and so will your collaborators!
- [Don't Repeat Yourself
(DRY)!](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don%27t_repeat_yourself) Instead of
repeating the same block of code multiple times, abstract it out into a
separate file and `include` that file where you need it.
### Whitespace
- Always use spaces. Never use tabs.
- Each indentation step should be exactly two (2) spaces.
- Whenever you add an opening tag, indent the following line. (Exception: If
you open and close the tag on the same line, do not indent the following
line.)
- Indent Liquid the same way as HTML.
- In general, the starting columns of every adjacent pair of lines should be no
more than two spaces apart (example below).
- No blank or empty lines. (Hint: When you feel you need one, add a comment on
that line instead.)
#### Indentation example
Here's an example that follows the indentation rules:
{% raw %}
```html
<table>
<tr>
<th title="Anchor Link"><span class="fa fa-link"></span></th>
{% for item in secs.htmlsections[0].columns %}
<th>{{ item.title }}</th>
{% endfor %}
</tr>
{% for canary in site.data.sec-canary reversed %}
<tr id="{{ canary.canary }}">
<td><a href="#{{ canary.canary }}" class="fa fa-link black-icon" title="Anchor link to Qubes Canary row: Qubes Canary #{{ canary.canary }}"></a></td>
<td>{{ canary.date }}</td>
<td><a href="https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-secpack/blob/master/canaries/canary-{{ canary.canary }}-{{ canary.date | date: '%Y' }}.txt">Qubes Canary #{{ canary.canary }}</a></td>
</tr>
{% endfor %}
</table>
```
{% endraw %}

View File

@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ ways in which you can help:
* Record [video tours](/video-tours/)
* Create [artwork](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-artwork) (plymouth themes,
installer themes, wallpapers, etc.)
* [Write and edit the documentation](/doc/doc-guidelines)
* [Write and edit the documentation](/doc/how-to-edit-the-documentation)
* [Donate](/donate/) to the project
* If you represent an organization, become a [Qubes partner](/partners/)
* Add a [Qubes download mirror](/downloads/mirrors/)

View File

@ -267,7 +267,9 @@ Please see the coreboot website / their IRC channel for further information.
### How should I report documentation issues?
Please see the [documentation guidelines](/doc/doc-guidelines).
If you can fix the problem yourself, please see [how to edit the
documentation](/doc/how-to-edit-the-documentation). If not, please see [issue
tracking](/doc/issue-tracking).
### Will Qubes seek to get certified under the GNU Free System Distribution Guidelines (GNU FSDG)?
@ -279,7 +281,7 @@ This website is hosted on [GitHub Pages](https://pages.github.com/) ([why?](#why
Therefore, it is largely outside of our control.
We don't consider this a problem, however, since we explicitly [distrust the infrastructure](#what-does-it-mean-to-distrust-the-infrastructure).
For this reason, we don't think that anyone should place undue trust in the live version of this site on the Web.
Instead, if you want to obtain your own trustworthy copy of this website in a secure way, you should clone our [website repo](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubesos.github.io), [verify the PGP signatures on the commits and/or tags](/security/verifying-signatures/#how-to-verify-qubes-repos) signed by the [doc-signing keys](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-secpack/tree/master/keys/doc-signing) (which indicates that the content has undergone review per our [documentation guidelines](/doc/doc-guidelines)), then either [render the site on your local machine](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubesos.github.io/blob/master/README.md#instructions) or simply read the source, the vast majority of which was [intentionally written in Markdown so as to be readable as plain text for this very reason](/doc/doc-guidelines/#markdown-conventions).
Instead, if you want to obtain your own trustworthy copy of this website in a secure way, you should clone our [website repo](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubesos.github.io), [verify the PGP signatures on the commits and/or tags](/security/verifying-signatures/#how-to-verify-qubes-repos) signed by the [doc-signing keys](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubes-secpack/tree/master/keys/doc-signing) (which indicates that the content has undergone [review](/doc/how-to-edit-the-documentation/#security)), then either [render the site on your local machine](https://github.com/QubesOS/qubesos.github.io/blob/master/README.md#instructions) or simply read the source, the vast majority of which was [intentionally written in Markdown so as to be readable as plain text for this very reason](/doc/documentation-style-guide/#markdown-conventions).
We've gone to special effort to set all of this up so that no one has to trust the infrastructure and so that the contents of this website are maximally available and accessible.
### What does it mean to "distrust the infrastructure"?

View File

@ -249,4 +249,4 @@ GitHub](https://github.com/QubesOS).
## Documentation
Peruse our extensive library of [documentation](/doc/) for users and developers
of Qubes OS. You can even [help us improve it](/doc/doc-guidelines/)!
of Qubes OS. You can even [help us improve it](/doc/how-to-edit-the-documentation/)!

View File

@ -34,9 +34,9 @@ Support, Mailing Lists, and Forum](/support/).
### I see something that should be changed in the documentation.
We encourage you to submit the change yourself! Please see the [Documentation
Guidelines](/doc/doc-guidelines/) for instructions on how to do so. If it's
something you can't do yourself, please proceed to open an issue.
We encourage you to submit the change yourself! Please see the [how to edit the
documentation](/doc/how-to-edit-the-documentation/) for instructions on how to
do so. If it's something you can't do yourself, please proceed to open an issue.
### I would like to report a security vulnerability.
@ -352,12 +352,3 @@ which means, "The fix has been released for the testing release but is pending
backport to the stable release." Our infrastructure will attempt to apply this
label automatically, when appropriate, but it is not perfect, and the
developers may be need to adjust it manually.
## See also
- [Help, Support, Mailing Lists, and Forum](/support/)
- [Testing New Releases and Updates](/doc/testing/)
- [How to Contribute](/doc/contributing/)
- [Contributing Code](/doc/contributing/#contributing-code)
- [Package Contributions](/doc/package-contributions/)
- [Documentation Guidelines](/doc/doc-guidelines/)

View File

@ -124,7 +124,7 @@ contributions](/doc/code-signing/).
For example, you might find it easier to trust advice from someone who has a
proven track record of [contributing software
packages](/doc/package-contributions/) or [contributing to the
documentation](/doc/doc-guidelines/). It's unlikely that individuals who have
documentation](/doc/how-to-edit-the-documentation/). It's unlikely that individuals who have
worked hard to build good reputations for themselves through their
contributions over the years would risk giving malicious advice in signed
messages to public mailing lists. Since every contribution to the Qubes OS
@ -217,7 +217,7 @@ not a discussion
forum](/doc/issue-tracking/#the-issue-tracker-is-not-a-discussion-forum).)
Likewise, if you see that something in the documentation should be changed,
don't simply point it out in a discussion venue. Instead, [submit the
change](/doc/doc-guidelines/).
change](/doc/how-to-edit-the-documentation/).
### Moderation

View File

@ -462,7 +462,7 @@ the other [How-To Guides](/doc/#how-to-guides), and learn about
useful and user friendly. We urge you to read it! It may very well contain
the answers to your questions. (Since the documentation is a community
effort, we'd also greatly appreciate your help in
[improving](/doc/doc-guidelines/) it!)
[improving](/doc/how-to-edit-the-documentation/) it!)
* If issues arise during installation, see the [Installation
Troubleshooting](/doc/installation-troubleshooting) guide.

View File

@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ templates, along with some examples of common use cases.
bug report. Instead, please see [Help, Support, Mailing Lists, and
Forum](/support/) for the appropriate place to ask for help. Once you have
learned how to solve your problem, please [contribute what you learned to
the documentation](/doc/doc-guidelines/).
the documentation](/doc/how-to-edit-the-documentation/).
3. The minimal templates are intentionally *minimal*. [Do not ask for your
favorite package to be added to the minimal template by