The Knative blog is owned by the Documentation working group and run by the Editorial Team.
This section covers documentation, processes, and roles for the Knative blog.
- Technical Editors: Lionel Villard, Evan Anderson
- Copy Editors: Ashleigh Brennan, Caroline Lee, María Cruz
- Blog Community Managers: María Cruz, Jonatas Baldin
- Slack: #docs
Anyone can write a blog post and submit it for review. Commercial content is not allowed. Please refer to the blog guidelines for more guidance.
To submit a blog post, follow the steps below.
- Sign the Contributor License Agreements if you have not yet done so.
- Familiarize yourself with the Markdown format for existing blog posts in the docs repository. Blog posts are categorized into different directories. You can explore the directories to find examples.
- Write your blog post in a text editor of your choice.
- (Optional) If you need help with markdown, check out StakEdit or read GitHub's formatting syntax for more information.
- Choose a directory in the docs repository, and click Create new file.
- Paste your content into the editor and save it. Name the file in the following way: [BLOG] Your proposed title , but don’t put the date in the file name. The blog reviewers will work with you on the final file name, and the date on which the blog will be published.
- When you save the file, GitHub will walk you through the pull request (PR) process.
- A reviewer is assigned to all pull requests automatically. The reviewer checks your submission, and works with you on feedback and final details. When the pull request is approved, the blog will be scheduled for publication.
- Ping editorial team members on Slack #docs channel with a link to your recently created PR.
- Original content only
- Knative new feature releases and project updates
- Tutorials and demos start a blog
- Use cases
- Content that is specific to a vendor or platform about Knative installation and use
- Blogs that do not address Knative in any way
- Content that doesn't interact with Knative APIs or interfaces
- Vendor pitches
After a blog post is submitted as a PR, it is automatically assigned to a reviewer.
Each blog post requires a lgtm
label from at least one person in the editorial team. Once the necessary labels are in place, one of the reviewers will add an approved
label, and schedule publication of the blog post.
Blog posts can take up to 1 week to review. If you'd like to request an expedited review, please say so on your message when you ping the editorial team on Slack.