This directory contains the code for the Apache Calcite web site, calcite.apache.org.
You can build the site manually using your environment or use the docker compose file.
Site generation currently works best with ruby-2.5.1.
cd site
git clone https://gitbox.apache.org/repos/asf/calcite-site.git target
sudo apt-get install rubygems ruby2.5-dev zlib1g-dev
(linux)Use RubyInstaller to install rubygems as recommended at https://www.ruby-lang.org/en/downloads/
(Windows)sudo gem install bundler
gem install bundler
(Windows)bundle install
cd ..
./gradlew javadocAggregate
rm -rf site/target/javadocAggregate
rmdir site\target\javadocAggregate /S /Q
(Windows)mkdir site/target
mkdir site\target
(Windows)mv build/docs/javadocAggregate site/target
for /d %a in (build\docs\javadocAggregate*) do move %a site\target
(Windows)
Before opening a pull request, you can preview your contributions by running from within the directory:
bundle exec jekyll serve
- Open http://localhost:4000
- Install docker
- Install docker-compose
cd site
docker-compose run build-site
cd site
docker-compose run generate-javadoc
You can preview your work while working on the site.
cd site
docker-compose run --service-ports dev
The web server will be started on http://localhost:4000
As you make changes to the site, the site will automatically rebuild.
cd site/target
git init
git remote add origin [email protected]:apache/calcite-site.git
git fetch
git reset origin/master --soft
If you have not regenerated the javadoc and they are missing, restore them:
git reset -- javadocAggregate/
git checkout -- javadocAggregate/
Restore the avatica site
-
git reset -- avatica/
-
git checkout -- avatica/
-
git add .
-
Commit:
git commit -m "Your commit message goes here"
-
Push the site:
git push origin master
Within a few minutes, gitpubsub should kick in and you'll be able to see the results at calcite.apache.org.
This process also publishes Avatica's web site. Avatica's web site has
separate source (under avatica/site
) but configures Jekyll to
generate files to site/target/avatica
, which becomes an
avatica
sub-directory when deployed. See
Avatica site README.
We want to deploy project changes (for example, new committers, PMC members or upcoming talks) immediately, but we want to deploy documentation of project features only when that feature appears in a release. For this reason, we generally edit the site on the "site" git branch.
Before making a release, release manager must ensure that "site" is in sync with "master". Immediately after a release, the release manager will publish the site, including all of the features that have just been released. When making an edit to the site, a Calcite committer must commit the change to the git "master" branch (as well as git, to publish the site, of course). If the edit is to appear on the site immediately, the committer should then cherry-pick the change into the "site" branch. If there have been no feature-related changes on the site since the release, then "site" should be a fast-forward merge of "master".