by The E3SM source code includes the documentation of the model in text files stored along with source code in the main repository.
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Our documentation is written in Markdown language. See https://docs.github.com/en/get-started/writing-on-github/getting-started-with-writing-and-formatting-on-github/basic-writing-and-formatting-syntax to get started. NOTE: the Markdown files are converted to html. They will look different if you view them directly with a Markdown renderer.
Doing local development of documentation
Just like you compile and test your Fortran before committing it, you should “compile” and view your documentation before committing and pushing the branch. Unlike compiling and running the model, the documentation can be easily built and displayed on your laptop. Here is one way to do that.
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.
Set up documentation development environment.
You only have to do this once and each machine you wish to use for writing documentation.
Python virtual environment
On your local laptop in your home directory, create a python virtual environment called “mkdocsenv”
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Installing a python package in a virtual environment keeps it from being installed system wide which is good practice and also useful if you don’t have permissions to install system-level packages. Expand
Conda
The same python environment above can be achieved with conda.
To do so, create a conda environment with a
conda create -n e3sm_docs mkdocs-material pymdown-extensions mkdocs-monorepo-plugin mdutils mkdocs-bibtex
then
activate and use the environment with:
conda activate e3sm_docs
to use the environment.
Use local environment to build/test documentation changes
Activate your virtual environment that you made in the above step.
source mkdocsenv/bin/activate
OR conda activate e3sm_docs
cd to the top level E3SM directory and see if you can build the current docs by typing
mkdocs build
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EAMxx docs use an automated routine to populate the namelist parameters in its documentation. In order to avoid warnings
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during build of the complete documentation, please ensure you have a copy of the CIME submodule inside your main repo. Proceed to executing eamxx-params-docs-autogen
in the components/eamxx/scripts
directory. Then, you will be able to build with mkdocs build --strict --verbose
(to convert any warning into an error, which we use in the PR checking).
View the docs locally in your browser with the built-in server
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NOTE: Don’t rely on direct Markdown viewers to see how things look. You need to look at the derived html because that is what will be served at github.io. title Expand
Info |
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An alternative to |
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is to access to the docs directly without serving them through a URL. To achieve this, one could you |
As you edit the documentation, rerun the “mkdocs build” command and refresh the website in your browser. The output of “mkdocs build” will tell you if you have a syntax error in your markdown files. The website in your browser will let you know if it looks as you intended
Markdown style and linting
To help with maintainability, everyone should follow the rules in markdownlint
for their markdown files. The rules used are available at https://github.com/DavidAnson/markdownlint?tab=readme-ov-file#rules--aliases
To enforce those rules, any PR that adds are modifies markdown files will check them with a linter. (A linter is a tool for processing source code and looking for problems or enforcing a style and is named after the “lint” tool for C.) E3SM uses the widely used “markdownlint-cli2” linter through a github action. The PR will be blocked until the all the rules are followed (except for line length).
You can install the linter on your local machine following the instructions at https://github.com/DavidAnson/markdownlint-cli2 (using homebrew, npm or a docker container).
Documentation organization
The documentation for a model should be stored within that model’s source code directory.
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Each of the sub-dirs should also have an “index.md” file to organize their content.
Files and sections
A subsection of your documentation should be contained entirely in a single file. Short sections can be grouped in to one file.
Equation numbering and references to equations are local to an individual markdown file.
Figures
When you start adding figures to your documentation, keep in mind that binary files can lead to repo size bloat IF they change a lot so don’t commit a figure to the repo until you are confident its the near-final version.
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Keep figures in the same directory as the Markdown file referencing them.
Markdown style guide
To help with maintainability, everyone is encouraged to follow best practices when it comes to writing markdown files. For example, popular IDEs support markdownlint
(https://github.com/DavidAnson/markdownlint)
Automated preview during PRs
When you submit a PR, we have an automated process to build and test the docs (with --strict --verbose
) and to preview them directly in the PR. An automated bot will leave a comment with a URL for you to review the docs.
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