Updating Documentation
We welcome contributions to the Airbyte documentation!
Our docs are written in Markdown following the Google developer documentation style guide and the files are stored in our Github repository. The docs are published at docs.airbyte.com using Docusaurus and GitHub Pages.
Finding good first issues
The Docs team maintains a list of #good-first-issues for new contributors.
- If you're new to technical writing, start with the smaller issues (fixing typos, broken links, spelling and grammar, and so on). You can edit the files directly on GitHub.
- If you're an experienced technical writer or a developer interested in technical writing, comment on an issue that interests you to discuss it with the Docs team. Once we decide on the approach and the tasks involved, edit the files and open a Pull Request for the Docs team to review.
Contributing to Airbyte docs
Before contributing to Airbyte docs, read the Airbyte Community Code of Conduct.
If you're new to GitHub and Markdown, complete the First Contributions tutorial and learn Markdown basics before contributing to Airbyte documentation. Even if you're familiar with the basics, you may be interested in Airbyte's custom markdown extensions for connector docs.
You can contribute to Airbyte docs in two ways:
Editing directly on GitHub
To make minor changes (example: fixing typos) or edit a single file, you can edit the file directly on GitHub:
- Click Edit this page at the bottom of any published document on docs.airbyte.com. You'll be taken to the GitHub editor.
- Edit the file directly on GitHub and open a Pull Request.
Editing on your local machine
To make complex changes or edit multiple files, edit the files on your local machine:
Fork the Airbyte repository.
Clone the fork on your local machine:
git clone git@github.com:{YOUR_USERNAME}/airbyte.git
cd airbyteOr
git clone https://github.com/{YOUR_USERNAME}/airbyte.git
cd airbyteWhile cloning on Windows, you might encounter errors about long filenames. Refer to the instructions here to correct it.
Test changes locally:
To install the docs locally, run the following commands in your terminal:
cd docusaurus
yarn installTo see changes as you make them, run:
yarn start
Then navigate to http://localhost:3005/. Whenever you make and save changes, you will see them reflected in the server. You can stop the running server in OSX/Linux by pressing
Ctrl-C
in the terminal.You can also build the docs locally and see the resulting changes. This is useful if you introduce changes that need to be run at build-time (e.g. adding a docs plug-in). To do so, run:
yarn build
yarn serveThen navigate to http://localhost:3000/ to see your changes. You can stop the running server in OSX/Linux by pressing
Ctrl-C
in the terminal.
Follow the GitHub workflow to edit the files and create a pull request.
noteBefore we accept any contributions, you'll need to sign the Contributor License Agreement (CLA). By signing a CLA, we can ensure that the community is free and confident in its ability to use your contributions. You will be prompted to sign the CLA while opening a pull request.
Assign
airbytehq/docs
as a Reviewer for your pull request.
Custom markdown extensions for connector docs
Airbyte's markdown documentation—particularly connector-specific documentation—needs to gracefully support multiple different contexts: key details may differ between open-source builds and Airbyte Cloud, and the more exhaustive explanations appropriate for https://docs.airbyte.com may bury key details when rendered as inline documentation within the Airbyte application. In order to support all these different contexts without resorting to multiple overlapping files that must be maintained in parallel, Airbyte's documentation tooling supports multiple nonstandard features.
Please familiarize yourself with all the tools available to you when writing documentation for a connector, so that you can provide appropriately tailored information to your readers in whichever context they see it.
As a general rule, features that introduce new behavior or prevent certain content from rendering will affect how the Airbyte UI displays markdown content, but have no impact on https://docs.airbyte.com. If you want to test out these in-app features in a local Airbyte build, ensure that you have the airbyte
git repository checked out to the same parent directory as the airbyte platform repository: if so, development builds will by default fetch connector documentation from your local filesystem, allowing you to freely edit their content and view the rendered output.
Jump to the relevant documentation section when specific connector setup inputs are focused with <FieldAnchor>
In the documentation, the relevant section needs to be wrapped in a <FieldAnchor field="path.to.field" />
component. When a user focuses the field identified by the field
attribute in the connector setup UI, the documentation pane will automatically scroll to the associated section of the documentation, highlighting all content contained inside the <FieldAnchor></FieldAnchor>
tag. These are rendered as regular divs in the documentation site, so they have no effect in places other than the in-app documentation panel—however, note that there must be blank lines between a custom tag like FieldAnchor
the content it wraps for the documentation site to render markdown syntax inside the custom tag to html.
The field
attribute must be a valid json path to one of the properties nested under connectionSpecification.properties
in that connector's spec.json
or spec.yaml
file. For example, if the connector spec contains a connectionSpecification.properties.replication_method.replication_slot
, you would mark the start of the related documentation section with <FieldAnchor field="replication_method.replication_slot">
and its end with </FieldAnchor>
. It's also possible to highlight the same section for multiple fields by separating them with commas, like <FieldAnchor path="replication_method.replication_slot,replication_method.queue_size">
. To mark a section as highlighted after the user picks an option from a oneOf
: use a field
prop like path.to.field[value-of-selection-key]
, where the value-of-selection-key
is the value of a const
field nested inside that oneOf
. For example, if the specification of the oneOf
field is:
"replication_method": {
"type": "object",
"title": "Update Method",
"oneOf": [
{
"title": "Read Changes using Binary Log (CDC)",
"required": ["method"],
"properties": {
"method": {
"type": "string",
"const": "CDC",
"order": 0
},
"initial_waiting_seconds": {
"type": "integer",
"title": "Initial Waiting Time in Seconds (Advanced)",
},
}
},
{
"title": "Scan Changes with User Defined Cursor",
"required": ["method"],
"properties": {
"method": {
"type": "string",
"const": "STANDARD",
"order": 0
}
}
}
]
}
The selection keys are CDC
and STANDARD
, so you can wrap a specific replication method's documentation section with a <FieldAnchor field="replication_method[CDC]">...</FieldAnchor>
tag, and it will be highlighted if the user selects CDC replication in the UI.
Prevent specific content from rendering in the UI with <HideInUI>
Certain content is important to document, but unhelpful in the context of the Airbyte UI's inline documentation views:
- background information that helps users understand a connector but doesn't affect configuration
- edge cases that are unusual but time-consuming to solve
- context for readers on the documentation site about environment-specific content (see below)
Wrapping such content in a pair of <HideInUI>...</HideInUI>
tags will prevent it from being rendered within the Airbyte UI without affecting its presentation on https://docs.airbyte.com. This allows a single markdown file to be the source of truth for both a streamlined in-app reference and a more thorough treatment on the documentation website.
Environment-specific in-app content with magic html comments
Sometimes, there are connector setup instructions which differ between open-source Airbyte builds and Airbyte Cloud. Document both cases, but wrap each in a pair of special HTML comments:
<!-- env:oss -->
<HideInUI>
## For open source:
</HideInUI>
Only open-source builds of the Airbyte UI will render this content.
<!-- /env:oss -->
<!-- env:cloud -->
<HideInUI>
## For Airbyte Cloud:
</HideInUI>
Only cloud builds of the Airbyte UI will render this content.
<!-- /env:oss -->
Content outside of the magic-comment-delimited blocks will be rendered everywhere.
Note that the documentation site will render all environment-specific content, so please introduce environment-specific variants with some documentation-site-only context (like the hidden subheadings in the example above) to disambiguate.
Contextually-styled callouts with admonition blocks
We have added support for Docusaurus' admonition syntax to Airbyte's in-app markdown renderer.
To make an admonition, wrap text with lines of three colons, with the first colons immediately followed (no space) by a tag specifying the callout's semantic styling, which will be one of tip
, warning
, caution
, danger
, note
, or info
. The syntax parallells a code block's, but with colons instead of backticks.
Examples of the different admonition types:
:::note
A **note** with _Markdown_ `syntax`.
:::
A note with Markdown syntax
.
:::tip
A **tip** with _Markdown_ `syntax`.
:::
A tip with Markdown syntax
.
:::info
Some **info** with _Markdown_ `syntax`.
:::
Some info with Markdown syntax
.
:::caution
A **caution** with _Markdown_ `syntax`.
:::
A caution with Markdown syntax
.
:::danger
Some **dangerous** content with _Markdown_ `syntax`.
:::
Some dangerous content with Markdown syntax
.
Collapsible content with <details>
and <summary>
## Ordinary markdown content
<details>
<summary>Here is an expandible section! Everything but this title is hidden by default.</summary>
Here is the dropdown content; if users expand this section, they will be able to read your valuable but perhaps nonessential content.
</details>
Back to ordinary markdown content.
Eagle-eyed readers may note that all markdown should support this feature since it's part of the html spec. However, it's worth special mention since these dropdowns have been styled to be a graceful visual fit within our rendered documentation in all environments.
Additional guidelines
- If you're updating a connector doc, follow the Connector documentation template
- If you're adding a new file, update the sidebars.js file
- If you're adding a README to a code module, make sure the README has the following components:
- A brief description of the module
- Development pre-requisites (like which language or binaries are required for development)
- How to install dependencies
- How to build and run the code locally & via Docker
- Any other information needed for local iteration
Advanced tasks
Adding a redirect
To add a redirect, open the docusaurus.config.js
file and locate the following commented section:
// {
// from: '/some-lame-path',
// to: '/a-much-cooler-uri',
// },
Copy this section, replace the values, and test the changes locally by going to the path you created a redirect for and verify that the address changes to the new one.
Your path needs a leading slash /
to work
Deploying and reverting the documentation site
Only the Airbyte team and maintainers have permissions to deploy the documentation site.
Automated documentation site deployment
When docs/
folder gets changed in master
branch of the repository, Deploy docs.airbyte.com
Github workflow steps in, builds and deploys the documentation site. This process is automatic, takes five to ten minutes, and needs no human intervention.
Manual documentation site deployment
Manual deployment is reserved for emergency cases. Please, bear in mind that automatic deployment is triggered by changes to docs/
folder, so it needs to be disabled to avoid interference with manual deployment.
You'll need a GitHub SSH key to deploy the documentation site using the deployment tool.
To deploy the documentation site, run:
cd airbyte
# or cd airbyte-cloud
git checkout master
git pull
./tools/bin/deploy_docusaurus
To revert/rollback doc changes, run:
cd airbyte
git checkout <OLDER_BRANCH>
./tools/bin/deploy_docusaurus