The website for gem5 is written in Jekyll markdown. It serves as the primarily source of information for those interested in the gem5 project. In the spirit of gem5's community-led, open governance model, anyone who wishes may make contributions and improvements to the website. This README outlines the basic procedure to do so, as well as notes the directory structure and general guidelines.
You may clone repository the repository, and run a local instance of the website using:
git clone https://gem5.googlesource.com/public/gem5-website cd gem5-website bundle jekyll serve --config _config.yml,_config_dev.yml
The jekyll server may also be run using:
bundle exec jekyll serve --config _config.yml,_config_dev.yml
Changes may be made and committed using:
git add <changed files> git commit
The commit message must adhere to our style. The first line of the commit is the “header”. The header line must not exceed 65 characters and adequately describe the change. To be consistent with commits made to the gem5 gerrit, the header should start with a website
tag followed by a colon.
After this, a more detailed description of the commit can be included. This is inserted below the header, separated by an empty line. Including a description is optional but strongly recommended for complex changes. The description may span multiple lines, and multiple paragraphs. No line in the description may exceed 72 characters. We also recommend adding reference to any relevant Jira issue (from the gem5 Jira: https://gem5.atlassian.net) so the context of a change can be more easily understood.
Below is an example of how a gem5 website commit message should be formatted:
website: This is an example header This is a more detailed description of the commit. This can be as long as is necessary to adequately describe the change. A description may spawn multiple paragraphs if desired. Jira: https://gem5.atlassian.net/browse/GEM5-186
We utilize Gerrit to review changes made to the website. Once changes are committed to a local repository they may be submitted for review by executing:
git push origin HEAD:refs/for/stable
At this stage you may receive an error if you're not registered to contribute to our Gerrit. To resolve this issue:
User Settings
Obtain password
(under HTTP Credentials
).Gerrit will amend your commit message with a Change-ID
. Any commit pushed to Gerrit with this Change-ID is assumed to be part of this change.
Once a change has been submitted to Gerrit, you may view the change at https://gem5-review.googlesource.com under Your
-> Changes
-> Outgoing reviews
).
Through the Gerrit prowl we strongly advise you add reviewers to your change. Gerrit will automatically notify those you assign. We recommend you add both Bobby R. Bruce bbruce@ucdavis.edu and Jason Lowe-Power jlowepower@ucdavis.edu as reviewers.
Reviewers will review the change. For non-trivial edits, it is not unusual for a change to receive feedback from reviewers that they want incorporated before flagging as acceptable for merging into the gem5 website repository. All communications between reviewers and contributors should be done in a polite manner. Rude and/or dismissive remakes will not be tolerated.
Once your change has been accepted by reviewers you will be able to click Submit
within your changes Gerrit page. This focally merges the change into the gem5 website repository. The website will be automatically updated with your changes within 30 minutes.
Yaml files, for easily editing navigation.
Page section and main navigation bar are here.
Different layout templates used on the site.
All pages (other than the index.html home page) should be placed in this folder. There is a subfolder /documentation where pages meant for documentation part of the site can be kept. This is purely for organization and ease of finding things. Reorganizing the _pages folder should not affect the site.
Holds blog posts.
All custom css is kept in _layout.scss.
Images and javascript files.
Holds index.html of blog page.
To edit the navigation bar: Go to _includes/header.html
Navigation element without submenu:
<li class="nav-item {% if page.title == "Home" %}active{% endif %}"> <a class="nav-link" href="{{ "/" | prepend: site.baseurl }}">Home</a> </li>
Replace Home
in {% if page.title == "Home" %}
to your page‘s title. Replace /
in href="{{ "/" | prepend: site.baseurl }}"
to the page’s permalink. Replace Home
in >Home</a>
with what you want the navbar to show.
Navigation element with submenu:
<li class="nav-item dropdown {% if page.parent == "about" %}active{% endif %}"> <a class="nav-link dropdown-toggle" id="navbarDropdownMenuLink" data-toggle="dropdown" aria-haspopup="true" aria-expanded="false"> About </a> <div class="dropdown-menu" aria-labelledby="navbarDropdownMenuLink"> <a class="dropdown-item" href="{{ "/about" | prepend: site.baseurl }}">About</a> <a class="dropdown-item" href="{{ "/publications" | prepend: site.baseurl }}">Publications</a> <a class="dropdown-item" href="{{ "/governance" | prepend: site.baseurl }}">Governance</a> </div> </li>
Replace about
in {% if page.parent == "about" %}
to a word that will represent the parent of all pages in the submenu. Make sure the frontmatter in those pages include parent: [your_parent_identifier]. Replace the permalink and title in all the <a></a>
submenu items.
Parent Topic:
Parent Topic:
To edit the documentation navigation, simply edit the documentation.yml file in the _data folder. docs
lists the parent topics, and within it subitems
lists its subtopics. This is an example of how it should be formatted:
title: Documentation docs: - title: Getting Started # Parent Topic id: gettingstarted # see below url: /gettingstarted # see below subitems: - page: Introduction # Name that will appear in navigation url: /introduction # url - page: Dependencies url: /dependencies - title: Debugging # Parent Topic id: debugging # see below subitems: - page: Piece 1 url: /piece1 - page: Piece 2 url: /piece2
Notes: id
is an identifier that links subtopics to its parent. It is required and must not contain any spaces. The subtopic pages must include in the frontmatter parent: id
with id
being the parent's id.
url
is optional for parent topics, if a parent topic has its own a page. If no url is provided, it will automatically link to the first subtopic.
To add a new documentation page, first add frontmatter at the top of either the markdown or html file to be added.
--- layout: documentation // specify page layout title: Getting Started // title of the page parent: gettingstarted // see below permalink: /gettingstarted/ // url ---
Notes:
parent
should be the exact same as the id of its parent topic that is assigned to it in _data/documentation.yml file. (If the page is the parent topic, parent
is the same as the id assigned to it in _data/documentation.yml file.)
Place the file in _pages/documentation. Make sure to add the page to the documentation navigation, explained by the section above.
To flag information in a page as valid, use an outdated notice in the .md file of that page:
{: .outdated-notice} This page is outdated!
This will be replaced by a warning element containing the text “Note: This page is outdated.”, followed by the content succeeding the notice - in this case, “This page is outdated!”. In this way, you can add additional information explaining why or how the page is outdated, and general tips on what to do to mitigate this issue.
Notes:
Make sure that the text following {: .outdated-notice}
is not used as a title, heading, or any other important Markdown element, as it will be incorporated into the outdated notice and break formatting.
Add blog page to _posts folder. Page must be named in this format: yyyy-mm-dd-name-of-file.md
At the top of the page add:
--- layout: post // specify page layout title: How to Debug author: John date: yyyy-mm-dd ---