Contribute to Druid docs
Apache Druid is a community-led project. We are delighted to receive contributions to the docs ranging from minor fixes to big new features.
Druid docs contributors:
- Improve existing content
- Create new content
Getting started
Druid docs contributors can open an issue about documentation, or contribute a change with a pull request (PR).
The open source Druid docs are located here: https://druid.apache.org/docs/latest/design/index.html
If you need to update a Druid doc, locate and update the doc in the Druid repo following the instructions below.
Druid repo branches
The Druid team works on the master
branch and then branches for a release, such as 26.0.0
.
See CONTRIBUTING.md for instructions on contributing to Apache Druid.
Before you begin
Before you can contribute to the Druid docs for the first time, you must complete the following steps:
Fork the Druid repo. Your fork will be the
origin
remote.Clone your fork:
git clone git@github.com:GITHUB_USERNAME/druid.git
Replace
GITHUB_USERNAME
with your GitHub username.In the directory where you cloned your fork, set up
apache/druid
as your your remoteupstream
repo:git remote add upstream https://github.com/apache/druid.git
Confirm that your fork shows up as the origin repo and
apache/druid
shows up as the upstream repo:git remote -v
Verify that you have your email configured for GitHub:
git config user.email
If you need to set your email, see the GitHub instructions.
Install Docusaurus so that you can build the site locally. Run either
npm install
oryarn install
in thewebsite
directory.
Contributing
Before you contribute, make sure your local branch of master
and the upstream Apache branch are up-to-date and in sync. This can help you avoid merge conflicts. Run the following commands on your fork’s master
branch:
git fetch origin
git fetch upstream
Then run either one of the following commands:
git rebase upstream/master
# or
git merge upstream/master
Now you’re up to date, and you can make your changes.
Create your working branch:
git checkout -b MY-BRANCH
Provide a name for your feature branch in MY-BRANCH
. 2. Find the file that you want to make changes to. All the source files for the docs are written in Markdown and located in the docs
directory. The URL for the page includes the subdirectory the source file is in. For example, the SQL-based ingestion tutorial found at https://druid.apache.org/docs/latest/tutorials/tutorial-msq-extern.html
is in the tutorials
subdirectory.
If you’re adding a page, create a new Markdown file in the appropriate subdirectory. Then, copy the front matter and Apache license from an existing file. Update the title
and id
fields. Don’t forget to add it to website/sidebars.json
so that your new page shows up in the navigation.
Test changes locally by building the site and navigating to your changes. In the
website
directory, rundocusaurus-start
. By default, this starts the site onlocalhost:3000
. If port3000
is already in use, it’ll increment the port number from there.Use the following commands to run the link and spellcheckers locally:
npm run spellcheck
npm run link-lint
This step can save you time during the review process since they’ll run faster than the GitHub Action version of the checks and warn you of issues before you create a PR.
Push your changes to your fork:
git push --set-upstream origin MY-BRANCH
Go to the Druid repo. GitHub should recognize that you have a new branch in your fork. Create a pull request from your Druid fork and branch to the
master
branch in the Apache Druid repo.
The pull request template is extensive. You may not need all the information there, so feel free to delete unneeded sections as you fill it out. Once you create the pull request, GitHub automatically labels the issue so that reviewers can take a look.
The docs go through a review process similar to the code where community members will offer feedback. Once the review process is complete and your changes are merged, they’ll be available on the live site when the site gets republished.
Style guide
Before publishing new content or updating an existing topic, audit your documentation using this checklist to make sure your contributions align with existing documentation.
Here are some general guidelines:
- Use descriptive link text. If a link downloads a file, make sure to indicate this action.
- Use present tense where possible.
- Avoid negative constructions when possible. In other words, try to tell people what they should do instead of what they shouldn’t.
- Use clear and direct language.
- Use descriptive headings and titles.
- Avoid using a present participle or gerund as the first word in a heading or title. A shortcut for this is to not start with a word that ends in
-ing
. For example, don’t use “Configuring Druid.” Use “Configure Druid.” - Use sentence case in document titles and headings.
- Don’t use images of text or code samples.
- Use SVG over PNG for images if you can.
- Provide alt text or an equivalent text explanation with each image.
- Use the appropriate text-formatting. For example, make sure code snippets and property names are in code font and UI elements are bold. Generally, you should avoid using bold or italics to emphasize certain words unless there’s a good reason.
- Put conditional clauses before instructions. In the following example, “to drop a segment” is the conditional clause: to drop a segment, do the following.
- Avoid gender-specific pronouns, instead use “they.”
- Use second person singular — “you” instead of “we.”
- When American spelling is different from Commonwealth/“British” spelling, use the American spelling.
- Don’t use terms considered disrespectful. Refer to a list like Google’s Word list for guidance and alternatives.
- Use straight quotation marks and straight apostrophes instead of the curly versions.
- Introduce a list, a table, or a procedure with an introductory sentence that prepares the reader for what they’re about to read.