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istio.io Netlify Status
preliminary.istio.io Netlify Status
archive.istio.io Netlify Status

istio.io

This repository contains the source code for the istio.io, preliminary.istio.io, and archive.istio.io sites.

Please see the main Istio README file to learn about the overall Istio project and how to get in touch with us. To learn how you can contribute to any of the Istio components, please see the Istio contribution guidelines.

Editing and building

To learn how to edit and build this repo's content, please refer to Creating and Editing Pages.

Versions and releases

Istio maintains three variations of its public site.

  • istio.io is the main site, showing documentation for the current release of the product.

  • archive.istio.io contains snapshots of the documentation for previous releases of the product. This is useful for customers still using these older releases.

  • preliminary.istio.io contains the actively updated documentation for the next release of the product.

The user can trivially navigate between the different variations of the site using the gear menu in the top right of each page. All three sites are hosted on Netlify.

How versioning works

  • Documentation changes are primarily committed to the master branch of istio.io. Changes committed to this branch are automatically reflected on preliminary.istio.io.

  • The content of istio.io is taken from the latest release-XXX branch. The specific branch that is used is determined by the istio.io Netlify project's configuration.

  • The content of archive.istio.io is taken from the older release-XXX branches. The set of branches that are included on archive.istio.io is determined by the TOBUILD variable in this script.

Publishing content immediately

Checking in updates to the master branch will automatically update preliminary.istio.io, and will only be reflected on istio.io the next time a release is created, which can be several weeks in the future. If you'd like some changes to be immediately reflected on istio.io, you need to check your changes both to the master branch and to the current release branch (named release-XXX such as release-1.4).

This process can be taken care of automatically by our infrastructure. If you submit a PR to the master branch and annotate the PR with the actions/merge-to-release-branch label, then as soon as your PR is merged into master, it will be merged into the current release branch.

Creating a version

Here are the steps necessary to create a new documentation version. Let's assume the current version of Istio is 1.3 and you wish to introduce 1.4 which has been under development.

When Istio source code is branched

The documentation repo pulls content from the Istio source repos for inclusion in the published site. When the source repos are branched in preparation for a release, a few changes are needed in the documentation repo to track this:

  1. Switch to the master branch of the istio/istio.io repo and make sure everything is up to date.

  2. Edit the file Makefile.core.mk and change the SOURCE_BRANCH_NAME variable to the name of the newly created source branches (in this case release-1.4).

  3. Edit the file data/args.yml and set the source_branch_name field to the name of the newly created source branches (in this case release-1.4).

  4. Run make update_all in order to retrieve the latest material from the source repositories.

  5. Commit the previous edits to your local git repo and push your master branch to GitHub.

On the day of the release

Creating the release branch

The day of a major Istio release, assuming you've previously done the steps from the above section, you need to:

  1. Switch to the master branch of the istio/istio.io repo and make sure everything is up to date.

  2. Edit the file scripts/build_archive_site.sh and add the new archive version (in this case release-1.3) to the TOBUILD variable.

  3. Edit the file data/versions.yml. Set the preliminary field to the next Istio release (in this case 1.5) and the main field to the current release (in this case 1.4).

  4. Commit the previous edits to your local git repo and push your master branch to GitHub.

  5. Create a new release branch off of master, named as release-major.minor (in this case release-1.4). There is one such branch for every release.

  6. Edit the file data/args.yml. Set the preliminary field to false and the the doc_branch_name field to the name of the release branch (in this case release-1.4).

  7. Commit the previous edits to your local git repo and push your release branch to GitHub.

Updating istio.io

  1. Go to the istio.io project on Netlify

  2. Change the branch that is built from the previous release's branch to the new release branch, in this case release-1.4

  3. Select the option to trigger an immediate rebuild and redeployment.

  4. Once deployment is done, browse istio.io and make sure everything looks good.

Updating archive.istio.io
  1. Go to the Google Custom Search Engine and do the following:

    • Download the archive.istio.io CSE context file from the Advanced tab.

    • Add a new FacetItem at the top of the file containing the previous release's version number. In this case, this would be "V1.3".

    • Upload the updated CSE context file to the site.

    • In the Setup section, add a new site that covers the previous release's archive directory. In this case, the site URL would be archive.istio.io/v1.3/*. Set the label of this site to the name of the facet item created above (V1.3 in this case).

  2. In the previous release's branch (in this case release-1.3), edit the file data/args.yml. Set the archive field to true and the archive_date field to the current date, and the archive_search_refinement to the previous release version (in this case V1.3).

  3. In the previous release's branch (in this case release-1.3), edit the file config.toml. Set the disableAliases field to false.

  4. Commit the previous edits to your local git repo and push the previous release's branch to GitHub.

  5. In the archive branch, rebase the branch to have all changes from the current release. In this case, all changes from the release-1.4 branch.

  6. Commit the previous edits to your local git repo and push the archive branch to GitHub.

  7. Wait a while (~20 minutes) and browse archive.istio.io to make sure everything looks good.

Updating preliminary.istio.io
  1. In the master branch, edit the file data/args.yml. Set the version and full_version fields to have the version of the next Istio release, and previous_version to be the version of the previous release. In this case, you would set the fields to "1.5", "1.5.0", and "1.4" respectively.

  2. In the master branch, edit the file data/args.yml. Set the source_branch_name and doc_branch_name fields to master.

  3. In the master branch, edit the file Makefile.core.mk. Set the variable SOURCE_BRANCH_NAKE to master.

  4. Run make update_all in order to retrieve the latest material from the source repositories.

  5. Commit the previous edits to your local git repo and push the master branch to GitHub.

  6. Wait a while (~5 minutes) and browse preliminary.istio.io to make sure everything looks good.

Creating a patch release

Creating a new patch release involves modifying a few files:

  1. Create the release note for the release by adding a markdown file in content/en/news/<YEAR>/1.X.Y/index.md, where 1.X.Y is the name of the release. This is where you describe the changes in the release.

  2. Edit the data/args.yml file and change the full_version field to the name of the release.

  3. Run make update_ref_docs to get the latest reference docs.

For the release note file, please look at existing files in the same location for example content and layout.

Multi-language support

The site is translated into multiple languages. Source of truth is the English content, while other languages are derived and so tend to lag behind slightly. Each site language gets its own fully self-contained content directory and translation table file. Languages are identified using their international 2-letter language code. The main site content is located in content/<language code> (e.g. content/en), and the translation table is a TOML-format file in i18n\<language code>.toml (e.g. i18n/en.toml).

Getting started with translation is fairly simple:

  • Create a full copy of the content/en directory for your language. For example, you'd copy content/en to content/fr if you were doing a French translation.

  • Update all the links in your new content directory to point to your content directory instead of to the English content. For example, if you were doing a French translation you would change links such as [a doc](/docs/a/b/c) to [a doc](/fr/docs/a/b/c).

  • Remove all the aliases directives in the front-matter of all content pages. Aliases are used when moving a page to a new location, so they're not desirable for brand new content.

  • Create a copy of the i18n/en.toml file for your language. For example, you'd copy i18n/en.toml to i18n/fr.toml if you were doing a French translation. This file contains the text that is displayed by the site infrastructure for things like menus, and other standard material.

  • Edit the file config.toml to list your new language. Search for the [languages] entry and just add a new entry. This tells the Hugo site generator to process your content.

  • Edit the file scripts/lint_site.sh and search for check_content. Add another call to check_content for your new content directory. This ensures that the linting rules apply to your new content.

  • Edit the file src/ts/lang.ts and add your new language. This will add your language to the language toggle button that is available on preliminary.istio.io and will make it so your language will be supported in the language selection menu.

  • Get an Istio GitHub administrator to create a new maintainer team for your language. For Franch, this would be WG - Docs Mintainers/French.

  • Edit the file CODEOWNERS and add entries for your language to give the new team you've created ownership over the translated content and translation table file.

You can then commit all of these changes and you can start translating the content and the translation file in a purely incremental fashion. When you build the site, you'll find your content at <url>/<language code>. For example, once you've checked everything in, you should be able to get to your content at https://preliminary.istio.io/fr if you were doing a French translation.

Once your translation is complete and you're ready to publish it to the world, there are a few other changes you need to make:

  • Edit the file layouts/index.redir. Search for translated sites and add a line for your language. This will cause users coming to the site for the first time to be automatically redirectded to the translated content suitable for them. For French, this would be:

    /  /fr   302  Language=fr
    
  • Edit fhe file layouts/partials/headers.html. Search for switch-lang and you'll find the definitions for the language selection menu. Add a line for your new language.

And that's it.

Regular maintenance

We have a number of checks in place to ensure a number of invariants are maintained in order to help the site's overall quality. For example, we disallow checking in broken links and we do spell checking. There are some things which are hard to systematically check through automation and instead require a human to review on in a while to ensure everything's doing well.

It's a good idea to run through this list before every major release of the site:

  • Ensure that references to the Istio repos on GitHub don't hardcode branch names. Search for any uses of /release-1 or /master throughout all the markdown files and replace those with {{< source_branch_name >}} instead, which produces a version-appropriate branch name.

  • Review the .spelling file for words that shouldn't be in there. Type names in particular tend to creep in here. Type names should not be in the dictionary and should instead be shown with backticks. Remove the entries from the dictionary and fix any spell checking errors that emerge.

  • Ensure proper capitalization. Document titles need to be fully capitalized (e.g. "This is a Valid Title"), while section headings should use first letter capitalization only (e.g. "This is a valid heading").

  • Ensure that preformatted text blocks that reference files from the Istio GitHub repos use the @@ syntax to produce links to the content. See here for context.

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