ceph/doc/dev/documenting.rst
Kefu Chai 9e9595291d doc: s/Asphyxiate/Breathe/ in documenting.rst
Signed-off-by: Kefu Chai <kchai@redhat.com>
2015-03-20 17:17:53 +08:00

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2.8 KiB
ReStructuredText

==================
Documenting Ceph
==================
Code Documentation
==================
C and C++ can be documented with Doxygen_, using the subset of Doxygen
markup supported by Breathe_.
.. _Doxygen: http://www.stack.nl/~dimitri/doxygen/
.. _Breathe: https://github.com/michaeljones/breathe
The general format for function documentation is::
/**
* Short description
*
* Detailed description when necessary
*
* preconditons, postconditions, warnings, bugs or other notes
*
* parameter reference
* return value (if non-void)
*/
This should be in the header where the function is declared, and
functions should be grouped into logical categories. The `librados C
API`_ provides a complete example. It is pulled into Sphinx by
`librados.rst`_, which is rendered at :doc:`/rados/api/librados`.
.. _`librados C API`: https://github.com/ceph/ceph/blob/master/src/include/rados/librados.h
.. _`librados.rst`: https://raw.github.com/ceph/ceph/master/doc/api/librados.rst
Drawing diagrams
================
Graphviz
--------
You can use Graphviz_, as explained in the `Graphviz extension documentation`_.
.. _Graphviz: http://graphviz.org/
.. _`Graphviz extension documentation`: http://sphinx.pocoo.org/ext/graphviz.html
.. graphviz::
digraph "example" {
foo -> bar;
bar -> baz;
bar -> thud;
}
Most of the time, you'll want to put the actual DOT source in a
separate file, like this::
.. graphviz:: myfile.dot
Ditaa
-----
You can use Ditaa_:
.. _Ditaa: http://ditaa.sourceforge.net/
.. ditaa::
+--------------+ /=----\
| hello, world |-->| hi! |
+--------------+ \-----/
Blockdiag
---------
If a use arises, we can integrate Blockdiag_. It is a Graphviz-style
declarative language for drawing things, and includes:
- `block diagrams`_: boxes and arrows (automatic layout, as opposed to
Ditaa_)
- `sequence diagrams`_: timelines and messages between them
- `activity diagrams`_: subsystems and activities in them
- `network diagrams`_: hosts, LANs, IP addresses etc (with `Cisco
icons`_ if wanted)
.. _Blockdiag: http://blockdiag.com/
.. _`Cisco icons`: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/blockdiagcontrib-cisco/
.. _`block diagrams`: http://blockdiag.com/en/blockdiag/
.. _`sequence diagrams`: http://blockdiag.com/en/seqdiag/index.html
.. _`activity diagrams`: http://blockdiag.com/en/actdiag/index.html
.. _`network diagrams`: http://blockdiag.com/en/nwdiag/
Inkscape
--------
You can use Inkscape to generate scalable vector graphics.
http://inkscape.org for restructedText documents.
If you generate diagrams with Inkscape, you should
commit both the Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) file and export a
Portable Network Graphic (PNG) file. Reference the PNG file.
By committing the SVG file, others will be able to update the
SVG diagrams using Inkscape.
HTML5 will support SVG inline.