[asterisk-dev] New Asterisk Documentation website is available for preview

Andrew Latham lathama at gmail.com
Tue Jun 20 20:20:29 CDT 2023


Maybe file an issue at https://github.com/asterisk/documentation/issues

I just tested and it works on localhost for me. It also prompted me for
cookies so I will do a PR for that.

On Tue, Jun 20, 2023 at 6:53 PM <asterisk at phreaknet.org> wrote:

> On 6/20/2023 8:33 PM, George Joseph wrote:
> > On Tue, Jun 20, 2023 at 5:06 PM Joshua C. Colp <jcolp at sangoma.com
> > <mailto:jcolp at sangoma.com>> wrote:
> >
> >     On Tue, Jun 20, 2023 at 3:51 PM <asterisk at phreaknet.org
> >     <mailto:asterisk at phreaknet.org>> wrote:
> >
> >         On 6/20/2023 10:32 AM, George Joseph wrote:
> >         > The one exception is the auto-generated documentation for
> >         > AMI/ARI/Dialplan.  That I'm starting to work on now.
> >         Thanks, George - I see from the README that one can run this
> >         on a local
> >         webserver. Will the auto-generated documentation aspect tie in
> >         with this
> >         as well? I wrote my own xmldoc to HTML generator a while back
> >         so I can
> >         view documentation for out of tree modules. If this can do
> >         that out of
> >         the box, then that would certainly be nice functionality to take
> >         advantage of. Will it just be sourcing from a core xml file,
> >         that we can
> >         point elsewhere if we want, or is that going to remain more
> >         upstream
> >         specific like it was with Confluence?
> >
> >
> >     I don't know how George plans to approach it fully, but ultimately
> >     the reference documentation will also end up as markdown and
> >     consumed with mkdocs. I do not expect those markdown files to be
> >     checked into the tree but generated as part of the deploy process.
> >     Any tooling to consume the XML and produce the markdown files will
> >     be available, so if someone wanted it locally they could.
> >
> >
> > Each version of Asterisk generates between 800 and 900 pages of
> > dynamic docs so it's going to take a bit of thought on how to
> > integrate them.  As Josh noted, we don't want those markdown files
> > checked into the repo but we do want mkdocs to integrate them
> > seamlessly into the main docs site, including the search indexing.
> >  We could run a full site build once a night to convert the static and
> > dynamic pages into html and index them all BUT we don't have
> > server-side searching available so it's done in the browser and right
> > now, even without the dynamic pages, the search_index.json file is
> > 4.1MB.  This might make it prudent to create a "virtual" site with its
> > own index just for the dynamic docs and link to it from the main
> > site.   Maybe even a separate virtual site for each Asterisk version.
> >  In fact, there are tools to create a versioned API site already
> > available. Kind of like how Python does it with a drop down at the top
> > of every page to select the Python version you want to see the
> > documentation for.
>
> Thanks, George - that helps!
> I was a bit surprised by how fast the search results were on the new
> site. It seems to be a lot better than the old wiki (which doesn't seem
> to work anymore, either...)
>
> There does seem to be an issue with the web hosting. It seems to be
> running:
> root at debian11:/usr/src/documentation# mkdocs serve
> INFO     -  Building documentation...
> INFO     -  Cleaning site directory
> INFO     -  Documentation built in 16.96 seconds
> INFO     -  [20:42:02] Watching paths for changes: 'docs', 'mkdocs.yml'
> INFO     -  [20:42:02] Serving on http://127.0.0.1:8000/
>
> But if I navigate to port 8000 on that machine in my browser, I get
> nothing... nothing even seems to be listening on that port.
> It works if I curl localhost on that server, so it seems to be listening
> on just the loopback address. I don't really see how that's helpful - it
> should probably be listening on all interfaces, so one can see what it
> looks like graphically, no?
>
> Realistically though, I wouldn't want to run a separate python server
> anyways, I just want static webpages I can serve in an Apache
> virtualhost, like my current doc generation process. It seems if I run
> "mkbuild docs" it does that. So if the dynamic docs have a similar
> process this seems like it will work great!
>
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-- 
- Andrew "lathama" Latham -
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