Writing NixOS Documentation
As NixOS grows, so too does the need for a catalogue and explanation of its
extensive functionality. Collecting pertinent information from disparate
sources and presenting it in an accessible style would be a worthy
contribution to the project.
Building the Manual
The DocBook sources of the are in the
nixos/doc/manual
subdirectory of the Nixpkgs repository.
You can quickly validate your edits with make:
$ cd /path/to/nixpkgs/nixos/doc/manual
$ make
Once you are done making modifications to the manual, it's important to
build it before committing. You can do that as follows:
nix-build nixos/release.nix -A manual.x86_64-linux
When this command successfully finishes, it will tell you where the manual
got generated. The HTML will be accessible through the
result symlink at
./result/share/doc/nixos/index.html.
Editing DocBook XML
For general information on how to write in DocBook, see
DocBook
5: The Definitive Guide.
Emacs nXML Mode is very helpful for editing DocBook XML because it validates
the document as you write, and precisely locates errors. To use it, see
.
Pandoc can generate DocBook XML
from a multitude of formats, which makes a good starting point.
Pandoc invocation to convert GitHub-Flavoured MarkDown to DocBook 5 XMLpandoc -f markdown_github -t docbook5 docs.md -o my-section.md
Pandoc can also quickly convert a single section.xml to
HTML, which is helpful when drafting.
Sometimes writing valid DocBook is simply too difficult. In this case,
submit your documentation updates in a
GitHub
Issue and someone will handle the conversion to XML for you.
Creating a Topic
You can use an existing topic as a basis for the new topic or create a topic
from scratch.
Keep the following guidelines in mind when you create and add a topic:
The NixOS
book
element is in nixos/doc/manual/manual.xml. It
includes several
parts
which are in subdirectories.
Store the topic file in the same directory as the part to
which it belongs. If your topic is about configuring a NixOS module, then
the XML file can be stored alongside the module definition
nix file.
If you include multiple words in the file name, separate the words with a
dash. For example: ipv6-config.xml.
Make sure that the xml:id value is unique. You can use
abbreviations if the ID is too long. For example:
nixos-config.
Determine whether your topic is a chapter or a section. If you are
unsure, open an existing topic file and check whether the main element is
chapter or section.
Adding a Topic to the Book
Open the parent XML file and add an xi:include element to
the list of chapters with the file name of the topic that you created. If
you created a section, you add the file to the chapter
file. If you created a chapter, you add the file to the
part file.
If the topic is about configuring a NixOS module, it can be automatically
included in the manual by using the meta.doc attribute.
See for an explanation.