mirror of
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer.git
synced 2024-11-23 18:21:04 +00:00
ca814c15a6
Original commit message from CVS: releasing 0.10.1 |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
code-reviews | ||
design | ||
faq | ||
gst | ||
libs | ||
manual | ||
plugins | ||
pwg | ||
random | ||
slides | ||
xsl | ||
.gitignore | ||
htmlinstall.mak | ||
image-eps | ||
image-pdf | ||
image-png | ||
Makefile.am | ||
manuals.mak | ||
README | ||
upload.mak | ||
url.entities | ||
version.entities.in |
GStreamer documentation notes IMPORTANT ========= Please make sure you've read and understood everything in this file before you try changing documentation. OVERVIEW ======== GStreamer has two sets of documentation that we maintain: * API references, using gtk-doc (gstreamer, gstreamer-libs) * "books", using DocBook/XML (faq, manual, pwg) DOCBOOK NOTES ============= OK, I've grown so tired of having to coax the docs to build every time I get round to it that I've decided to note down some of the things that are important to know. OVERVIEW -------- * Our documentation should all be Docbook/XML. No SGML. * The source for the documentation is: - one or more .xml files, with the main one being gstreamer-(whatever).xml - image files - in .fig - in .png (and maybe others) * We want to generate docs in HTML, PS and PDF * We want to use xml to to generate these CONVENTIONS ----------- We stick to some simple conventions for writing docbook documentation. * id names: - all id's start with chapter-, part-, section-, or misc- - verify this is the case by looking at the generated file names in html/ - sections should also include the chapter name; for example in a chapter called chapter-example, a section would be called section-example-hello-world HOW IMAGES ARE HANDLED ---------------------- * the format of images used is: - PNG for html - EPS for ps - PDF for pdf * images may need to be converted from their source format to the end format * a file called image.entities is generated that provides two entities: ℑ and &IMAGE; ℑ is the file extension (png, ps, pdf) * all generated images will be put in images/ HOW THE BUILD WORKS FOR EACH FORMAT ----------------------------------- * HTML: - xmlto html gstreamer-whatever.xml should produce the html docs. - We do this in the html subdir of the doc builddir. - images are copied to (builddir)/html/images - PNGS should be set to all of the png's referenced for html, both already there and auto-generated * PS : - images are converted to .ps files in EPS format. Generated images are put in images/ - xmlto ps gstreamer-whatever.xml generates the ps file * PDF : There are two ways: - ps2pdf is the easiest - we specify ps, PS as the image type, but using xmlto the build will fail because it uses ps2pdf internally and it fails to generate the images By hand-generating .pdf images before xmlto we can make the build succeed. (This is why image-pdf has file ext pdf but type EPS; this tricks xmlto in doing the right thing) xmlto pdf gstreamer-whatever.xml generates pdf (but seems to fail on the FAQ, so for now we use ps2pdf) HOW THE BUILD SYSTEM IS SET UP ------------------------------ * make all should build html, ps, and pdf * html is built in a subdir, with the png/ps images copied there * ps and pdf are built in the current dir, in one file DOCBOOK NOTES ============= * spell checking with aspell * aspell -b -c --mode=sgml --lang=en <file>.xml unfortunately the curses-ui of aspell (0.50.5) has problems with the xml tags GTK-DOC NOTES ============= * files under CVS control: - Makefile.am - gstreamer-sections.txt describes which symbols later appear on one api-doc page configure which symbols are shown/invisible/private - gstreamer.types the types file lists all get_type() functions that register the GObject types - gstreamer-docs.sgml defines the overall structure of the api documentation - tmpl/ - only add the file to CVS if you have at least filled the short description (filename corresponds to the <FILE> tag in the sections file) - document as much as possible in the source (*.c files) * what to do when adding a new piece of API: - add both an entity and use the entity in gstreamer-docs.sgml - add a new <SECTION> to gstreamer-sections.txt in the correct alphabetical position related to the other sections (so that it is easier to locate) - add all documented symbols to gstreamer-sections.txt in the proper section (default),<SUBSECTION Standard>,<SUBSECTION Private> - document at least the Short_Description in tmpl/.sgml - document symbols where they are definied, so that when one changes the definition, the chaces are good that docs are updated. - document functions, signals in the .c files - document structs, typedefs, enums in the .h files * checklist: - make sure *-sections.txt has a <TITLE> set for each <FILE> - add only *one* <TITLE> to each file, when you have multiple classes in one source-file, create one <FILE> section for each class - the <TITLE> *must* be named like the type of the GType, when it gets registered (otherwise gtkdoc introspection fails) - for clarity name the <FILE> like the <TITLE>, but all lowercase * what to do when trying to improve the docs - compare the output of grep "_get_type" gstreamer-sections.txt | sort with the types in XXX.types to detect entries that are maybe missing - gtk docs does not warns about empty member docs!, run find . -name "*.[c,h]" -exec egrep -Hn "^ +\* +@.*: *$" {} \; in the project root to find them - gtk docs does not warns about empty Returns: docs!, run find . -name "*.[c,h]" -exec egrep -Hn "^ +\* +@Returns: *$" {} \; in the project root to find them * what happens during a gtk-doc build ? - Scan step: - based on a $(MODULE).types file: - gtkdoc-scangobj creates a gtkdoc-scan binary - using CC, LD, CFLAGS, LDFLAGS env var - using --type-init-func and --module parameters - gtkdoc-scan creates - $MODULE.signals.new - $MODULE.hierarchy.new - $MODULE.interfaces.new - $MODULE.prerequisites.new - $MODULE.args.new - generated source and objects get deleted - gtkdoc-scangobj merges changes into the original files - gtkdoc-scan - extracts decls of functions, macros, enums, structs, unions from headers - generates - $MODULE-decl.txt - $MODULE-decl-list.txt - $MODULE-decl-list.txt then should get copied to $MODULE-sections.txt - scan-build.stamp gets created - Template generation step: - gtkdoc-mktmpl --module=$MODULE - reads in tmpl/*.sgml - moves them to tmpl/*.sgml.bak - recreates tmpl/*.sgml according to $MODULE-sections.txt - moves unused stuff to $MODULE-unused.txt - tmpl-build.stamp gets generated * Possible errors and how to fix them - Warning: multiple "IDs" for constraint linkend: gst-tag-register. - check if gst_tag_register is listed more than once in -sections.txt STYLE GUIDE FOR GTK-DOC ======================= - this is in addition to gtk-doc's style-guide.txt - when documenting signals, use "the #Gst..." for the object receiving the signal; no trailing dot, and no "that received the signal" - function/macro descriptions are descriptive, not imperative ie, it uses the third person verb - synopsis and description should have most-used/application functions at the top - functions that can return FALSE/NULL or fail should describe their failure conditions like this: * Returns NULL if no element with the given name is found in the bin, if * the frobble was stuck in the froob, or the frizzle was frazzed. - a line with function attributes should be added before Returns: - can contain: "MT safe." - the function is verified to be multithreadingsafe "Caller owns returned reference" for refcounted classes "Caller owns returned value" for other types (iterators, ..) - we do this because, in contrast with GLib/GTK, we are more explicit about threadsafety and related issues - link to signals from the description like this: * The <link linkend="GstBin-element-added">element-added</link> signal - the bottom of the description should say when the doc was last reviewed (version and date) * Last reviewed on 2005-10-28 (0.9.4) WEBSITE DOCUMENTATION ===================== Updating the online documentation is pretty simple. Make sure that you a) have a working freedesktop.org account b) $HOME/.ssh/config set up so that it has the right User for the Host (for example, I have: Host freedesktop.org User thomasvs c) verify this works by doing ssh freedesktop.org and being logged in without a password prompt d) have verified your changes build documentation locally. Then, after updating any of the docs, run "make upload" from that directory. Or, run "make upload" from this (docs) directory. DOCUMENTING ELEMENTS ==================== As of september 2005 we have some system to document plugins and elements in the various plugin packages. - in a submodule, docs go in docs/plugins - template can be copied from gst-plugins-base - to add an element to be documented: - add an include href in the Elements chapter for the element in the main .sgml - add a section for it in -sections.txt with <FILE>element-(element)</FILE> <TITLE>(element)</TITLE> - add a gtk-doc section to the source code like: /** * SECTION:element-multifdsink and fill it with documentation about the element, preferably inside a <refsect2> docbook container. - add an example: - either a few pipelines, inside <programlisting> - or a piece of code: - create an example program (element)-example.c in the plugin dir - add the full path (starting with $(top_srcdir)) for this example to the EXAMPLE_CFILES variable in Makefile.am - add an xinclude of a file named "element-(element)-example.xml" to the docbook documentation piece in the element source code - add the header to EXTRA_HFILES in Makefile.am to be able to document signals and args; in that case, the object struct needs to be in -sections.txt outside of the Standard Subsection (which is annoying, but ...) (FIXME: are we sure we can both do the xinclude from the tmpl/ sgml, as well as an override from the source itself ? maybe we should just make sure the xinclude is in the source itself instead ?) - to rebuild the docs, do: make clean make inspect-update make - examples will only show up using gtk-doc 1.4 or later - it relies on merging stuff from .sgml with inline docs. We might want to change this to only get stuff from the source. - to add a plugin to be documented: - make sure inspect/ has generated a .xml file for it - add it to CVS - add an include in -docs.sgml in the Plugins list for that plugin - possible errors: "multiple constraints for linkend ID": check if each section in -sections.txt actually starts and ends with <SECTION> and </SECTION> RANDOM THINGS I'VE LEARNED ========================== * for clean builddir != srcdir separation, I wanted to use xmlto --searchpath so the source xml could find the built entity file. But xmlto --searchpath is (right now) for TeX input, not xml input. xsltproc has a --path option (that xmlto doesn't use yet), but it resolves single files to $(specified_path)/$(srcdir)/$(file) For now, we need to hack around it by copying xml to the build dir. Building GStreamer documentation (old) DOCUMENTATION BUILDING NOTES ---------------------------------- To build the GStreamer documentation you need the following installed (based on Red Hat packages). These packages comes from rawhide and are the ones that will be in Red Hat 7.3/8.0 Docbook stuff: sgml-common xml-common openjade (needs to be rebuilt from SRPM for Red Hat 7.2) tetex-dvips jadetex docbook-dtds docbook-style-dsssl docbook-style-xsl docbook-utils XML stuff: libxml2 libxml2-python libxml2-devel libxslt libxslt-devel libxslt-python Gtkdoc: gtk-doc Other stuff: transfig pdftops DEVHELP INTEGRATION ------------------- Check http://www.imendio.com/projects/devhelp/ It's a really nice development app allowing you to look up API stuff from various gtk-doc'd libraries. GStreamer is one of these ;) gtk-doc generates both html API docs and the matching .devhelp files