Commit 09e70718 authored by Russell Dickenson's avatar Russell Dickenson

Merge branch 'selhorn-move-structure-out' into 'master'

Move the folder structure content to new page

See merge request gitlab-org/gitlab!79282
parents 5401c260 a987e188
......@@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ Adhere to the [Documentation Style Guide](styleguide/index.md). If a style stand
## Folder structure and files
See the [Structure](styleguide/index.md#structure) section of the [Documentation Style Guide](styleguide/index.md).
See the [Folder structure](site_architecture/folder_structure.md) page.
## Metadata
......
---
stage: none
group: unassigned
info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
---
# Folder structure for documentation
The documentation is separated by top-level audience folders [`user`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/tree/master/doc/user),
[`administration`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/tree/master/doc/administration),
and [`development`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/tree/master/doc/development)
(contributing) folders.
Beyond that, we primarily follow the structure of the GitLab user interface or
API.
Our goal is to have a clear hierarchical structure with meaningful URLs like
`docs.gitlab.com/user/project/merge_requests/`. With this pattern, you can
immediately tell that you are navigating to user-related documentation about
Project features; specifically about Merge Requests. Our site's paths match
those of our repository, so the clear structure also makes documentation easier
to update.
Put files for a specific product area into the related folder:
| Directory | Contents |
|:----------------------|:------------------|
| `doc/user/` | Documentation for users. Anything that can be done in the GitLab user interface goes here, including usage of the `/admin` interface. |
| `doc/administration/` | Documentation that requires the user to have access to the server where GitLab is installed. Administrator settings in the GitLab user interface are under `doc/user/admin_area/`. |
| `doc/api/` | Documentation for the API. |
| `doc/development/` | Documentation related to the development of GitLab, whether contributing code or documentation. Related process and style guides should go here. |
| `doc/legal/` | Legal documents about contributing to GitLab. |
| `doc/install/` | Instructions for installing GitLab. |
| `doc/update/` | Instructions for updating GitLab. |
| `doc/topics/` | Indexes per topic (`doc/topics/topic_name/index.md`): all resources for that topic. |
## Work with directories and files
When working with directories and files:
1. When you create a new directory, always start with an `index.md` file.
Don't use another filename and do not create `README.md` files.
1. Do not use special characters and spaces, or capital letters in file
names, directory names, branch names, and anything that generates a path.
1. When creating or renaming a file or directory and it has more than one word
in its name, use underscores (`_`) instead of spaces or dashes. For example,
proper naming would be `import_project/import_from_github.md`. This applies
to both image files and Markdown files.
1. For image files, do not exceed 100KB.
1. Do not upload video files to the product repositories.
[Link or embed videos](../styleguide/index.md#videos) instead.
1. There are four main directories: `user`, `administration`, `api`, and
`development`.
1. The `doc/user/` directory has five main subdirectories: `project/`, `group/`,
`profile/`, `dashboard/` and `admin_area/`.
- `doc/user/project/` should contain all project related documentation.
- `doc/user/group/` should contain all group related documentation.
- `doc/user/profile/` should contain all profile related documentation.
Every page you would navigate under `/profile` should have its own document,
for example, `account.md`, `applications.md`, or `emails.md`.
- `doc/user/dashboard/` should contain all dashboard related documentation.
- `doc/user/admin_area/` should contain all administrator-related
documentation describing what can be achieved by accessing the GitLab
administrator interface (not to be confused with `doc/administration` where
server access is required).
- Every category under `/admin/application_settings/` should have its
own document located at `doc/user/admin_area/settings/`. For example,
the **Visibility and Access Controls** category should have a document
located at `doc/user/admin_area/settings/visibility_and_access_controls.md`.
1. The `doc/topics/` directory holds topic-related technical content. Create
`doc/topics/topic_name/subtopic_name/index.md` when subtopics become necessary.
General user and administrator documentation should be placed accordingly.
1. The `/university/` directory is *deprecated* and the majority of its documentation
has been moved.
If you're unsure where to place a document or a content addition, this shouldn't
stop you from authoring and contributing. Use your best judgment, and then ask
the reviewer of your MR to confirm your decision. You can also ask a technical writer at
any stage in the process. The technical writing team reviews all
documentation changes, regardless, and can move content if there is a better
place for it.
## Avoid duplication
Do not include the same information in multiple places.
[Link to a single source of truth instead.](../styleguide/index.md#link-instead-of-repeating-text)
## References across documents
- Give each folder an `index.md` page that introduces the topic, and both introduces
and links to the child pages, including to the index pages of
any next-level sub-paths.
- To ensure discoverability, ensure each new or renamed doc is linked from its
higher-level index page and other related pages.
- When making reference to other GitLab products and features, link to their
respective documentation, at least on first mention.
- When making reference to third-party products or technologies, link out to
their external sites, documentation, and resources.
......@@ -52,6 +52,8 @@ product, and all together are pulled to generate the docs website:
- [GitLab Runner](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-runner/-/tree/main/docs)
- [GitLab Chart](https://gitlab.com/charts/gitlab/tree/master/doc)
Learn more about [the docs folder structure](folder_structure.md).
## Assets
To provide an optimized site structure, design, and a search-engine friendly
......
......@@ -181,115 +181,6 @@ included in backticks. For example:
- `git clone` is a command, so it must be lowercase, while Git is the product,
so it must have a capital G.
## Structure
We include concept and task topic types in the same larger topic.
In general, we have one topic that's a landing page.
Below that topic in the left nav are individual topics. Each of these include a concept
and multiple related tasks, reference, and troubleshooting topics.
### Folder structure overview
The documentation is separated by top-level audience folders [`user`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/tree/master/doc/user),
[`administration`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/tree/master/doc/administration),
and [`development`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/tree/master/doc/development)
(contributing) folders.
Beyond that, we primarily follow the structure of the GitLab user interface or
API.
Our goal is to have a clear hierarchical structure with meaningful URLs like
`docs.gitlab.com/user/project/merge_requests/`. With this pattern, you can
immediately tell that you are navigating to user-related documentation about
Project features; specifically about Merge Requests. Our site's paths match
those of our repository, so the clear structure also makes documentation easier
to update.
Put files for a specific product area into the related folder:
| Directory | Contents |
|:----------------------|:------------------|
| `doc/user/` | Documentation for users. Anything that can be done in the GitLab user interface goes here, including usage of the `/admin` interface. |
| `doc/administration/` | Documentation that requires the user to have access to the server where GitLab is installed. Administrator settings in the GitLab user interface are under `doc/user/admin_area/`. |
| `doc/api/` | Documentation for the API. |
| `doc/development/` | Documentation related to the development of GitLab, whether contributing code or documentation. Related process and style guides should go here. |
| `doc/legal/` | Legal documents about contributing to GitLab. |
| `doc/install/` | Instructions for installing GitLab. |
| `doc/update/` | Instructions for updating GitLab. |
| `doc/topics/` | Indexes per topic (`doc/topics/topic_name/index.md`): all resources for that topic. |
### Work with directories and files
When working with directories and files:
1. When you create a new directory, always start with an `index.md` file.
Don't use another filename and do not create `README.md` files.
1. Do not use special characters and spaces, or capital letters in file
names, directory names, branch names, and anything that generates a path.
1. When creating or renaming a file or directory and it has more than one word
in its name, use underscores (`_`) instead of spaces or dashes. For example,
proper naming would be `import_project/import_from_github.md`. This applies
to both image files and Markdown files.
1. For image files, do not exceed 100KB.
1. Do not upload video files to the product repositories.
[Link or embed videos](#videos) instead.
1. There are four main directories: `user`, `administration`, `api`, and
`development`.
1. The `doc/user/` directory has five main subdirectories: `project/`, `group/`,
`profile/`, `dashboard/` and `admin_area/`.
- `doc/user/project/` should contain all project related documentation.
- `doc/user/group/` should contain all group related documentation.
- `doc/user/profile/` should contain all profile related documentation.
Every page you would navigate under `/profile` should have its own document,
for example, `account.md`, `applications.md`, or `emails.md`.
- `doc/user/dashboard/` should contain all dashboard related documentation.
- `doc/user/admin_area/` should contain all administrator-related
documentation describing what can be achieved by accessing the GitLab
administrator interface (not to be confused with `doc/administration` where
server access is required).
- Every category under `/admin/application_settings/` should have its
own document located at `doc/user/admin_area/settings/`. For example,
the **Visibility and Access Controls** category should have a document
located at `doc/user/admin_area/settings/visibility_and_access_controls.md`.
1. The `doc/topics/` directory holds topic-related technical content. Create
`doc/topics/topic_name/subtopic_name/index.md` when subtopics become necessary.
General user and administrator documentation should be placed accordingly.
1. The `/university/` directory is *deprecated* and the majority of its documentation
has been moved.
If you're unsure where to place a document or a content addition, this shouldn't
stop you from authoring and contributing. Use your best judgment, and then ask
the reviewer of your MR to confirm your decision. You can also ask a technical writer at
any stage in the process. The technical writing team reviews all
documentation changes, regardless, and can move content if there is a better
place for it.
### Avoid duplication
Do not include the same information in multiple places.
[Link to a single source of truth instead.](#link-instead-of-repeating-text)
### References across documents
- Give each folder an `index.md` page that introduces the topic, and both introduces
and links to the child pages, including to the index pages of
any next-level sub-paths.
- To ensure discoverability, ensure each new or renamed doc is linked from its
higher-level index page and other related pages.
- When making reference to other GitLab products and features, link to their
respective documentation, at least on first mention.
- When making reference to third-party products or technologies, link out to
their external sites, documentation, and resources.
### Structure in documents
- Include any and all applicable subsections as described on the
[structure and template](../structure.md) page.
- Structure content in alphabetical order in tables, lists, and so on, unless
there's a logical reason not to (for example, when mirroring the user
interface or an otherwise ordered sequence).
## Language
GitLab documentation should be clear and easy to understand.
......
......@@ -157,7 +157,7 @@ Ensure the following if skipping an initial Technical Writer review:
- Specific [user permissions](../../user/permissions.md) are documented.
- New documents are linked from higher-level indexes, for discoverability.
- The style guide is followed:
- For [directories and files](styleguide/index.md#work-with-directories-and-files).
- For [directories and files](site_architecture/folder_structure.md).
- For [images](styleguide/index.md#images).
Merge requests that change the location of documentation must always be reviewed by a Technical
......
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