Go to file
2019-11-23 10:10:54 -08:00
include removal of extra "then" 2019-11-23 10:10:54 -08:00
source Bar graph meters screenshot with the -18dBFS 1kHz sine and all available meters 2019-09-26 09:13:04 -07:00
.gitignore Add .bak files to .gitignore 2018-11-08 20:01:05 +00:00
build.py Moved a CSS property out of the building script 2019-08-29 14:02:14 +02:00
explode.py Fix to internal links heisenbug, added -d switch for Headwar. 2017-02-23 14:20:47 -06:00
implode.py Added chapter on track automation. 2017-02-21 14:59:29 -06:00
master-doc.txt Added a 'pdf-exclude' property to master-doc.txt, allowing a page not to be included in the PDF version of the manual (e.g. Lua Bindings) 2019-08-28 16:27:01 +02:00
onepage-template.html Added files for PDF generation 2019-07-30 16:17:43 +02:00
page-template.html Include images in the automated PDF 2019-07-31 14:18:07 +02:00
pdf-template.html Added metadata to the PDF 2019-08-02 11:06:35 +02:00
README.md Documented the 'pdf-exclude' keyword 2019-08-29 14:15:38 +02:00
STYLE_GUIDE NO-OP: whitespace 2018-02-18 14:06:12 -08:00
uri_to_fix.txt Removing a duplicate 2019-02-26 08:36:33 -08:00

The Ardour Manual

This is the project that generates the static ardour manual website available at manual.ardour.org. The site is built using python 3.

Get the code

git clone <repo-url> ardour-manual
cd ardour-manual

Structure of the content

There are 2 different types of content:

  • a master document which describes the overall structure of the manual
  • normal content, which is described in the master document

The Master Document

This is a text file (master-doc.txt) which describes the structure of the manual. It does this through headers which tell the build script where the content lives, what its relationship to the overall structure is, as well as a few other things.

All headers have a similar structure, and have to have at least the following minimal structure:

---
title: Some Wordy and Expressive Title
part: part
---

Keywords that go into the header are of the form:

  keyword: value

Here are the keywords you can put in, and a brief description of what they do:

Keyword Meaning
title Sets the title for the content that follows
menu_title Sets the title for the content that follows which will appear in the menu link sidebar. If this is not specified, it defaults to the value of the title keyword
part Sets the hierarchy for the content that follows. It must be one of the following (listed in order of lowering hierarchy): part, chapter, subchapter
link Sets the unbreakable link to the content that follows. Links in the content should be prefixed with a double at-sign (@@) to tell the build system that the link is an internal one
include Tells the build system that the content lives in an external file; these normally live in the include/ directory. Note that the filename should not be prefixed with include/
exclude Tells the implode and explode scripts that file referred to by the include keyword should be ignored. Note that the value of this keyword is ignored
pdf-exclude Does not include the content in the generated PDF, but links to its online contents. The value is also ignored.
style Sets an alternate CSS stylesheet; the name should match the one referred to (sans the .css suffix) in the source/css directory
uri Sets an absolute URI where this page will go in the hierachy of the created website. It does not change the document structure

Normal content

Manual content goes into the include/ directory (or in the Master Document itself); and consists of normal HTML, sans the usual headers that is normally seen in regular HTML web pages. Any other content, such as css files, images, files and fixed pages goes into the source/ directory.

Adding source/images/horse.png makes it available at the url /images/horse.png after publishing it; things work similarly for source/files/ and source/css/.

CSS

The manual uses Bootstrap for its global layout, and a few custom CSS files that contains classes used for keys, menus, tables, etc... so it is recommanded to have a look at it first, or at least see how other pages are made to keep the manual consistent in its appearance:

  • source/css/common.css contains shared classes between all media and is included everywhere
  • source/css/screen.css adds classes used for screen display (html)
  • source/css/pdf.css adds classes used for print (pdf)
  • source/css/luadocs.css adds classes used in the Lua script documentation

More Advanced Stuff

You probably don't want or need to do any of this, but here are some notes just in case you decide to anyway.

Run it locally

You may want the manual available on a machine that doesn't have constant internet access. You will need git, and python3 installed.

  1. Download code and build manual
git clone <repo-url> ardour-manual
cd ardour-manual
./build.py
  1. Install and configure a web server on your machine. Any web server should work, Apache, nginx, etc... The following steps are for nginx, using another server means following the same procedure for the server you decide to use.

  2. Install nginx

  3. Configure nginx server block in /etc/nginx/sites-available/default

server {
    listen 80;
    server_name localhost;

    root ...path_to_.../ardour-manual/website;
    index index.html;
}
  1. Restart nginx server

     service nginx restart
    
  2. The manual will now be available at http://localhost

Helper scripts: implode and explode

The implode and explode scripts exist in order to accomodate different working styles. implode takes all the files referenced by the include keywords in the headers in the Master Document and automagically puts them into the Master Document in their proper places. Note that any header that has an exclude keyword will remain in the include/ directory. explode does the inverse of implode; it takes all the content in the Master Document and blows it into individual files in the include/ directory.

Build options

The build.py script that builds the manual accepts the following options:

  • '-v', or '--verbose', to display the high-level structure of the manual
  • '-q', or '--quiet', to suppress all output (overrides -v)
  • '-d', or '--devmode', to add content to pages to help developers debug them (link, file name, URL)
  • '-n', or '--nopdf', to prevent the build script from generate a PDF from the content