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SingularityCE User Docs

This repository holds user-facing documentation for the SingularityCE container runtime.

This is a community project led by Sylabs, and contributions are always welcome! If you'd like to update or improve SingularityCE's documentation please follow the instructions below, and submit a PR on GitHub.

Setting up an environment to contribute

The Singularity user documentation is written in reStructured Text (RST) format and generated using Sphinx. The ReadTheDocs theme for Sphinx is used.

We use RST instead of markdown as it's better at handling large documents with many linked sections, and Sphinx makes it easy to produce online documentation as well as PDFs.

Sphinx is written in Python. To get setup to contribute:

pip3 install --user sphinx sphinx-rtd-theme rstcheck pygments m2r2

If your version of python 3 does not come with pip / pip3, you may need to install a python3-pippackage with apt or yum, or you can install pip following the instructions here.

You're all set! After this you will only need to use your favorite editor to work with the RST files.

How to edit & write RST

A Sphinx documentation project has some structure that it's good to know before you dive in and start editing or writing content.

Structure of the project

This project maintains the following structure:

  1. index.rst : contains the front page of the online documentation and the initial table of contents tree. Every documentation section is referenced by a tag next to its name. (e.g. Quick Start <quick_start>)
  2. All other .rstfiles are sections named to match reference tags described before. So, for the <quick_start> reference in index.rst you'll find a quick_start.rst file with the content for that section.
  3. The configuration used to build the final documentations from the .rst files is set in the conf.py file.

The conf.py file

This file sets the themes, extensions, variables and naming scheme for output created when building the documentation with Sphinx. Some important elements include:

Cheatsheet to get started with reStructured (RST) Text

RST is similar to Markdown, but has enough differences that you are likely to be caught out a few times until you are familiar with it. Let's look at some of the common things you need to do when writing or editing RST.

1. Create a section/subsection/subsubsection title

Section titles are defined by surrounding or underlining them with different characters. Each combination of overline/underline and character used represents a different level section. We follow the conventions used by the python documentation for headers:

##################
H1: document title
##################

*********
Sample H2
*********

Sample H3
=========

Sample H4
---------

Sample H5
^^^^^^^^^

Sample H6
"""""""""

2. Referencing sections

To reference a section in an RST file you need to first create the reference above the title you need to reference, and second to reference it where you need the link to the reference section. When you build HTML or PDF output with Sphinx it will create the links for you, so the reader can jump around the documentation easily.

Step 1: Create the reference

To create the reference on the section you need to link, you must specify a tag:

.. _build-docker:

-------------------------
Build from a Docker Image
-------------------------

This example will let you refer to the section titled "Build from a Docker Image" with the tag build-docker. Note that the tag here doesn't include the _ that you have to prefix it with when creating the reference.

Step 2: Reference it

To reference a section you need to use this syntax:

:ref:`read the section covering docker images <build-docker>`

:ref: tells Sphinx that this is a reference. In between the `you should provide text for the link, and then the tag you created above between < >.

Further Reading

These are some of the basics of RST. For a more complete introduction, see the Sphinx documentation

Building HTML documentation

To build the HTML documentation, make sure you are in the top level of the singularity-userdocs repository and run:

make html SKIPCLI=1

This will generate a folder called _build/html with the output. Open index.html to browse the documentation.

The SKIPCLI=1 option tells make not to generate the CLI reference, which is created automatically from the SingularityCE source code. You can generate the CLI documentation by running make html alone. This requires a Go build environment (see below).

Generating PDF files from RST

This is very similar to the previous step, you will need to run:

make latexpdf SKIPCLI=1

Output is written into _build/latex and the final PDF will be named singularity-userdocs.pdf

Generating EPUB from RST

Very similar to the previous command, you will just need to run:

make epub SKIPCLI=1

Output is written into _build/epub and the final EPUB will be named singularity-userdocs.epub

Generating CLI docs

The SingularityCE CLI docs are generated using the actual code from SingularityCE. To do this, we include SingularityCE as a git submodule, and whenever a Makefile target (like make html) is run, singularity itself is compiled and used to generate the CLI docs.

However, you might not want to compile singularity, either because you can't on your machine, or because you want to test out a quick change to the docs. If this is the case, you can skip the CLI doc generation using the SKIPCLI argument. For example, to rebuild the HTML docs without including the CLI docs, just run make html SKIPCLI=1.

If SingularityCE has been updated and you want to synchronize the CLI docs with the new version of SingularityCE, you'll have to update the submodule. To do this, just run:

git submodule update --remote --merge
git add vendor/src/github.com/sylabs/singularity
git commit

This will update the submodule to the latest version of the main branch.