1# Writing NixOS Documentation {#sec-writing-documentation} 2 3As NixOS grows, so too does the need for a catalogue and explanation of 4its extensive functionality. Collecting pertinent information from 5disparate sources and presenting it in an accessible style would be a 6worthy contribution to the project. 7 8## Building the Manual {#sec-writing-docs-building-the-manual} 9 10The DocBook sources of the [](#book-nixos-manual) are in the 11[`nixos/doc/manual`](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/tree/master/nixos/doc/manual) 12subdirectory of the Nixpkgs repository. 13 14You can quickly validate your edits with `make`: 15 16```ShellSession 17$ cd /path/to/nixpkgs/nixos/doc/manual 18$ nix-shell 19nix-shell$ make 20``` 21 22Once you are done making modifications to the manual, it\'s important to 23build it before committing. You can do that as follows: 24 25```ShellSession 26nix-build nixos/release.nix -A manual.x86_64-linux 27``` 28 29When this command successfully finishes, it will tell you where the 30manual got generated. The HTML will be accessible through the `result` 31symlink at `./result/share/doc/nixos/index.html`. 32 33## Editing DocBook XML {#sec-writing-docs-editing-docbook-xml} 34 35For general information on how to write in DocBook, see [DocBook 5: The 36Definitive Guide](http://www.docbook.org/tdg5/en/html/docbook.html). 37 38Emacs nXML Mode is very helpful for editing DocBook XML because it 39validates the document as you write, and precisely locates errors. To 40use it, see [](#sec-emacs-docbook-xml). 41 42[Pandoc](http://pandoc.org) can generate DocBook XML from a multitude of 43formats, which makes a good starting point. Here is an example of Pandoc 44invocation to convert GitHub-Flavoured MarkDown to DocBook 5 XML: 45 46```ShellSession 47pandoc -f markdown_github -t docbook5 docs.md -o my-section.md 48``` 49 50Pandoc can also quickly convert a single `section.xml` to HTML, which is 51helpful when drafting. 52 53Sometimes writing valid DocBook is simply too difficult. In this case, 54submit your documentation updates in a [GitHub 55Issue](https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/new) and someone will 56handle the conversion to XML for you. 57 58## Creating a Topic {#sec-writing-docs-creating-a-topic} 59 60You can use an existing topic as a basis for the new topic or create a 61topic from scratch. 62 63Keep the following guidelines in mind when you create and add a topic: 64 65- The NixOS [`book`](http://www.docbook.org/tdg5/en/html/book.html) 66 element is in `nixos/doc/manual/manual.xml`. It includes several 67 [`parts`](http://www.docbook.org/tdg5/en/html/book.html) which are in 68 subdirectories. 69 70- Store the topic file in the same directory as the `part` to which it 71 belongs. If your topic is about configuring a NixOS module, then the 72 XML file can be stored alongside the module definition `nix` file. 73 74- If you include multiple words in the file name, separate the words 75 with a dash. For example: `ipv6-config.xml`. 76 77- Make sure that the `xml:id` value is unique. You can use abbreviations 78 if the ID is too long. For example: `nixos-config`. 79 80- Determine whether your topic is a chapter or a section. If you are 81 unsure, open an existing topic file and check whether the main 82 element is chapter or section. 83 84## Adding a Topic to the Book {#sec-writing-docs-adding-a-topic} 85 86Open the parent XML file and add an `xi:include` element to the list of 87chapters with the file name of the topic that you created. If you 88created a `section`, you add the file to the `chapter` file. If you created 89a `chapter`, you add the file to the `part` file. 90 91If the topic is about configuring a NixOS module, it can be 92automatically included in the manual by using the `meta.doc` attribute. 93See [](#sec-meta-attributes) for an explanation.