* Simplified community contributions section Simplified to 8th grade reading level from 10th+ and to 314 words from 349 words * Update community.md All edits are recorded by line: 197 added “,” after “change” 198 added “,” after “Also’; added “,” after “Usually” 199 added “,” after “needs”; added “a” before “changes” 200 added “,” after “Next” 206 replaced “Merges for minor documentation updates or bug fixes are usually done by the Fleet team.” with “The Fleet team usually does Merges for minor documentation updates or bug fixes” * Revised simplified community contributions section Added Mike and Desmi's changes * Update community.md All edits are recorded by line: 206 replaced “The Fleet team usually does Merges for minor documentation updates or bug fixes “ with Everyone can contribute bug fixes and improvements to the documentation, whether or not they work for Fleet. Co-authored-by: Desmi-Dizney <99777687+Desmi-Dizney@users.noreply.github.com>
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Community
As an open-core company, Fleet endeavors to build a community of engaged users, customers, and contributors.
Communities
Fleet's users and broader audience are spread across many online platforms. Here are the most active communities where Fleet's developer relations and social media team members participate at least once every weekday:
- Osquery Slack (
#fleet
channel) - MacAdmins Slack (
#fleet
channel) - osquery discussions on LinkedIn
- osquery discussions on Twitter
- reddit.com/r/sysadmins
- reddit.com/r/SysAdminBlogs
- r/sysadmin Discord
Fleet docs
Markdown
Fleet's documentation and handbook are written in Markdown. Using Markdown lets us keep our documentation consistently formatted and viewable directly from the Fleet GitHub repo. The Markdown files in the /docs
and /handbook
folders are converted to HTML for the Fleet website.
When making changes to the Fleet docs or handbook, there are a few differences in how the Markdown will render on GitHub and the Fleet website.
Linebreaks and newlines
Any time you need to add a line break in Markdown, you should add a new line. It is vital to make sure paragraphs are separated by new lines otherwise they will render as the same HTML element.
For example, if you were adding this section to the docs:
line one
line two
The Markdown would render on the Fleet Website as:
line one line two
To ensure formatting is consistent across GitHub and the Fleet website, you'll need to add a new line anywhere you want a line break. For example, if we separate the lines with a new line:
line one
line two
The Markdown will render correctly as:
line one
line two
Ordered lists
Content nested within an ordered list needs to be indented. If the list is not formatted correctly, the number will reset on each list item.
For example, this list:
1. Item one
Paragraph about item one
2. Item two
On the Fleet website, this ordered list would be rendered as:
- Item one
Paragraph about item one
- Item two
To ensure that ordered lists increment on the Fleet website, you can indent the content nested within the list. For example, the same ordered list with indentation:
1. Item one
Paragraph about item one
2. Item two
This ordered list will render correctly as:
-
Item one
Paragraph about item one
-
Item two
Docs style guide
Headings
Headings help readers quickly scan content to find what they need. Organize page content using clear headings specific to the topic they describe.
Keep headings brief, organized, and in a logical order:
- H1: Page title
- H2: Main headings
- H3: Subheadings
- H4: Sub-subheadings (headings nested under subheadings)
Try to stay within 3 or 4 heading levels. Complicated documents may use more, but pages with a simpler structure are easier to read.
Adding a link to the Fleet docs
You can link documentation pages to each other using relative paths. For example, in docs/Using-Fleet/Fleet-UI.md
, you can link to docs/Using-Fleet/Permissions.md
by writing [permissions](./Permissions.md)
. This will automatically transformed into the appropriate URL for fleetdm.com/docs
.
However, the fleetdm.com/docs
compilation process does not account for relative links to directories outside of /docs
.
This is why it’s essential to follow the file path exactly when adding a link to Fleet docs.
In the Fleet documentation, when directly linking to a specific section, always format the spaces within a section name to use a hyphen "-" instead of an underscore "_". For example, when linking to the osquery_result_log_plugin
section of the configuration reference docs, use a relative link like the following: ./Configuration.md#osquery-result-log-plugin
.
Linking to a location on GitHub
When adding a link to a location on GitHub outside of /docs
, be sure to use the canonical form of the URL.
To do this, navigate to the file's location on GitHub, and press "y" to transform the URL into its canonical form.
How to fix a broken link
For instances in which a broken link is discovered on fleetdm.com, always check if the link is a relative link to a directory outside of /docs
.
An example of a link that lives outside of /docs
is:
../../tools/app/prometheus
If the link lives outside /docs
, head to the file's location on GitHub (in this case, https://github.com/fleetdm/fleet/blob/main/tools/app/prometheus.yml)), and press "y" to transform the URL into its canonical form (https://github.com/fleetdm/fleet/blob/194ad5963b0d55bdf976aa93f3de6cabd590c97a/tools/app/prometheus.yml). Replace the relative link with this link in the markdown file.
Note that the instructions above also apply to adding links in the Fleet handbook.
Ordering a page in the Fleet docs
The order we display documentation pages on fleetdm.com is determined by pageOrderInSection
meta tags. These pages are sorted in their respective section by the pageOrderInSection
value in ascending order. Every markdown file (except readme and faq pages) in the docs/
folder must have a meta tag with a positive 'pageOrderInSection' value.
We leave large gaps between values to make future changes easier. For example, the first page in the "Using Fleet" section of the docs has a pageOrderInSection
value of 100, and the next page has a value of 200. The significant difference between values allows us to add, remove and reorder pages without the need for changing the value of multiple pages at a time.
When adding or reordering a page, try to leave as much room between values as possible. If you were adding a new page that would go between the two pages from the example above, you would add <meta name="pageOrderInSection" value="150">
to the page.
Adding an image to the Fleet docs
Try to keep images in the docs at a minimum. Images can be a quick way to help users understand a concept or direct them towards a specific user interface(UI) element. Still, too many can make the documentation feel cluttered and more difficult to maintain.
When adding images to the Fleet documentation, follow these guidelines:
- Keep the images as simple as possible to maintain. Screenshots can get out of date quickly as UIs change.
- Exclude unnecessary images. An image should be used to help emphasize information in the docs, not replace it.
- Minimize images per doc page. More than one or two per page can get overwhelming, for doc maintainers and users.
- The goal is for the docs to look good on every form factor, from 320px window width all the way up to infinity. Full window screenshots and images with too much padding on the sides will be less than the width of the user's screen. When adding a large image, make sure it is easily readable at all widths.
Images can be added to the docs using the Markdown image link format, e.g. ![Schedule Query Sidebar](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/fleetdm/fleet/main/docs/images/schedule-query-modal.png)
The images used in the docs live in docs/images/
. Note that you must provide the URL of the image in the Fleet Github repo for it to display properly on both Github and the Fleet website.
Note that the instructions above also apply to adding images in the Fleet handbook.
Adding a mermaid diagram to the Fleet Docs
The Fleet Docs support diagrams that are written in mermaid.js syntax. Take a look at the Mermaid docs to learn about the syntax language and what types of diagrams you can display.
To add a mermaid diagram to the docs, you need to add a code block and specify that it is written in the mermaid language by adding mermaid
to the opening backticks (i.e., ```mermaid
).
For example, the following code block is a mermaid diagram that has not been specified as a mermaid code block:
graph TD;
A-->D
B-->D
C-->D
D-->E
Once we specify the mermaid
as the language in the code block, it will render as a mermaid diagram on fleetdm.com and GitHub.
graph TD;
A-->D
B-->D
C-->D
D-->E
If the mermaid syntax is incorrect, the diagram will be replaced with an image displaying an error, as shown in the following example where the code block was written with intentional syntax errors:
graph TD;
A--D
Community contributions (pull requests)
When community members contribute changes, Fleet’s top priority is to help them feel engaged. We acknowledge contributions as soon as possible, within 1 business day. We also drive to a resolution (close/merge) as soon as possible, though this may take longer than 1 business day.
Process
- Decide if the change is acceptable (see below). If this will take time, acknowledge the contribution and let the user know that the team will respond. If you choose not to approve a change, first thank the contributor for their interest. Next, encourage them to open an issue or share their ideas before writing more code. Discussions can occur in the #fleet channel of osquery's Slack.
- Help the contributor make the content suitable for merging. Ensure appropriate manual and automated testing occurred. Also, confirm that changes to files and documentation are updated. Usually, this is best done with code review and coaching the user. Sometimes Fleet may complete a PR by improving testing and code review.
- After reviewing and addressing all the changes a PR needs, a Fleet team member may merge. Before merging, please use your best judgment. Double-check that CI is passing, documentation is updated, and a changes file is created.
- Once a PR is approved and merged, thank and congratulate the contributor. Next, share it with the team in the #help-promote channel of Fleet's Slack so they can promote it on social media. Recognized contributors often become project champions.
Please refer to our PRs from the community guide for more detailed information.
What is acceptable?
Everyone can contribute bug fixes and improvements to the documentation, whether or not they work for Fleet. Working Standard Query Library(SQL) additions or fixes are acceptable with correct attribution. Please use your best judgment.
Product DRIs should approve extensive changes and new features. Ask in the #g-product channel in Fleet's Slack for more information.
Fleet swag
We want to recognize and congratulate community members for their contributions to Fleet. Nominating a contributor for Fleet swag is a great way to show our appreciation.
How to order swag
-
Reach out to the contributor to thank them for their contribution and ask if they would like any swag.
-
Fill out our swag request sheet.
-
Once approved, place the order through our Printful account (credentials in 1Password).
-
If available through the ordering process, add a thank you note for their contribution and "Feel free to tag us on Twitter."
Slack channels
Please see Digital experience > Slack channels.