tree: 67082b78bf161059079ee96cd4e6f386cf369ad1 [path history] [tgz]
  1. images/
  2. shared/
  3. topics/
  4. .gitignore
  5. build-doc.sh
  6. impala.ditamap
  7. impala_html.ditaval
  8. impala_keydefs.ditamap
  9. impala_pdf.ditaval
  10. impala_release_notes.ditamap
  11. Makefile
  12. README.md
docs/README.md

Generating HTML or a PDF of Apache Impala Documentation

Prerequisites

Make sure that you have a recent version of a Java JDK installed and that your JAVA_HOME environment variable is set. This procedure has been tested with JDK 1.8.0. See Setting JAVA_HOME at the end of these instructions.

Download Docs Source

  • Open a terminal window and run the following commands to get the Impala documentation source files from Git:

    git clone https://gitbox.apache.org/repos/asf/impala.git/docs
    cd <local_directory>
    git checkout master
    

    Where master is the branch where Impala documentation source files are uploaded.

Download DITA Open Toolkit

  • Download the DITA Open Toolkit version 2.3.3 from the DITA Open Toolkit web site:

    https://github.com/dita-ot/dita-ot/releases/download/2.3.3/dita-ot-2.3.3.zip

    Note: A DITA-OT 2.3.3 User Guide is included in the toolkit. Look for userguide.pdf in the doc directory of the toolkit after you extract it. For example, if you extract the toolkit package to the /Users/<username>/DITA-OT directory on Mac OS, you will find the userguide.pdf at the following location:

    /Users/<username>/DITA-OT/doc/userguide.pdf
    

Add dita Executable to Your PATH

  1. Identify the directory into which you extracted DITA-OT. For this exercise, we‘ll assume it’s /Users/<username>/DITA-OT
  2. Find your .bash_profile. On Mac OS X, it is probably /Users/<username>/.bash_profile.
  3. Edit your <path_to_bash_profile>/.bash_profile file and add the following lines to the end of the file.
    # Add dita to path
    export PATH="/Users/<username>/DITA-OT/bin:$PATH"
    
    Save the file.
  4. Open a new terminal, or run source <path_to_bash_profile>/.bash_profile.
  5. Verify dita is in your PATH. A command like which dita should print the location of the dita executable, like:
    $ which dita
    /Users/<username>/DITA-OT/bin/dita
    

Verify dita Executable Can Run

In a terminal, try dita --help. You should get brief usage, like:

Usage: dita -i <file> -f <name> [options]
   or: dita -install [<file>]
   or: dita -uninstall <id>
   or: dita -help
   or: dita -version
Arguments:
  -i, -input <file>      input file
  -f, -format <name>     output format (transformation type)
  -install [<file>]      install plug-in from a ZIP file or reload plugins
  -uninstall <id>        uninstall plug-in with the ID
  -h, -help              print this message
  -version               print version information and exit
Options:
  -o, -output <dir>      output directory
  -filter <file>         filter and flagging file
  -t, -temp <dir>        temporary directory
  -v, -verbose           verbose logging
  -d, -debug             print debugging information
  -l, logfile <file>     use given file for log
  -D<property>=<value>   use value for given property
  -propertyfile <name>   load all properties from file with -D
                         properties taking precedence

If you don't get this, or you get an error, see Setting JAVA_HOME and Troubleshooting at the end of these instructions.

Oneshot Docs Build

The easiest way to build the docs is to run make from the docs/ directory corresponding to your git clone. It takes about 1 minute. This works because the make uses the provided Makefile to call dita properly.

Docs will end up in docs/build (both HTML and PDF).

Details, Advanced Usage

  1. In the directory where you cloned the Impala documentation files, you will find the following important configuration files in the docs subdirectory. These files are used to convert the XML source you downloaded from the Apache site to PDF and HTML:

    • impala.ditamap: Tells the DITA Open Toolkit what topics to include in the Impala User/Administration Guide. This guide also includes the Impala SQL Reference.
    • impala_html.ditaval: Further defines what topics to include in the Impala HTML output.
    • impala_pdf.ditaval: Further defines what topics to include in the Impala PDF output.
  2. Run one of the following commands, depending on what you want to generate:

    • To generate HTML output of the Impala User and Administration Guide, which includes the Impala SQL Reference, run the following command:

      dita -input <path_to_impala.ditamap> -format html5 \
        -output <path_to_build_output_directory> \
        -filter <path_to_impala_html.ditaval>
      
    • To generate PDF output of the Impala User and Administration Guide, which includes the Impala SQL Reference, run the following command:

      dita -input <path_to_impala.ditamap> -format pdf \
        -output <path_to_build_output_directory> \
        -filter <path_to_impala_pdf.ditaval>
      

    Note: For a description of all command-line options, see the DITA Open Toolkit User Guide in the doc directory of your downloaded DITA Open Toolkit.

Setting JAVA_HOME

Set your JAVA_HOME environment variable to tell your computer where to find the Java executable file. For example, to set your JAVA_HOME environment on Mac OS X when you have the 1.8.0_101 version of the Java Development Kit (JDK) installed and you are using the Bash version 3.2 shell, perform the following steps:

  1. Find your .bash_profile. On Mac OS X, it is probably /Users/<username>/.bash_profile. Edit your <path_to_bash_profile>/.bash_profile file and add the following lines to the end of the file.

    # Set JAVA_HOME
    JAVA_HOME=/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_101.jdk/Contents/Home
    export JAVA_HOME
    

    Where jdk1.8.0_101.jdk is the version of JDK that you have installed. For example, if you have installed jdk1.8.0_102.jdk, you would use that value instead.

  2. Open a new terminal, or run source <path_to_bash_profile>/.bash_profile.

  3. Test to make sure you have set your JAVA_HOME correctly:

    • Open a terminal window and type: $JAVA_HOME/bin/java -version

    • Press return. If you see something like the following:

      java version "1.8.0_101"
      Java(TM) 2 Runtime Environment, Standard Edition (build 1.8.0_101-b06-284)
      Java HotSpot (TM) Client VM (build 1.8.0_101-133, mixed mode, sharing)
      

      Then you've successfully set your JAVA_HOME environment variable to the binary stored in /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_101.jdk/Contents/Home.

      Note: The exact version and build number on your system may differ. The point is you want a message like the above.

Troubleshooting

Ant

If you're trying to use DITA-OT to build docs and you get an exception like this

java.lang.NoSuchMethodError: org.apache.tools.ant.Main: method <init>()V not found
    at org.dita.dost.invoker.Main.<init>(Main.java:418)
    at sun.reflect.NativeConstructorAccessorImpl.newInstance0(Native Method)
    at sun.reflect.NativeConstructorAccessorImpl.newInstance(NativeConstructorAccessorImpl.java:57)
    at sun.reflect.DelegatingConstructorAccessorImpl.newInstance(DelegatingConstructorAccessorImpl.java:45)
    at java.lang.reflect.Constructor.newInstance(Constructor.java:526)
    at java.lang.Class.newInstance(Class.java:379)
    at org.apache.tools.ant.launch.Launcher.run(Launcher.java:279)
    at org.apache.tools.ant.launch.Launcher.main(Launcher.java:109)

... your CLASSPATH may be interfering with DITA-OT‘s ability to find the proper Ant. While you’re free to fix the CLASSPATH yourself, it may be easier just to run

unset CLASSPATH

and try again. This will use the libraries and Ant provided by the DITA-OT package.