commit | 276b79c555f8fa88c4f96f29dd89d34cc3dc030a | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Brian Demers <bdemers@apache.org> | Tue Oct 18 21:51:14 2016 -0400 |
committer | Brian Demers <bdemers@apache.org> | Wed Oct 19 09:52:28 2016 -0400 |
tree | f9e0331f4772e7e6a86ca01e21b0d9d54766641b | |
parent | ddea166c68d446f6e2dc948f028623379d06b4e6 [diff] |
Remove boot strap specifics and keep rendering the same The info, tip, danger, and warning panels are all split out now so changing the styling should be easier. As a bonus all of the missing confluence gif are fixed as well.
The Apache Shiro website is a static content website accessible at http://shiro.apache.org
Site content is authored as Markdown and HTML files. These files are scanned by a tool that applies a page template to each file's contents as necessary, and the rendered static .html files are output to a publish
directory.
Publishing site changes is as simple as committing any changes in the publish
directory to version control. ASF infrastructure will see the commit and automatically push the changes to the ASF's production webservers.
The tool used to generate the static content is SCMS. Once scms is installed and in your $PATH
, generating and publishing the site on the command line is easy.
The following example assumes you have SVN commit permissions to the publish
directory, typically because your are an Apache Shiro project committer:
cd site # This next command will take a few seconds, be patient :) scms trunk publish # Open up the local publish/index.html file in your web browser. Ensure the changes reflect what you want. # # This next commands will publish changes to live ASF web servers. Be confident the changes are what you want: svn add . svn commit -m "my change description"