terraform/website
Martin Atkins 74761b2f8b getmodules: Use go-getter v1.5.10 and return to upstream GitGetter
There was an unintended regression in go-getter v1.5.9's GitGetter which
caused us to temporarily fork that particular getter into Terraform to
expedite a fix. However, upstream v1.5.10 now includes a
functionally-equivalent fix and so we can heal that fork by upgrading.

We'd also neglected to update the Module Sources docs when upgrading to
go-getter v1.5.9 originally and so we were missing documentation about the
new "depth" argument to enable shadow cloning, which I've added
retroactively here along with documenting its restriction of only
supporting named refs.

This new go-getter release also introduces a new credentials-passing
method for the Google Cloud Storage getter, and so we must incorporate
that into the Terraform-level documentation about module sources.
2022-01-03 11:44:16 -08:00
..
docs getmodules: Use go-getter v1.5.10 and return to upstream GitGetter 2022-01-03 11:44:16 -08:00
guides migrate docs to mdx 2021-12-14 18:41:17 -08:00
intro migrate docs to mdx 2021-12-14 18:41:17 -08:00
layouts website: Correct navbar link to the "Refactoring" page 2021-12-08 14:08:42 -08:00
README.md update make website workflow 2021-12-16 16:10:17 -08:00

README.md

Terraform Documentation

This directory contains the portions of the Terraform website that pertain to the core functionality, excluding providers and the overall configuration.

The files in this directory are intended to be used in conjunction with the terraform-website repository, which brings all of the different documentation sources together and contains the scripts for testing and building the site as a whole.

Modifying Sidebar Navigation

Updates to the sidebar navigation of Terraform docs need to be made in the terraform-website repository (preferrably in a PR also updating the submodule commit). You can read more about how to make modifications to the navigation in the README for terraform-website.

Previewing Changes

You should preview all of your changes locally before creating a pull request. The build includes content from this repository and the terraform-website repository, allowing you to preview the entire Terraform documentation site.

Set Up Local Environment

  1. Install Docker.
  2. Restart your terminal or command line session.

Launch Site Locally

  1. Navigate into your local terraform top-level directory and run make website.
  2. Open http://localhost:3000 in your web browser. While the preview is running, you can edit pages and Next.js will automatically rebuild them.
  3. When you're done with the preview, press ctrl-C in your terminal to stop the server.

Deploying Changes

Merge the PR to main. The changes will appear in the next major Terraform release.

If you need your changes to be deployed sooner, cherry-pick them to:

  • the current release branch (e.g. v1.1) and push. They will be deployed in the next minor version release (once every two weeks).
  • the stable-website branch and push. They will be included in the next site deploy (see below). Note that the release process resets stable-website to match the release tag, removing any additional commits. So, we recommend always cherry-picking to the version branch first and then to stable-website when needed.

Once your PR to stable-website is merged, open a PR bumping the submodule commit in terraform-website.

Deployment

New commits in hashicorp/terraform and hashicorp/terraform-cdk don't automatically deploy the site. To use the latest upstream content, you'll need to open a PR bumping the submodule commit. If your changes aren't being deployed, it's very likely that you need to open a PR to update the submodule commit.