Em Tue, 23 Apr 2019 09:21:00 -0400 Mike Snitzer <snitzer@xxxxxxxxxx> escreveu: > On Tue, Apr 23 2019 at 9:01am -0400, > Peter Zijlstra <peterz@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On Tue, Apr 23, 2019 at 08:55:19AM -0400, Mike Snitzer wrote: > > > On Tue, Apr 23 2019 at 4:31am -0400, > > > Peter Zijlstra <peterz@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > > On Mon, Apr 22, 2019 at 10:27:45AM -0300, Mauro Carvalho Chehab wrote: > > > > > > > > > .../{atomic_bitops.txt => atomic_bitops.rst} | 2 + > > > > > > > > What's happend to atomic_t.txt, also NAK, I still occationally touch > > > > these files. > > > > > > Seems Mauro's point is in the future we need to touch these .rst files > > > in terms of ReST compatible changes. > > > > > > I'm dreading DM documentation changes in the future.. despite Mauro and > > > Jon Corbet informing me that ReST is simple, etc. ReST is simple[1], and neither Jon or me wants to burden developers to use complex documents all over the Kernel tree. ReST is just a way to make the documents with similar visual. The main advantage of ReST is that documents can be better organized, as they will be inside some index.rst file. [1] Ok, as any document, you could write an easy or hard to read stuff. The way we're using on most places is to be just a coding style with benefits. I wrote a quick 101 guide to ReST at the end, with all you probably need to know about it. So, for example, in the specific case of atomic_bitops, all it takes for it to be parsed by Sphinx is to rename it to .rst. With that, it can be added into an index.rst file, like at Documentation/driver-api/index.rst. The document, as is, will be displayed like this: https://www.infradead.org/~mchehab/rst_conversion/driver-api/atomic_bitops.html?highlight=atomic_t And the original text file can also be seen from the output data: https://www.infradead.org/~mchehab/rst_conversion/_sources/driver-api/atomic_bitops.rst.txt > > > > Well, it _can_ be simple, I've seen examples of rst that were not far > > from generated HTML contents. And I must give Jon credit for not > > accepting that atrocious crap. > > > > But yes, I have 0 motivation to learn or abide by rst. It simply doesn't > > give me anything in return. There is no upside, only worse text files :/ > > Right, but these changes aren't meant for our benefit. They are for > users who get cleaner web accessible Linux kernel docs. Seems the > decision has been made that the users' benefit, and broader > modernization of Linux docs, outweighs the inconvenience for engineers > who maintain the content of said documentation. > This kind of thing happens a lot these days: pile on engineers, they can > take it :/ Yes, that's the main goal: ensure that more people will see the documents and write less crappy code. So, overall, reducing the time we spent with reviews of bad code. ---- ================================= My 101 ReST quick reference guide ================================= Basically, a "quick" ReST guide for those that don't want to learn it and like to have an easy to read text document would be 1) to format documents like: ========= Doc Title ========= foo chapter =========== bar section ----------- foobar sub-section ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ foobarzeta sub-sub-section .......................... (the actual character used to mark the titles can be different, provided that you use the same character for the same title level - the above is just the way *I* use, as it makes easier for me to remember the title level). 2) remember that ReST considers new lines with same indentation as belonging to the same paragraph. So, foo bar is identical to: foo bar while foo bar will make "foo" bold, and write bar on the next line. So, if you want to have them on two separate lines on its output, it should be either write it as: foo bar or you could use a list: - foo - bar Btw, *a lot* of Kernel documents already have the above format. 3) literal values should be either inside ``foo``, `foo` or on an indented line after a ::, like: example:: # some_command_to_be_typed If you follow those three simple rules, your document will be properly parsed. The above covers 90% of what we normally use. Tables are also easy to write there, as it recognizes two ways to write ascii tables, with are already popular ways to write them. So, those are valid tables: Without a title: === =============== foo foo description bar bar description === =============== +-------+-----------------+ | foo | foo description | +-------+-----------------+ | bar | bar description | +-------+-----------------+ (both will produce exactly the same output) With a title: ===== =============== field description ===== =============== foo foo description bar bar description === =============== +-------+-----------------+ | field | description | +=======+=================+ | foo | foo description | +-------+-----------------+ | bar | bar description | +-------+-----------------+ (both will produce exactly the same output) This is not too different on what we usually do on documents - except that some documents sometimes use UTF8, or a different character set to mark the table lines. So the "conversion" is simply to follow one of the above styles. Thanks, Mauro -- dm-devel mailing list dm-devel@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/dm-devel