Docsy is a Hugo theme for technical documentation sites, providing easy site navigation, structure, and more. This project was begun as a clone of the Docsy Example Project, which uses the Docsy theme and provides a skeleton documentation structure for you to use. Refer to that project for more information.
In this project, the Docsy theme is included as a Git submodule:
$ git submodule
...<hash>... themes/docsy (remotes/origin/HEAD)
You can find detailed theme instructions in the Docsy user guide.
This Docsy Example Project is hosted on Netlify at example.docsy.dev. You can view deploy logs from the deploy section of the project's Netlify dashboard, or this alternate dashboard.
The following procedure came from the Docsy Example Project. I edited it for this project, but some references to the Docsy Example Project might have slipped through. -TE
A simple way to get started was to use the Docsy Example Project as a template, which gave me a site project that was set up and ready to use. To do so, I used the following procedure from the Docsy Example Project in my clone of it:
-
Click Use this template.
-
Select a name for your new project and click Create repository from template.
-
Make your own local working copy of your new repo using git clone, replacing https://github.com/my/example.git with this repo’s web URL:
git clone --recurse-submodules --depth 1 https://github.com/Mashweb/doc.git
You can now edit your own versions of the site’s source files.
If you want to do SCSS edits and want to publish these, you need to install PostCSS
npm install
Those are the exact words copied from the Docsy Example Project, except that I gave the actual URL for this project, https://github.com/Mashweb/doc.git .
Building and running this site locally requires a recent extended
version of Hugo.
You can find out more about how to install Hugo for your environment in our
Getting started guide.
Once you've made your working copy of the site repo, from the repo root folder, run:
hugo server
You can run docsy-example inside a Docker
container, the container runs with a volume bound to the docsy-example
folder. This approach doesn't require you to install any dependencies other
than Docker Desktop on
Windows and Mac, and Docker Compose
on Linux.
-
Build the docker image
docker-compose build
-
Run the built image
docker-compose up
NOTE: You can run both commands at once with
docker-compose up --build
. -
Verify that the service is working.
Open your web browser and type
http://localhost:1313
in your navigation bar, This opens a local instance of the docsy-example homepage. You can now make changes to the docsy example and those changes will immediately show up in your browser after you save.
To stop Docker Compose, on your terminal window, press Ctrl + C.
To remove the produced images run:
docker-compose rm
For more information see the Docker Compose documentation.
As you run the website locally, you may run into the following error:
➜ hugo server
INFO 2021/01/21 21:07:55 Using config file:
Building sites … INFO 2021/01/21 21:07:55 syncing static files to /
Built in 288 ms
Error: Error building site: TOCSS: failed to transform "scss/main.scss" (text/x-scss): resource "scss/scss/main.scss_9fadf33d895a46083cdd64396b57ef68" not found in file cache
This error occurs if you have not installed the extended version of Hugo. See our user guide for instructions on how to install Hugo.