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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!--
  Copyright (c) 2005 The Apache Software Foundation or its licensors, as applicable.

  Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
  you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
  You may obtain a copy of the License at

     http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

  Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
  distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
  WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
  See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
  limitations under the License.
 -->
<document url="howtobuildsite.xml"><properties>  
	<author email="mike_edwards@uk.ibm.com">Mike Edwards</author>  
	<title>Apache Tuscany - How To Build Site</title></properties><body> 
	 
	<section name="Tuscany Site Generation Overview">
		<p>The Tuscany website is built using the site plugin of Maven 2.0.  A general guide to
		the Maven site plugin can be found <a href="http://maven.apache.org/guides/mini/guide-site.html">here</a>.
		</p>
		<p>
		The website is held in the site subproject of Tuscany, with a set of source files in tuscany/src/site 
		directory.  The website project has its own POM file, held in the main site directory.
		The site is generated using the following command while in site directory.
		<pre>
	mvn site
		</pre>
		This will generate target/site directory.  When you make changes to files intended for the website,
		please check out the results on your local machine by opening site/target/site/index.htm. You should 
		be able to reach all the other pages from this location.
		</p>
		<p>
		The actual live website for Tuscany is at the URL 
		<a href="http://incubator.apache.org/tuscany/">http://incubator.apache.org/tuscany/</a>.  The files for the live
		website are held on the machine people.apache.org in the directory /www/incubator.apache.org/tuscany. 
		When you want to publish new or updated pages to the live website, use the command
		<pre>
	mvn site-deploy
		</pre>
		which transfers the site files from the site/target directory on your system to the people.apache.org system and
		the files go live within a few minutes of the transfer.  For site-deploy to work, you must have a userid and 
		password that are valid for the people.apache.org system and you must be a member of the apcvs group, since this
		is the group with write access to the /tuscany directory. To enable the mvn site-deploy command to work correctly,
		you need an entry like this in your maven settings.xml file:
		<pre>
&lt;servers&gt;
&lt;!-- server
| Specifies the authentication information to use when connecting to a particular server, identified by
| a unique name within the system referred to by the 'id' attribute below.
| 
| NOTE: You should either specify username/password OR privateKey/passphrase, since these pairings are 
|       used together.
|
-->
	
	&lt;server&gt;
		&lt;id&gt;website&lt;/id&gt;
		&lt;username&gt;yourid&lt;/username&gt;
		&lt;password&gt;yourpassword&lt;/password&gt;
	&lt;/server&gt;
	
&lt;/servers&gt;
		</pre>
		The settings.xml file can be found in your $MAVEN_HOME/conf directory.
		</p>
		
	</section>
	<section name="Location and Format of the Source Files">
		
		<p>The source files for the Tuscany site are held in the site/src/site directory.  In that
		directory there is a special file called site.xml which holds the basic layout for all the
		pages in the site.  In particular, site.xml contains the definitions for the left menu bar
		and for the overall title on each page. Only edit site.xml if you need to add a new top
		level page to the site.
		</p>
		<p>
			Most of the pages for the site are held in the site/src/xdoc directory.  The pages are generally in
		an XML format, although it is possible to define pages as HTML files.  XML files are 
		preferred, since Maven applies a standard layout and style sheet to these pages.  If you
		provide a page as an HTML file, it will appear exactly as you create it - Maven does not
		modify HTML files as it creates the site.
		</p>
		<p>
		The website landing page is defined by index.xml.  The other pages are linked from this
		page, either via the left sidebar or via explicit links in the body of the page.  The
		following section gives you some details on how to create your own page and link it into
		the site.
		</p>
		<p>
		Other files are held in the resources directory.  These files include things like images
		(eg. JPEG files) and documents (eg. PDF files).  These files can be referenced from the
		pages in the xdocs directory, without the need for any path - Maven copies the files in 
		the resources directory to the root directory of the website.
		</p>
		
	</section>
	<section name="Creating your own Pages">
		<p>
		You can get a good feel for the format of the pages in the Tuscany website by looking at
		some of the existing files in the xdoc directory.  bugs.xml is a good example of a simple
		page with a reference hyperlink.  documentation.xml is an example of a more complex page
		which has a table.  The format of the xml files uses a simple set of elements that
		approximate to the more common HTML tags.  To get a feel for the XML elements, let's use an example
		of creating a new page called foo.xml.
		</p>
		<p>
		First, create a file called foo.xml in the xdocs directory, similar to the following:

		<pre>
&lt;document url="foo.xml"&gt;
&lt;properties&gt;  
	&lt;author email="your_id@blah.com"&gt;Your Name&lt;/author&gt;
	&lt;title&gt;Apache Tuscany - Foo&lt;/title&gt;
&lt;/properties&gt;
&lt;body&gt;
	&lt;section name="Tuscany Foo"&gt;	
	&lt;p&gt;
	Welcome to the foo section.  
	Please review the &lt;a href="tuscany_foo.pdf"&gt;Tuscany FOO manual&lt;/a&gt;.
	You can run foo by typing in the command:
	&lt;pre&gt;
		foo bar
	&lt;/pre&gt;
	&lt;/p&gt; 

&lt;/section&gt;
&lt;/body&gt;
&lt;/document&gt;
		</pre>
		
		Note the header information with a general title in the properties section - this gets applied to the title line of
		the browser when the page is displayed.  There is a body section, which is the main content
		of the page.  Within the body, each section tag places a heading into the page.  Paragraphs
		are defined using the &lt;p&gt; tags. Hyperlink references can be created using the &lt;a&gt;
		element.  For descriptions of commands and similar text elements, you can use the &lt;pre&gt;
		element.
		</p>
		<p>
		References like "tuscany_foo.pdf" should be dropped into the site/resources directory.  If you want to structure the
		information in the resources area, you can create subdirectories and then use relative references in the hyperlinks
		which reference them, such as href="subdirname/tuscany_foo.pdf".
		</p>
		<p>If the foo page needs to be linked from the left bar, then a link to foo must be created in the
		site.xml file which is in the main src/site directory, with the following format:

		<pre>
...
&lt;menu name="Tuscany"&gt;
...
&lt;item name="Foo"  href="foo.html" /&gt;
&lt;/menu&gt;
...
		</pre>
		Note that the link here is to foo.html, not to foo.xml - foo.html is the name of the page
		in the final website format.
		</p>
		<section name="Preferred Data Formats">
			<p>
				When placing materials onto the web site, please use formats that are widely accepted and avoid
				proprietary formats.  So, xdoc format is the preferred style for source web pages since they get
				the "house style" look and feel of the Tuscany site. HTML files are also acceptable, but they will
				lack the naviagation features of the xdoc pages (particularly the left bar). If you need to publish
				longer material, you can use HTML or PDF format.  PDF is particularly good for material that users
				may need to download and keep locally for reference.  PDF is also good if you anticipate that the
				users will need to print the material.
			</p>
			<p>Please avoid the use of proprietary format such as Word documents.  Not everyone has Microsoft office
			installed and may find such formats unreadable.
			</p>
		</section>
	</section>  

</body>
</document>