diff --git a/docs/README.md b/docs/README.md index 3b471555cd..8e49af7aa2 100755 --- a/docs/README.md +++ b/docs/README.md @@ -3,11 +3,10 @@ The source for Docker documentation is here under `sources/` and uses extended Markdown, as implemented by [MkDocs](http://mkdocs.org). -The HTML files are built and hosted on `https://docs.docker.com`, and update -automatically after each change to the master or release branch of [Docker on -GitHub](https://github.com/docker/docker) thanks to post-commit hooks. The -`docs` branch maps to the "latest" documentation and the `master` (unreleased -development) branch maps to the "master" documentation. +The HTML files are built and hosted on +[http://docs.docker.com](http://docs.docker.com), and update automatically +after each change to the `docs` branch of [Docker on +GitHub](https://github.com/docker/docker) thanks to post-commit hooks. ## Contributing @@ -61,25 +60,21 @@ work!](../CONTRIBUTING.md#sign-your-work) ## Branches +| Branch | Description | URL (published via commit-hook) | +|----------|--------------------------------|------------------------------------------------------------------------------| +| `docs` | Official release documentation | [http://docs.docker.com](http://docs.docker.com) | +| `master` | Unreleased development work | [http://docs.master.dockerproject.com](http://docs.master.dockerproject.com) | + **There are two branches related to editing docs**: `master` and `docs`. You -should always edit the documentation on a local branch of the `master` -branch, and send a PR against `master`. +should always edit the documentation on a local branch of the `master` branch, +and send a PR against `master`. That way your fixes will automatically get +included in later releases, and docs maintainers can easily cherry-pick your +changes into the `docs` release branch. In the rare case where your change is +not forward-compatible, you may need to base your changes on the `docs` branch. -That way your fixes will automatically get included in later releases, and docs -maintainers can easily cherry-pick your changes into the `docs` release branch. -In the rare case where your change is not forward-compatible, you may need to -base your changes on the `docs` branch. - -Also, now that we have a `docs` branch, we can keep the -[http://docs.docker.com](http://docs.docker.com) docs up to date with any bugs -found between Docker code releases. - -> **Warning**: When *reading* the docs, the -> [http://docs-stage.docker.com](http://docs-stage.docker.com) documentation may -> include features not yet part of any official Docker release. The `beta-docs` -> site should be used only for understanding bleeding-edge development and -> `docs.docker.com` (which points to the `docs` branch`) should be used for the -> latest official release. +Also, since there is a separate `docs` branch, we can keep +[http://docs.docker.com](http://docs.docker.com) up to date with any bugs found +between Docker code releases. ## Publishing Documentation