Skip to content

tomasliumparas/s2i-mkdocs

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

17 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Build Status

Mkdocs S2I container image

This container image includes Node-red for OpenShift and general usage.

Note: while the examples in this README are calling podman, you can replace any such calls by docker with the same arguments

Description

MkDocs is a fast, simple and downright gorgeous static site generator that's geared towards building project documentation. Documentation source files are written in Markdown, and configured with a single YAML configuration file. It provides a browser-based editor that makes it easy to wire together flows using the wide range of nodes in the palette that can be deployed to its runtime in a single-click.

Usage

The structure of docs-example can look like this:

./mkdocs.yml

A file containing Mkdocs configuration

./requirements.txt

Additional python packages - Mkdocs plugins

Building on OpenShift

If you want to create a new container layered image, you can use the Source build feature of Openshift. To create a new Node-red application in Openshift, while using data available in test-app on the host, execute the following command:

git clone https://github.com/tomasliumparas/s2i-mkdocs.git
cd s2i-mkdocs
oc new-app getais/s2i-httpd-24-mkdocs-centos7:latest~. --context-dir docs-example --name mkdocs-example

Or without locally cloning the repository:

oc new-app getais/s2i-httpd-24-mkdocs-centos7:latest~https://github.com/tomasliumparas/s2i-mkdocs.git --context-dir docs-example --name mkdocs-example

Creating OpenShift route:

oc expose

Building using standalone S2i

The same application can also be built using the standalone S2I application on systems that have it available

$ s2i build docs-example/ getais/s2i-httpd-24-mkdocs-centos7 mkdocs-example

Environment variables and volumes

The Apache HTTP Server container image supports the following configuration variables:

TBD

Default user

By default, Node-red container runs as UID 1001. That means the volume mounted directories for the files (if mounted using -v option) need to be prepared properly, so the UID 1001 can read them.

About

No description or website provided.

Topics

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

 
 
 

Contributors