/*!
@page inside_doxygen Documenting SimGrid
-\tableofcontents
+@tableofcontents
-We use doxygen for our documentation. This tool is sometimes anoying
-but that's the best we've found so far. Remember, we all bitch about
-doxygen, but at the end of the day, it kinda delivers what we need. So
-stop bitching about the doc or the tools, and start improving the
-documentation text itself.
+We use doxygen for our documentation. It's annoying but that's the
+best we've found so far. Stop bitching about the doc or the tools, and
+start improving the documentation text itself.
Good documentation is rare and there is not much project of which we
can get inspiration. The best exception I know is TikZ and
latex-beamer. I'd be so happy if SimGrid documentation could follow
-the organisation (and reach half the quality) of the TikZ one. But
+the organization (and reach half the quality) of the TikZ one. But
anyway. As they say: Documentation is like sex; when it's not good
it's still better than nothing and when it's good it's very very good.
-\section inside_doxygen_module Adding a new module to the reference guide
+@section inside_doxygen_module Adding a new module to the reference guide
If you add a new file to the project, you want to document it. It's
more urgent if it's user-visible, but it should be done in any case if
possible.
-\subsection inside_doxygen_module_create Declaring the module to doxygen
+@subsection inside_doxygen_module_create Declaring the module to doxygen
First declare your sub-module in the corresponding
-(project)/doc/doxygen/module-(englobingmodule).doc Two edits are
+(project)/doc/doxygen/module-(enclosing module).doc Two edits are
needed in this file:
-@li Most of the englobing modules (xbt, msg, sd, etc) have a manually
+@li Most of the enclosing modules (xbt, msg, sd, etc) have a manually
maintained table of contents as content of the module main page,
at the top of the corresponding file. You want to add a reference to
- your submodule there. For that, simply add something like the
+ your sub-module there. For that, simply add something like the
following. The dash (-) will help building item lists. The ref
command requests for a link to your module, that is identified
- with the word after that (here, I used xbt_cunit as a submodule
+ with the word after that (here, I used xbt_cunit as a sub-module
identifier.
@verbatim
- @ref XBT_cunit
@endverbatim
@li Create your module below in the file as follows. the first world
-after the defgroup keyword must be the submodule identifier you used
+after the defgroup keyword must be the sub-module identifier you used
above.
@verbatim
/** @defgroup XBT_cunit Unit testing support */
documentation. In particular, the order of the defgroups is not
inocuitous at all.
-\subsection inside_doxygen_module_populate Adding symbols to your module
+@subsection inside_doxygen_module_populate Adding symbols to your module
Once your group is created and referenced from the group containing
it, you must populate it. For that, edit the corresponding header file
Any informative stuff is welcomed in the module introduction, on top.
This includes examples that the users can copy/paste to fit their
needs. If your module is too large to be nicely documented on one
-unique page, you may want to split its documentation in submodules.
+unique page, you may want to split its documentation in sub-modules.
See dynar.h for an example of how to do so.
Make sure to only include the public declarations of your module. For
should not see. In this case, do not put the symbols you want to hide
between the @ { and @ } markers.
-\subsection inside_doxygen_module_document Documenting the symbols of your module
+@subsection inside_doxygen_module_document Documenting the symbols of your module
Finally, you naturally need to actually write the documentation of
each public symbol belonging to your module. Macros must naturally be
links to any other location of the documentation that could provide
interesting additional information.
-\section inside_doxygen_page Adding a new page to the user guide
+@section inside_doxygen_page Adding a new page to the user guide
Note that doxygen provides two hierarchies that cannot be intermixed.
Groups are used to build a reference guide while pages are used for
any page, while a page cannot contain any module. That's the doxygen
style.
-\subsection inside_doxygen_page_write Writing a new documentation page
+@subsection inside_doxygen_page_write Writing a new documentation page
The first thing to do to add a new page is to actually write a file
containing the information you want to add. It should be located in
@tableofcontents
-blabla bla
+blah blah blah
@section <short_name_of_section> <title>
-bliblublo
+blah blah blah
@subsection <short_name_of_subsection> <title>
@ref shortname "text to use instead of the title"
@endverbatim
-\subsection inside_doxygen_page_doxy Registering a documentation page to doxygen
+@subsection inside_doxygen_page_doxy Registering a documentation page to doxygen
Edit (project)/doc/Doxyfile.in and add your page to the INPUT
variable. Don't edit the Doxyfile directly, as it is generated
contents of sub pages even if it dupplicates what's on the left.
That's the doxygen style (but I can live with it).
-\subsection inside_doxygen_page_cmake Registering a documentation page to cmake
+@subsection inside_doxygen_page_cmake Registering a documentation page to cmake
Ahhh, cmake and doxygen. The perfect combo to bitch about life for a
whole day...
Don't forget to commit your page, so that you can get some git fun to
complete your day.
-\section inside_doxygen_image Adding an image to the documentation
+@section inside_doxygen_image Adding an image to the documentation
If you need to run a command (like fig2dev) to generate your image,
edit tools/cmake/GenerateDoc.cmake and add your command to the
tools/cmake/DefinePackage.cmake so that it lands in the archive
distribution. It will also be copied automatically to the documentation.
-\section inside_doxygen_website Working on the website
+@section inside_doxygen_website Working on the website
Our website is generated/exported via [orgmode](http://www.orgmode.org), a tool that we use to facilitate our reproducible research.
git clone git://scm.gforge.inria.fr/simgrid/website.git
@endverbatim
-\section inside_doxygen_regen Regenerating the documentation
+@section inside_doxygen_regen Regenerating the documentation
Once you've changed the doc, you want to run doxygen to regenerate the
html output (and maybe the pdf too). Here is how to do this:
Once you're satisfyied with the result, refreshing the documentation
on the web pages is very easy, as shown below. A few permission errors
are ok, unfortunately. We should improve things here, but I'm not sure
-of how. A funny thing is that this make target is also provided in the
-archives we distribute to the users, but I guess that it's harmless :)
+of how. This @c make target is also provided in the archives we
+distribute to the users, but I guess that it's harmless :)
@verbatim
make sync-gforge-doc