k3s/docs/man
Tim Hockin f928f52a4a Alias --container-port to --target-port in kubectl 2015-03-26 17:59:46 -07:00
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man1 Alias --container-port to --target-port in kubectl 2015-03-26 17:59:46 -07:00
Dockerfile Man pages - initial release 2014-10-13 15:57:26 -05:00
README.md Fix typos in docs/man/README.md 2015-03-06 14:01:26 -08:00
kube-apiserver.1.md Convert kube-apiserver to hyperkube. 2015-01-30 13:06:28 -08:00
kube-controller-manager.1.md Add missing flag description; regenerate man1 2015-02-26 11:15:01 -05:00
kube-proxy.1.md Fix up for posix flags 2015-01-15 09:12:19 -08:00
kube-scheduler.1.md Fix up for posix flags 2015-01-15 09:12:19 -08:00
kubelet.1.md Replace "net" by "pod infra" in docs and format strings. 2015-01-28 15:03:06 -08:00
md2man-all.sh Man pages - initial release 2014-10-13 15:57:26 -05:00

README.md

Kubernetes Documentation

This directory contains the Kubernetes user manual in the Markdown format. Do not edit the man pages in the man1 directory. Instead, amend the Markdown (*.md) files.

File List

kube-apiserver.1.md
kube-controller-manager.1.md
kubelet.1.md
kube-proxy.1.md
kube-scheduler.1.md
Dockerfile
md2man-all.sh

Generating man pages from the Markdown files

The recommended approach for generating the man pages is via a Docker container using the supplied Dockerfile to create an image with the correct environment. This uses go-md2man, a pure Go Markdown to man page generator.

Building the md2man image

There is a Dockerfile provided in the kubernetes/docs/man directory.

Using this Dockerfile, create a Docker image tagged docker/md2man:

docker build -t docker/md2man .

Utilizing the image

Once the image is built, run a container using the image with volumes:

docker run -v /<path-to-git-dir>/kubernetes/docs/man:/docs:rw \
-w /docs -i docker/md2man /docs/md2man-all.sh

The md2man Docker container will process the Markdown files and generate the man pages inside the docker/docs/man/man1 directory using Docker volumes. For more information on Docker volumes see the man page for docker run and also look at the article [Sharing Directories via Volumes] (http://docs.docker.com/use/working_with_volumes/).