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Documentation Generation

generate.py

This script generates documentation for the wandb SDK library.

For help with this function, run

python generate.py --help

It uses a more generic documentation generation tool, docugen, based on the TensorFlow documentation generator.

Steps

  1. Run pip install --upgrade git+git://github.com/wandb/wandb.git@<commit_id> to install the version ofwandb you wish to document.
  2. Run python generate.py --commit_id <commit_id> to create the documentation. Make sure to use a full hash or tag -- it's used to create URLs.
  3. Move the generated documentation into a local copy of the Docs repository (under docs/ref).

Outputs

  1. A folder named ref. The files in the ref folder are the generated markdown. Use the --output_dir option to change where this folder is saved; by default it is in the working directory. If the output_dir already contains a folder named ref, any contents inside the cli or python directory will be over-written.
  2. A SUMMARY.md file for creating a GitBook sidebar that indexes the automatically-generated docs. This is based on a provided --template_file (by default, _SUMMARY.md from this repo).

Example Usage

python generate.py \
  --template_file _SUMMARY.md \
  --commit_id v0.15.6 \
  --output_dir path/to/gitbook

Requirements

Run pip install -r docugen/requirements.txt from root to install requirements.

Extension and configuration

Behavior is configured by the config.ini file, which is loaded using ConfigParser.

To extend the footprint of the library that is documented, this file must be edited.

There's a rough dummy/documentary example in config.ini, the EXAMPLE_SUBCONFIG.

If the newly-documented components are in the top level of a module that is already being documented, e.g. if a method is added to the top-level wandb or if a new data_type is added to wandb.data_types, then add the elements to document to either elements or add-elements in the proper SUBCONFIG.

For example, if we added launch as a method available at wandb.launch and wanted to document it at the top level (alongside e.g. wandb.watch), we'd add it to the elements of the WANDB_CORE subconfig.

As another example, if we added PanopticSegmentation to the wandb.data_types submodule, but didn't make it available at the top level, we'd add it to the add-elements section of the WANDB_DATATYPES subconfig.

Editing on top of the state at commit 7ab1d97, the subconfig sections of config.ini would look like:

[WANDB_CORE]
# main python SDK library
dirname=python
title=Python Library
slug=wandb.
elements=Artifact,agent,config,controller,finish,init,launch,log,save,summary,sweep,watch,__version__
add-from=wandb_sdk.wandb_run
add-elements=Run
module-doc-from=self

[WANDB_DATATYPES]
# data types submodule, including media and tables
dirname=data-types
title=Data Types
slug=wandb.data\_types.
elements=Graph,Image,Plotly,Video,Audio,Table,Html,Object3D,Molecule,Histogram
add-from=data_types
add-elements=ImageMask,BoundingBoxes2D,PanopticSegmentation
module-doc-from=data_types

If the newly-documented components are not in the top level of a module that is already being documented, then you'll need to add a new section to the reference docs (though it'd be easier just export them at the top level and add them to an existing section!).

You'll need to

  1. Add a new subconfig, a la WANDB_DATATYPES
  2. Populate that with all the required tags (see EXAMPLE_SUBCONFIG)
  3. Add that subconfig to the SUB_CONFIGS
  4. Add handling for the new section to generate.py, under get_prefix
  5. Add handling for the new section to library.py, under build. (This last step could probably be easily automated away with some slight changes to the logic there).

Running as a GitHub Action

In any wandb repo's Actions workflow, you can trigger document generation like so...

- uses: wandb/[email protected]
  with:
    gitbook-branch: en
    access-token: ${{ secrets.DOCUGEN_ACCESS_TOKEN }}

where vX.Y.Z is a tag on this (docugen) repo and DOCUGEN_ACCESS_TOKEN is a Personal Access Token with org write permissions, stored in the consuming repo. This will generate docs based on the latest releases of all contributing projects and push them to the target branch in the gitbook repo (en is the branch used for the main English docs).

Updating the GitHub Action

After merging your changes to docugen@main...

git tag -a vX.Y.Z -m "docugen version X.Y.Z"
git push origin vX.Y.Z

Then you'll need to update the uses line in the consuming repo. If we eventually have a lot of repos doing this it might be better to refer to @main, to save us the trouble of manually updating all of them (note that if you don't update a repo, it will trigger the old document generation logic, potentially overwriting new docs).

You can test changes to the action on a branch with uses: wandb/docugen@branch-name from any other repo.