Thank you for your interest in Azure documentation!
- Ways to contribute
- About your contributions to Azure content
- Repository organization
- Use GitHub, Git, and this repository
- How to use markdown to format your topic
- More resources
- Index of all contributors' guide articles (opens new page)
You can contribute to Azure documentation in a few different ways:
- Contribute to a forum discussion.
- Submit Disqus comments at the bottom of articles.
- You can easily contribute to technical articles in the GitHub user interface. Either find the article in this repository, or visit the article on http://azure.microsoft.com/documentation and click the link in the article that goes to the GitHub source for the article.
- If you are making substantial changes to an existing article, adding or changing images, or contributing a new article, you need to fork this repository, install Git Bash, Markdown Pad, and learn some git commands.
##About your contributions to Azure content
###Minor corrections
Minor corrections or clarifications you submit for documentation and code examples in this repo are covered by the Azure Website Terms of Use (ToU).
###Larger submissions
If you submit a pull request with new or significant changes to documentation and code examples, we'll send a comment in GitHub asking you to submit an online Contribution License Agreement (CLA) if you are in one of these groups:
- Members of the Microsoft Open Technologies group.
- Contributors who don't work for Microsoft.
We need you to complete the online form before we can accept your pull request.
Full details are available at http://azure.github.io/guidelines.html#cla.
The content in the azure-content repository follows the organization of documentation on Azure.Microsoft.com. This repository contains two root folders:
The \articles folder contains the documentation articles formatted as markdown files with an .md extension. Articles are published to Azure.Microsoft.com in the path http://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/documentation/articles/{article-name-without-md}/.
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Article filenames: See our file naming guidance.
-
Media subfolders: The \articles folder contains the \media folder, inside which are subfolders with the images for each article. The article image folders are named identically to the article file, minus the .md file extension.
You can create reusable content sections to be included in one or more articles. see Custom extensions used in our technical content.
This folder contains our standard markdown template with the basic markdown formatting you need for an article.
This folder contains articles that are part of our contributors' guide.
Note: Most of the information in this section can be found in GitHub Help [] articles. If you are familiar with Git and GitHub, skip to the "Contribute and edit content" section for the particulars of the code/content flow of this repository.
-
The first step to contributing to this project is setting up a GitHub account. If you have not done so already go to GitHub Home [] and do so now.
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Now that you have an account, you also need a copy of Git on your computer. Follow the instructions in the [Setting up Git Tutorial] Set Up Git.
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Now that machine is set up with Git, you need a fork of this repository. Go to the top of the page and click the Fork button. You now have your own fork of this repository.
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The last step involves copying your fork to your local machine. To do this go open GitBash. On the command prompt enter:
git clone https://github.com/<your user name>/azure-content.git
Next create a reference to the root repository by entering these commands:
cd azure-content git remote add upstream https://github.com/Azure/azure-content.git git fetch upstream
Congratulations you have now set up your repository. The above steps will not need to be repeated again.
In order for the contribution process to be as seamless as possible, the following procedure has been established.
- Create a new branch
- Add new content or edit existing content
- Submit a pull request to the main repository
- Delete the branch
Each branch should be limited to a single concept/article both to streamline work flow and reduce the possibility of merge conflicts. The following efforts are of the appropriate scope for a new branch:
- A new article (and associated images)
- Spelling and grammar edits on an article.
- Applying a single formatting change across a large set of articles (e.g. new copyright footer).
- Open GitBash
- Type
git pull upstream master:<new branch name>
in the prompt. This will create a new branch locally copied from the latest Azure master branch. Note: For internal contributors, replacemaster
in the command with the branch for the publishing date you are targeting. - Type
git push origin <new branch name>
in the prompt. This will alert GitHub to the new branch. You should now be able to see the new branch in your fork of the repository on GitHub. - Type
git checkout <new branch name>
to switch to your new branch.
You can now navigate to the repository on your local machine using Windows Explorer. The repository files are in C:\Users\<yourusername>\azure-content
.
If you are editing files, open them in an editor of your choice and start modifying them. If you want to create a new file, use the editor of your choice and save the new file in the appropriate location in your local copy of the repository. While working, make sure to save your work frequently.
The files in C:\Users\<yourusername>\azure-content
are a working copy of the new branch that you created in your local repository. Changing anything in this folder does not affect the local repository until you commit a change. To commit a change to the local repository, type the following commands in GitBash:
git add .
git commit -v -a -m "<Describe the changes made in this commit>"
The add
command adds your changes to a staging area in preparation for committing them to the repository. The period after the add
command specifies that you want to stage all of the files that you have added or modified, checking subfolders recursively. (If you don't want to commit all of the changes, you can add specific files. You can also undo a commit. For help, type git add -help
or git status
.)
The commit
command applies the staged changes to the repository. -m
means you are providing the commit comment in the command line. If you aren't targeting a specific date for publishing, you can say "for publishing ASAP". The -v and -a switches can be omitted. The -v switch is for verbose output from the command, and -a does what you already did with the add command.)
You can commit multiple times while you are doing your work, or you can wait and commit only once when you're done.
When you are done with your work and are ready to have it merged into the central repository follow these steps.
- In GitBash type
git push origin <new branch name>
in the command prompt. In your local repository,origin
refers to your GitHub repository that you cloned the local repository from. This command pushes the current state of your new branch, including all commits made in the previous steps, to your GitHub fork. - On the GitHub site, navigate in your fork to the new branch.
- Click the Pull Request button at the top of the page.
- Ensure that the Base branch is
Azure/azure-content@master
and the Head branch is<your username>/azure-content@<branch name>
- Click the Update Commit Range button.
- Give your pull request a Title, and describe all the changes being made. If your bug fixes a TFS Item or GitHub issue make sure to reference them in the description.
- Submit the Pull Request.
One of the site administrators will now process your pull request. Your pull request will surface on the Azure/azure-content site under Issues. When the Pull Request is accepted, the issue will be resolved.
After a branch has been successfully merged (i.e. your pull request has been accepted), do not continue working in the local branch that was successfully merged upstream. This can lead to merge conflicts if you submit another pull request. Instead, if you want to do another update, create a new local branch from the successfully merged upstream branch.
For example, suppose your local branch X was successfully merged into the Azure/azure-content master branch and you want to make further updates to the content that was merged. Create a new local branch, X2, from the Azure/Azure-Content master branch. To do this, open GitBash and execute the following commands:
cd azure-content
git pull upstream master:X2
git push origin X2
You now have local copies (in a new local branch) of the work that you submitted in branch X. The X2 branch also contains all the work other writers have merged, so if your work depends on others' work (e.g. shared images), it will be available in the new branch. You can verify that your previous work (and others' work) is in the branch by checking out the new branch...
git checkout X2
...and verifying the content. (The checkout
command updates the files in C:\Users\<yourusername>\azure-content
to the current state of the X2 branch.) Once you have checked out the new branch, you can make updates to the content and commit them as usual. However, to avoid working in the merged branch (X) by mistake, it is best to delete it (see the following "Delete a Branch" section).
Once your changes have been successfully merged into the central repository you can delete the branch you used, as you will no longer need it. Any further work requires a new branch. To delete your branch follow these steps:
- In GitBash type
git checkout master
in the command prompt. This ensures that you aren't in the branch to be deleted (which isn't allowed). - Next, type
git branch -d <branch name>
in the command prompt. This will delete the branch on your local machine only if it has been successfully merged to the upstream repository. (You can override this behavior with the–D
flag, but first be sure you want to do this.) - Finally, type
git push origin :<branch name>
in the command prompt (a space before the colon and no space after it). This will delete the branch on your github fork.
Congratulations, you have successfully contributed to the project.
The [markdown template](/markdown templates/markdown-template-for-new-articles.md) contains the basic markdown for a topic that includes a TOC, sections with subheadings, links to other azure.microsoft.com topics, links to other sites, bold text, italic text, numbered and bulleted lists, code snippets, and images. For fancier markdown, see the following sections, or find a published topic and copy the markdown or HTML you want.
All of the articles in this repository use Markdown. While a complete introduction (and listing of all the syntax) can be found here Markdown Home [], the relevant basics will be covered here.
If you are looking for a good editor, try Markdown Pad. Below is a list of the most common markdown syntax.
-
Line breaks vs. paragraphs: In Markdown there is no HTML
<br />
element. Instead, a new paragraph is designated by an empty line between two blocks of text. -
Italics: The HTML
<i>some text</i>
is written*some text*
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Bold: The HTML
<strong>some text</strong>
element is written**some text**
-
Headings: HTML headings are designated by an number of
#
characters at the start of the line. The number of#
characters corresponds to the hierarchical level of the heading (for example,#
= h1 and###
= h3). -
Numbered lists: To make an numbered (ordered) list start the line with
1.
. If you want multiple elements within a single list element, format your list as follows:1. Notice that this line is tabbed over after the '.' Now notice that there is a line break between the two paragraphs in the list element, and that the indentation here matches the indentation of the line above.
-
Bulleted lists: Bulleted (unordered) lists are almost identical to ordered lists except that the
1.
is replaced with either*
,-
, or+
. Multiple element lists work the same way as with ordered lists. -
Links: The base syntax for a link is
[visible link text](link url)
.Links can also have references, which will be discussed in the "Link and Image References" section below.
-
Images: The base syntax for an image is
![alt text for the image](image url)
.Images can also have references, which will be discussed in the "Link and Image References" section below.
-
In-line HTML: Finally, markdown allows for the inclusion of HTML inline:
<i>italic</i>
is correctly rendered by Markdown as italic.
Markdown has a really nice feature that allows a user to insert a reference instead of a URL for images and links. sThe syntax for using this feature is:
The image below is from [Google][googleweb]
![Google's logo][logo]
[googleweb]: http://www.google.com
[logo]: https://www.google.com/images/srpr/logo3w.png
By using references grouped at the bottom of your file, you can easily find, edit, and reuse link and image URLs.
We use custom markdown extensions for fancier formatting. We currently have extensions for adding reusable content, notes, embedded videos, and technology selectors to your articles. For more info, see Custom extensions used in our technical content.
Article metadata enables certain functionalities on the azure.microsoft.com web site, such as author attribution, contributor attribution, breadcrumbs, article descriptions, and SEO optimizations as well as reporting Microsoft uses to evaluate the performance of the content. So, the metadata is important! Here's the guidance for making sure your metadata is done right.
- For more information on Markdown go to their site.
- For more information on using Git and GitHub first check out the [GitHub Help Section] GitHub Help and if necessary contact the site administrators.