Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
102 lines (52 loc) · 8.2 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

102 lines (52 loc) · 8.2 KB

LivePerson Developer Center

As of August 2018, please open all Pull Requests DIRECTLY TO THE MASTER BRANCH ON THE PUBLIC VERSION OF THIS REPOSITORY. THERE IS NO MORE NEED FOR THE INTERNAL REPOSITORY

This site is maintained by the Product Communications and Experience team. Please contact [email protected] for issues, questions, and the such.

This repository generates LivePerson's Developer Center, which can be found at https://developers.liveperson.com. The site is generated using Jekyll. If you find an issue with the documentation, site structure, meta or anything else, please open an issue and we'll respond as soon as possible.

Table of Contents

Updating the Documentation

All pages on the site correspond to a Markdown file (.md) which can be found inside /documents/pages. To update a file, please branch off of the master branch, edit the file in question and create a Pull Request back to the master branch. There's no need for the old Development branch, so please don't create pull requests to it.

Environments

Updating/Creating Headers

Jekyll uses a front-matter to arrange and define the various documents in the site. This is the text which appears in between the "---" at the top of each document. It's technically a YAML snippet, so all YAML formatting and rules apply to it. Our headers are usually comprised of the following key/value pairs:

  • pagename: This is the name of the page that will appear at the top of the document.

  • keywords: This replaces the keywords found in the <meta> tag of the page. Leave it unpopulated.

  • documentname: This key accepts either Documents or Solutions. This designates which part of the site the document is under.

  • categoryname: This is the category to which the document's API belongs (for example, the "Create Users" method belongs to the Users API which is under Contact Center Management).

  • documentname: This is the API to which the document belongs.

  • subfoldername: This is a sub-folder to which the document belongs, if there is one.

  • permalink: this key defines the link at which the document can be found. The format of this value MUST BE as follows. Any other value format will cause the sidebar to malfunction:

    • If the page has a subfoldername value: documentname - subfoldername - pagename. For example: mobile-app-messaging-sdk-for-android-advanced-features-audio-messages.html

    • If the page does not have a subfoldername value: documentname - pagename. For example: users-api-overview.html

  • indicator: this key sets the Chat or Messaging indicator (or both) on a document. It accepts chat, messaging or both as its value.

Any other parameters which are not documented here which you might find in the front-matter are deprecated and are only present for backwards compatibility purposes. These should not be used.

Adding New Documents to the Sidebar

Once you've created a new document, you'll need to have it manually added. We chose a manual process for the sidebar for a few reasons. First, it reduces the fragility of the sidebar (the extra, manual step gives us another layer of QA). Secondly, it increases the flexibility of the sidebar (we write code once and then maintain a YAML file, making it easier to add options). Lastly, it decreases site build times (since the forloops needed to dynamically build a sidebar in a site of our size and complexity are time and resource consuming).

The sidebar's YAML file can be found in the _data folder. It's called documentsupdated.yaml. You must make sure the name of the file and the name in the sidebar correspond; the link the sidebar sends to is auto-generated and must match the permalink in the file's header (see above).

The max width for an image in this repo is 800px.

Building the Site Locally

If you have not already done so, make sure your computer has Ruby installed. Here's a helpful guide on how best do that on Mac (you can stop once Ruby is installed, you don't need Rails) and on any other system.

Once you have installed Ruby, clone this repository to your machine. Once done, navigate to it using Terminal or your preferred command line interface. Follow the steps below to run the site from your machine. If you're on Windows, don't forget to run your CLI as an admin.

First time install

  1. Run gem install bundler. This will install Ruby's package manager which is required for all following commands.
  2. Run bundle install. This will install all the gems/plugins that the site depends on.
  3. Run bundle exec jekyll build. This builds the _site folder for the first time on your machine. The bundle exec prefix makes sure that bundler "watches" your build and installs any dependencies that might be missing. It's a precaution and is thus not mandatory.
  4. Run bundle exec jekyll serve. This builds the site and serves it over localhost:4000 (by default, you can change the port parameter in config.yml to whatever port you'd prefer).
  5. Navigate to http://localhost:4000/ (or the port you chose) and you'll see the site.

OSX Installation

  1. We recommend installing a standalone Ruby Installation and RVM
  2. See this for an example: Stack Overflow

Serving the site after the first install

You have two options to run the site locally after the first install:

  • Using gulp.js. Gulp is a toolkit for automating painful or time-consuming tasks. By simply typing in gulp in your command line, it takes care of all the build commands needed to serve the site. It also watches the root directory and will automatically refresh your browser once any changes were built. Gulp and its dependencies are installed locally in the project, so there's no further installation needed from your end.

  • Using Jekyll's standard commands. All you need to run in consequent builds of the site is bundle exec jekyll serve. You can add the suffix --incremental to enable incremental building of the site. This saves build times since the regeneration feature is enabled by default (the site rebuilds every time you hit "save"). When --incremental is used, Jekyll won't rebuild the entire site on every save, only the affected sections. If you'd like the project to automatically open in a new tab, you can add the -o flag to the end of the above command.

Note: changes that alter site navigation or other changes that change the site as a whole might not show up when using --incremental. If that occurs, simply "kill" the build and run bundle exec jekyll serve without the suffix. This is also true for gulp: you will need to kill your gulp instance and then run the direct Jekyll command.

Template

See the _template folder above for a complete template of a simple REST API. Other templates will follow in the future. However, if you have a unique API to document or need further assistance, please reach out to Product Communications before starting to write your document so that we can advise on its structure.

Licensing

All usage of the contents, documentation or code found in this repository is subject to the LivePerson API Terms of Use. Please use the link above to read them carefully before utilizing the site.