Rust Forge
Welcome to the Rust Forge! Rust Forge serves as a repository of supplementary documentation useful for members of The Rust Programming Language.
Development
You can build a local version by installing mdbook and running the following command.
mdbook build
This will build and run the blacksmith
tool automatically. When developing
it's recommended to use the serve
command to launch a local server to allow
you to easily see and update changes you make.
mdbook serve
JavaScript
Forge uses JavaScript to display dates for releases and "no tools breakage
week". When making modifications to the JavaScript, make sure it matches the
standard style. You can install standard
and automatically format the code
using the following commands.
Install commands
# With Yarn
yarn global add standard
# With NPM
npm install --global standard
Formatting
standard --fix js/
Contributing
Adding teams
Any Rust team can have a section in the Rust Forge. If you'd like to add your team, you first need to add them as an item to src/SUMMARY.md
, like below, replacing TEAM NAME
with your respective team's name to show on Forge, and <TEAM_NAME>
with a filesystem- and URL-friendly version of that name where your documentation will be stored.
- [TEAM NAME](src/<TEAM_NAME>/README.md)
<!-- or -->
- [TEAM NAME](src/<TEAM_NAME>.md)
If you run mdbook build
, mdbook
will automatically create the folder and file for your team.
It's recommended that you put general team information in src/<TEAM_NAME>/README.md
, such as where the meetings happen, repositories that the team manages, links to chat platforms, etc. Larger topics should be made as a subpage, e.g. (src/release/topic.md
).
- [TOPIC](src/<TEAM_NAME>/TOPIC.md)