If an HTTP API returned a top-level array response, the templating system
would fail to create a table for it. This is now partially fixed by pulling
out the type of the elements (no recursion is done to populate nested tables)
Templates don't know at what level they will be inserted. Previously, we
hard-coded the title style which is not compatible with the build target
system. Define a set of styles which will be replaced by the gendoc script
when it encounters them:
'<' : Make this title a sub-heading
'/' : Make this title a heading at the same level
'>' : Make this title a super-heading
The build target system is now basically complete and functioning.
it without having to fiddle with the jenkins UI.
It also allow us to move files without breaking the CI since we
won't be hard coding the locations of scripts in the jenkins UI.
This will allow us to programatically position .rst snippets *anywhere*
which will for once and for all remove the horrid title level mismatch bugs.
We require this in order to allow people to re-shuffle the spec without
having to adjust the spec itself (e.g. 2 targets with different levels of
nesting).
We're well beyond the point now where a simple `cat` of .rst files to "build"
the spec is practical. We may want to slice and dice the spec in different
ways to address various cross-cutting concerns. To this end, there is now a
'targets' file which contains the "build targets" for the spec, which contains
the sorting order for the .rst files. For now, we just have a single
target: 'main'.
schema.
Does the same checks as check.sh, but is a *lot* faster making it
suitable for using as a pre-commit hook.
I don't suggest replacing check.sh since it's good to check that the
schema works with multiple implementations of jsonschema.
Convert the file format to be of the form ##_##_something.rst where the
first ## is the top-level section number and the second ## is the
second-level section number, e.g. 07_01_push_cs_api.rst means
Section 7.1 - This is now enforced in gendoc.py along with the title line
style that should be used (= for top-level, - for 2nd level) which will
give helpful suggestions if you trip up. This feels much more intuitive
now looking in /specification
Rename "schema/v1/core" to "schema/v1/core-event-schema".
Add self-referential symlinks to schema/v1/core-event-schema
The python json schema libraries expect that relative references are
relative to the file they are in. The node json schema libraries
expect that relateive references are relative to the first file loaded.
To support both kinds we reference the core event schema using
"core-event-schema/event.json". We then symlink the core-event-schema
directory to both the location of the file refering to "event.json" so
that it will work in python and to the location of the top level file
so that it will work in node.