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Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Lennart Poettering
c4bc2e9343 CONTRIBUTING: be clearer about versions and RFE process
Fixes: #16550
2020-08-31 23:23:56 +02:00
Lukas Nykryn
21d19a7a13 docs: update information where to file bugs against RHEL/CentOS versions of systemd 2020-07-07 23:12:51 +02:00
Lennart Poettering
c85b6ff1b2 docs: point contributors to list of most recent systemd releases
Fixes: #16083
2020-06-10 10:30:02 +02:00
Tobias Bernard
b41a3f66c9 docs: make it pretty
Add custom Jekyll theme, logo, webfont and .gitignore

FIXME: the markdown files have some H1 headers which need to be replaced
with H2
2019-12-11 17:04:20 +01:00
Lennart Poettering
4cdca0af11 docs: place all our markdown docs in rough categories 2019-12-11 10:53:00 +01:00
Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek
153d597575 docs: create new SECURITY.md page
github has special support for that name:
https://help.github.com/en/articles/adding-a-security-policy-to-your-repository.
2019-08-30 11:45:42 +02:00
Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek
6d8cf86476 docs: new systemd-security mailing list
In the past, we asked people to open a security bug on one of the "big"
distros. This worked OK as far as getting bugs reported and notifying some
upstream developers went. But we always had trouble getting information to
all the appropriate parties, because each time a bug was reported, a big
thread was created, with a growing CC list. People who were not CCed early
enough were missing some information, etc.

To clean this up, we decided to create a private mailing list. The natural
place would be freedesktop.org, but unfortunately the request to create a
mailing list wasn't handled
(https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/freedesktop/freedesktop/issues/134). And even
if it was, at this point, if there was ever another administrative issue, it
seems likely it could take months to resolve. So instead, we asked for a list
to be created on the redhat mailservers.

Please consider the previous security issue reporting mechanisms rescinded, and
send any senstive bugs to systemd-security@redhat.com.
2019-08-30 09:12:27 +02:00
Filipe Brandenburger
c3e270f4ee docs: add a "front matter" snippet to our markdown pages
It turns out Jekyll (the engine behind GitHub Pages) requires that pages
include a "Front Matter" snippet of YAML at the top for proper rendering.

Omitting it will still render the pages, but including it opens up new
possibilities, such as using a {% for %} loop to generate index.md instead of
requiring a separate script.

I'm hoping this will also fix the issue with some of the pages (notably
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.html) not being available under systemd.io

Tested locally by rendering the website with Jekyll. Before this change, the
*.md files were kept unchanged (so not sure how that even works?!), after this
commit, proper *.html files were generated from it.
2019-01-02 14:16:34 -08:00
Faheel Ahmad
eea984028f docs: Update links to updated docs 2018-10-30 23:01:20 +05:30
Filipe Brandenburger
c2beadcd34 docs: move markdown docs from .github/ to docs/
The GitHub guide on contributing file says: "Decide whether to store your
contributing guidelines in your repository's root, docs, or .github directory."

https://help.github.com/articles/setting-guidelines-for-repository-contributors/#adding-a-contributing-file

But there's really no advantage to keeping it in the hidden .github/, since
these are public and really belong together with the other documentation.

We can still keep the issue templates under .github/, since they are not really
documentation on their own.

Updated the links pointing to CONTRIBUTING.md to refer to the one in docs/.
2018-09-08 13:39:03 -07:00