Attention: Here be dragons
This is the latest
(unstable) version of this documentation, which may document features
not available in or compatible with released stable versions of Redot.
Checking the stable version of the documentation...
Building the manual with Sphinx¶
This page explains how to build a local copy of the Redot manual using the Sphinx docs engine. This allows you to have local HTML files and build the documentation as a PDF, EPUB, or LaTeX file, for example.
Before you get started, make sure that you have:
Note
Python 3 should come with the pip3
command. You may need to write
python3 -m pip
(Unix) or py -m pip
(Windows) instead of pip3
.
If both approaches fail, make sure that you have pip3 installed.
(Optional) Set up a virtual environment. Virtual environments prevent potential conflicts between the Python packages in
requirements.txt
and other Python packages that are installed on your system.Create the virtual environment:
py -m venv redot-docs-venv
python3 -m venv redot-docs-venv
Activate the virtual environment:
redot-docs-venv\Scripts\activate.bat
source redot-docs-venv/bin/activate
(Optional) Update pre-installed packages:
py -m pip install --upgrade pip setuptools
pip3 install --upgrade pip setuptools
Clone the docs repo:
git clone https://github.com/redot-engine/redot-engine-docs.git
Change directory into the docs repo:
cd redot-docs
Install the required packages:
pip3 install -r requirements.txt
Build the docs:
make html
Note
On Windows, that command will run
make.bat
instead of GNU Make (or an alternative).Alternatively, you can build the documentation by running the sphinx-build program manually:
sphinx-build -b html ./ _build/html
The compilation will take some time as the classes/
folder contains hundreds of files.
See Hints for performance.
You can then browse the documentation by opening _build/html/index.html
in
your web browser.
Dealing with errors¶
If you run into errors, you may try the following command:
make SPHINXBUILD=~/.local/bin/sphinx-build html
If you get a MemoryError
or EOFError
, you can remove the classes/
folder and
run make
again.
This will drop the class references from the final HTML documentation, but will keep the
rest intact.
Important
If you delete the classes/
folder, do not use git add .
when working on a pull
request or the whole classes/
folder will be removed when you commit.
See #3157 for more detail.
Hints for performance¶
RAM usage¶
Building the documentation requires at least 8 GB of RAM to run without disk swapping, which slows it down. If you have at least 16 GB of RAM, you can speed up compilation by running:
set SPHINXOPTS=-j2 && make html
make html SPHINXOPTS=-j2
You can use -j auto
to use all available CPU threads, but this can use a lot
of RAM if you have a lot of CPU threads. For instance, on a system with 32 CPU
threads, -j auto
(which corresponds to -j 32
here) can require 20+ GB of
RAM for Sphinx alone.
Specifying a list of files¶
You can specify a list of files to build, which can greatly speed up compilation:
make html FILELIST='classes/class_node.rst classes/class_resource.rst'