## Welcome to the go-ethereum website! This is the repository for the `go-ethereum` website. All the website code is held here in the `website` branch. If you are looking for `go-ethereum` source code you need to switch to the `master` branch. The purpose of the go-ethereum website is to provide the necessary documentation and supporting information to help users to get up to speed with using go-ethereum (aka "Geth"). The website is maintained by a team of developers but community contributions are also very welcome. ## Contributing Contributions from the community are very welcome. Please contribute by cloning the `go-ethereum` repository, checking out the `website` branch and raising pull requests to be reviewed and merged by the repository maintainers. Issues can be raised in the main `go-ethereum` repository using the prefix `[website]: ` in the title. ### The geth.ethereum.org stack geth.ethereum.org is a [Next.js](https://nextjs.org/) project bootstrapped with [`create-next-app`](https://github.com/vercel/next.js/tree/canary/packages/create-next-app). The following tools were used to build the site: - [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/) - [Yarn package manager](https://yarnpkg.com/cli/install) - [React](https://reactjs.org/) - A JavaScript library for building component-based user interfaces - [Typescript](https://www.typescriptlang.org/) - TypeScript is a strongly typed programming language that builds on JavaScript - [Chakra UI](https://chakra-ui.com/) - A UI library (Migration in progress) - [Algolia](https://www.algolia.com/) - Site indexing, rapid intra-site search results, and search analytics. [Learn more on how we implement Algolia for site search](./docs/ALGOLIA_DOCSEARCH.md). - Primary implementation: `/src/components/Search/index.ts` - [Netlify](https://www.netlify.com/) - DNS management and primary host for `master` build. ### Repository structure The website code is organized with a top-level `docs` folder that contains all the documentation pages as markdown files. Inside `docs` are subdirectories used to divide the docs by theme (e.g. `getting-started`,`fundamentals`, `developers` etc). Website code is in `src`, and assets including images are in `public`. ### Adding a new documentation page Documentation pages are located in the `/docs` folder in the root directory of the project. The docs pages are all markdown files. When you want to add a new page, add the new file in the appropriate folder in the `/docs` page. `index.md` files will be the default page for a directory, and `{pagename}.md` will define subpages for a directory. After adding a page, you will also need to list it in `/src/data/documentation-links.yaml`. This file defines the documentation structure which you will see on the left sidebar in the documentation pages. ### Building locally To check a new page it is helpful to build the site locally and see how it behaves in the browser. First, run the development server: ```bash npm run dev # or yarn dev ``` Open [http://localhost:3000](http://localhost:3000) with your browser to see the result. You can start editing the page by modifying `pages/index.tsx`. The page auto-updates as you edit the file. [API routes](https://nextjs.org/docs/api-routes/introduction) can be accessed on [http://localhost:3000/api/hello](http://localhost:3000/api/hello). This endpoint can be edited in `pages/api/hello.ts`. The `pages/api` directory is mapped to `/api/*`. Files in this directory are treated as [API routes](https://nextjs.org/docs/api-routes/introduction) instead of React pages. ### Review and merge PRs will be reviewed by the website maintainers and merged if they improve the website. For substantial changes it is best to reach out to the team by raising a GH issue for discussion first.