Since almost all of our feature pages are out of date, and always have
been, I wasn't thinking of or planning on trying to keep them updated. (One
more reason to have users avoid them.)
For documentation, though, I would like to have a version selector like
most other projects.
Example:
Hi,
> 2. Feature pages can and should be updated, and include inline the
changes
> done per version.
This is very hard to enforce as feature pages are part of a different
repository on a different review platform (!). Ideally this kind of
(developer) documentation should be part of source code repository so
you can track history together with the actual source changes. That
way reviewers can also check the changes together.
Martin
On Thu, Feb 21, 2019 at 8:33 AM Yedidyah Bar David <didi(a)redhat.com>
wrote:
>
> On Thu, Feb 21, 2019 at 5:03 AM Laura Wright <lwright(a)redhat.com> wrote:
>>
>> I think from a design perspective we should try to make the features
and documentation pages look more different from one another so users are
less likely to mistake the different types of docs for one another. We can
definitely address this more in the site redesign. I can come up with
further iterations of those pages for the site redesign so we have a couple
different options to talk more about.
>>
>> I also think from an information architecture perspective we should
probably feature the official end user documentation at a higher level than
the features pages so users would be more likely to find the end user
documentation first and then find the features pages if they dig a little
deeper.
>>
>> We could also feature different documentation user guides that are more
tailored to the different types of users who might use oVirt.
>>
>> I'm curious to hear others thoughts on this.
>>
>> Best,
>> Laura
>>
>> On Wed, Feb 20, 2019 at 11:59 PM Greg Sheremeta <gshereme(a)redhat.com>
wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> TL;DR: please don't direct users to feature pages -- direct them to
end-user documentation instead. And maintain content separation between
end-user documentation and technical docs like feature pages.
>>> ...
>>>
>>> Lately we've cleaned up documentation on
ovirt.org, and I wanted to
share some of my thoughts about it. As a user experience focused person, I
really believe that clear and helpful documentation is crucial to the
project's success. I've also seen outdated documentation be a source of
extreme frustration for our users.
>>>
>>> In the distant past, most of oVirt's documentation was written by
developers on a wiki, typically in the form of "feature pages." Feature
pages are basically technical design documents with occasionally some user
help sprinkled in.
>>>
>>> With oVirt 4.0, we put a great set of clear documentation, written by
technical writers, on the oVirt website (which was also converted from a
wiki to a regular static site). This documentation is up to date with 4.2,
and we'll get the 4.3 content out there soon.
>>>
>>> This official documentation lives at
https://ovirt.org/documentation
>>> and it should be considered the authoritative place for users to
access our documentation.
>>>
>>> Feature pages, on the other hand, are (now) for developers. When you
hear the term "feature page", think "technical design document." Most
users
should not be interested in this content.
>>>
>>> It helps to think about the personas.
>>>
>>> 1. oVirt admins -- the person who sets up oVirt on Day 1 and 2. This
is the person who cares about and will read the Installation Guide and the
Administration Guide. These live under /documentation, e.g.
>>>
https://ovirt.org/documentation/install-guide/Installation_Guide.html
>>>
>>> 2. oVirt users -- the people who use oVirt to create, manage, and use
virtual machines, etc. This person will care about and read the VM Portal
Guide, User Guides, and such. These also live under /documentation, e.g.
>>>
https://ovirt.org/documentation/vmm-guide/Virtual_Machine_Management_Guid...
>>>
>>> 3. Developers -- you and I, and occasionally highly curious and
technical admins. These people might care about how the project works under
the hood -- high level designs, code flows, etc. Persona 2, oVirt users, do
not care about these details when they are learning to use oVirt, so
end-user documentation should not be polluted with this type of content.
This content now lives exclusively under /develop, the developer's section
of the site.
>>>
https://ovirt.org/develop/release-management/features/
>>>
>>> Let's help our users by directing them to the end-user documentation,
not to feature pages. If you would like to contribute end-user
documentation, it should go under /documentation and not in a feature page.
If you build a new feature, the technical stuff goes under
/develop/release-management/features/ and the end-user stuff goes under
/documentation.
>>>
>>> Feedback welcome :)
>
>
> I'd like to add another issue which might be worth discussing now, also
> in light of what you suggest re different design. This is: How do we
handle
> the history of version changes?
>
> Suppose at some version X a new feature is added. We obviously want a
> feature page for it (its design) and eventually a doc page for it
(perhaps
> a few, or only one or a few mentions in existing pages).
>
> Then, at a later version, a new feature is added, which in terms of
content
> might be worth its own feature page (or not), but is very closely tied to
> the first feature. We might have here two quite opposing views:
>
> 1. All features have new feature pages, existing feature pages are not
> updated once they reach "100% done" state (reality is obviously much more
> complex, but let's ignore that for now).
>
> 2. Feature pages can and should be updated, and include inline the
changes
> done per version.
>
> And related to that:
>
> 1. Documentation pages are per-version, and are never updated after the
> version is obsolete. With each new version we copy (/branch) and create
> a new version of the documentation, and update only the latest version,
> or simply update in-place (and then rely, in theory, on things like
>
archive.org, for people that need/want to see documentation for older
> versions).
>
> 2. Documentation pages reveal the history. When we update them, e.g.
> adding a section for a new (sub-)feature, we mention in-line "available
> since version X". This is similar to how e.g. python or ansible
documentation
> sites look - although they actually do both - both have subtrees per
> version and mention in-place - which might be best.
>
> So far, in practice, we did something somewhat similar to (1.), but
> it was never an official policy (AFAIK, at least).
>
> I personally tend to prefer both (2.)'s, but less strongly so for the
> first one - I can live with many more feature pages, although not sure
> is scales well.
>
> Best regards,
> --
> Didi
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--
GREG SHEREMETA
SENIOR SOFTWARE ENGINEER - TEAM LEAD - RHV UX
Red Hat NA
<