All clients are listed in the clients.json
file. Each key in the JSON
object represents a single client library. For example:
"Rediska": {
# A programming language should be specified.
"language": "PHP",
# If the project has a website of its own, put it here.
# Otherwise, lose the "url" key.
"url": "http://rediska.geometria-lab.net",
# A URL pointing to the repository where users can
# find the code.
"repository": "http://github.com/Shumkov/Rediska",
# A short, free-text description of the client.
# Should be objective. The goal is to help users
# choose the correct client they need.
"description": "A PHP client",
# An array of Twitter usernames for the authors
# and maintainers of the library.
"authors": ["shumkov"]
}
Redis commands are described in the commands.json
file.
For each command there's a Markdown file with a complete, human-readable description. We process this Markdown to provide a better experience, so some things to take into account:
-
Inside text, all commands should be written in all caps, in between backticks. For example:
.INCR
-
You can use some magic keywords to name common elements in Redis. For example:
@multi-bulk-reply
. These keywords will get expanded and auto-linked to relevant parts of the documentation.
There should be at least two predefined sections: description and return value. The return value section is marked using the @return keyword:
Returns all keys matching the given pattern.
@return
@multi-bulk-reply: all the keys that matched the pattern.
Please wrap your text to 80 characters. You can easily accomplish this
using a CLI tool called par
.
Once you're done, the very least you should do is make sure that all files compile properly. You can do this by running Rake inside your working directory.
$ rake parse
Additionally, if you have Aspell installed, you can spell check the documentation:
$ rake spellcheck
Exceptions can be added to ./wordlist
.