Site Preparation
After installing Docusaurus, you now have a skeleton to work from for your specific website. The following discusses the rest of the Docusaurus structure in order for you to prepare your site.
Directory Structure
As shown after you installed Docusaurus, the initialization script created a directory structure similar to:
root-directory
├── .gitignore
├── docs
│ ├── doc1.md
│ ├── doc2.md
│ ├── doc3.md
│ ├── exampledoc4.md
│ └── exampledoc5.md
└── website
├── blog
│ ├── 2016-03-11-blog-post.md
│ ├── 2017-04-10-blog-post-two.md
│ ├── 2017-09-25-testing-rss.md
│ ├── 2017-09-26-adding-rss.md
│ └── 2017-10-24-new-version-1.0.0.md
├── core
│ └── Footer.js
├── package.json
├── pages
├── sidebars.json
├── siteConfig.js
└── static
Directory Descriptions
- Documentation Source Files: The
docs
directory contains example documentation files written in Markdown. - Blog: The
website/blog
directory contains examples of blog posts written in markdown. - Pages: The
website/pages
directory contains example top-level pages for the site. - Static files and images: The
website/static
directory contains static assets used by the example site.
Key Files
- Footer: The
website/core/Footer.js
file is a React component that acts as the footer for the site generated by Docusaurus and should be customized by the user. - Configuration file: The
website/siteConfig.js
file is the main configuration file used by Docusaurus. - Sidebars: The
sidebars.json
file contains the structure and order of the documentation files. - .gitignore: The
.gitignore
file lists the necessary ignore files for the generated site so that they do not get added to the git repo.
Preparation Notes
You will need to keep the website/siteConfig.js
and website/core/Footer.js
files but may edit them as you wish. The value of the customDocsPath
key in website/siteConfig.js
can be modified if you wish to use a different directory name or path. The website
directory can also be renamed to anything you want it to be.
However, you should keep the website/pages
and website/static
directories. You may change the content inside them as you wish. At the bare minimum, you should have an en/index.js
or en/index.html
file inside website/pages
and an image to use as your header icon inside website/static
.
If your directory does not yet have a .gitignore
, we generate it with the necessary ignored files listed. As a general rule, you should ignore all node_modules
, build files, system files (.DS_Store
), logs, etc. Here is a more comprehensive list of what is normally ignored for Node.js projects.