Lately I’ve been working on Pintail, a documentation site generator built on top of Mallard, Yelp, and the various other tools we’ve developed over the years. Pintail grew out of the tool that used to build projectmallard.org from Mallard sources. But it’s grown a lot to be able to handle general documentation sites. I want GNOME to be able to use Pintail for its documentation site. I want other projects to be able to use it too.
One of the more compelling features, and something many documentation site generators don’t handle, is that Pintail can pull in different git repositories for different directories. Small projects can get away with having all their docs in one repository. Large projects like GNOME can’t. Here’s a snippet of what the configuration for help.gnome.org might look like:
[/users/gnome-help/stable/] git_repository = git://git.gnome.org/gnome-user-docs git_branch = master git_directory = gnome-help/C/
Pintail’s native format is Mallard, but you can add in support for other formats pretty easily. There’s Docbook support, for example, and I’d like to add AsciiDoc support using asciidoctor-mallard.
There are two major features I hope to have ready soon. Both of them are available as Summer of Code projects. First, documentation sites obviously need search. But it’s not enough to just search the whole site. You want to be able to search within specific documents, or specific versions of documents. I’ve actually already got some indexing code in Pintail using Elasticsearch as a backend.
Second, Pintail needs to be able to handle localizations. I’ve put a lot of work into documentation internationalization over the years. It’s important, and everything I work on will continue to support it. I have some ideas on how this will work.
If you need to build a documentation site, give Pintail a try. I’m building a few sites with it already, but I’d love to get input from people with different needs.