dokka [![TeamCity (build status)](https://img.shields.io/teamcity/http/teamcity.jetbrains.com/s/Kotlin_Dokka_DokkaAntMavenGradle.svg)](https://teamcity.jetbrains.com/viewType.html?buildTypeId=Kotlin_Dokka_DokkaAntMavenGradle&branch_KotlinTools_Dokka=%3Cdefault%3E&tab=buildTypeStatusDiv) [ ![Download](https://api.bintray.com/packages/kotlin/dokka/dokka/images/download.svg) ](https://bintray.com/kotlin/dokka/dokka/_latestVersion) ===== Dokka is a documentation engine for Kotlin, performing the same function as javadoc for Java. Just like Kotlin itself, Dokka fully supports mixed-language Java/Kotlin projects. It understands standard Javadoc comments in Java files and [KDoc comments](https://kotlinlang.org/docs/reference/kotlin-doc.html) in Kotlin files, and can generate documentation in multiple formats including standard Javadoc, HTML and Markdown. ## Using Dokka ### Using the Command Line To run Dokka from the command line, download the [Dokka jar](https://github.com/Kotlin/dokka/releases/download/0.9.1/dokka-fatjar.jar). To generate documentation, run the following command: java -jar dokka-fatjar.jar Dokka supports the following command line arguments: * `output` - the output directory where the documentation is generated * `format` - the output format: * `html` - HTML (default) * `markdown` - Markdown * `jekyll` - Markdown adapted for Jekyll sites * `javadoc` - Javadoc (showing how the project can be accessed from Java) * `classpath` - list of directories or .jar files to include in the classpath (used for resolving references) * `samples` - list of directories containing sample code (documentation for those directories is not generated but declarations from them can be referenced using the `@sample` tag) * `module` - the name of the module being documented (used as the root directory of the generated documentation) * `include` - names of files containing the documentation for the module and individual packages * `nodeprecated` - if set, deprecated elements are not included in the generated documentation ### Using the Ant task The Ant task definition is also contained in the dokka-fatjar.jar referenced above. Here's an example of using it: ```xml ``` The Ant task supports the following attributes: * `outputdir` - the output directory where the documentation is generated * `outputformat` - the output format (see the list of supported formats above) * `classpath` - list of directories or .jar files to include in the classpath (used for resolving references) * `samples` - list of directories containing sample code (documentation for those directories is not generated but declarations from them can be referenced using the `@sample` tag) * `modulename` - the name of the module being documented (used as the root directory of the generated documentation) * `include` - names of files containing the documentation for the module and individual packages * `skipdeprecated` - if set, deprecated elements are not included in the generated documentation ### Using the Maven plugin The Maven plugin is available in JCenter. You need to add the JCenter repository to the list of plugin repositories if it's not there: ```xml jcenter JCenter https://jcenter.bintray.com/ ``` Minimal maven configuration is ```xml org.jetbrains.dokka dokka-maven-plugin ${dokka.version} pre-site dokka ``` by default files will be generated in `target/dokka` Configuring source links mapping: ```xml org.jetbrains.dokka dokka-maven-plugin ${dokka.version} pre-site dokka ${project.basedir}/src/main/kotlin http://github.com/me/myrepo ``` Please see the [Dokka Maven example project](https://github.com/JetBrains/kotlin-examples/tree/master/maven/dokka-maven-example) for an example. ### Using the Gradle plugin ```groovy buildscript { repositories { mavenLocal() jcenter() } dependencies { classpath "org.jetbrains.dokka:dokka-gradle-plugin:${dokka_version}" } } apply plugin: 'org.jetbrains.dokka' ``` To configure plugin use dokka lambda in the root scope. For example: ```groovy dokka { linkMapping { dir = "src/main/kotlin" url = "https://github.com/cy6erGn0m/vertx3-lang-kotlin/blob/master/src/main/kotlin" suffix = "#L" } } ``` To get it generated use gradle `dokka` task ```bash ./gradlew dokka ``` Please see the [Dokka Gradle example project](https://github.com/JetBrains/kotlin-examples/tree/master/gradle/dokka-gradle-example) for an example. ## Dokka Internals ### Documentation Model Dokka uses Kotlin-as-a-service technology to build `code model`, then processes it into `documentation model`. `Documentation model` is graph of items describing code elements such as classes, packages, functions, etc. Each node has semantic attached, e.g. Value:name -> Type:String means that some value `name` is of type `String`. Each reference between nodes also has semantic attached, and there are three of them: 1. Member - reference means that target is member of the source, form tree. 2. Detail - reference means that target describes source in more details, form tree. 3. Link - any link to any other node, free form. Member & Detail has reverse Owner reference, while Link's back reference is also Link. Nodes that are Details of other nodes cannot have Members. ### Rendering Docs When we have documentation model, we can render docs in various formats, languages and layouts. We have some core services: * FormatService -- represents output format * LocationService -- represents folder and file layout * SignatureGenerator -- represents target language by generating class/function/package signatures from model Basically, given the `documentation` as a model, we do this: ```kotlin val signatureGenerator = KotlinSignatureGenerator() val locationService = FoldersLocationService(arguments.outputDir) val markdown = JekyllFormatService(locationService, signatureGenerator) val generator = FileGenerator(signatureGenerator, locationService, markdown) generator.generate(documentation) ``` ## Building Dokka Dokka is built with Gradle. To build it, use `./gradlew build`. Alternatively, open the project directory in IntelliJ IDEA and use the IDE to build and run Dokka.