Curious about what Sami generates? Have a look at the Symfony API.
First, get Sami from Github (or integrate it as a dependency in your project Composer file -- you are using Composer, right?):
https://github.com/fabpot/Sami
You can also download an archive from Github.
As Sami uses Composer to manage its dependencies, installing it is a matter of running composer:
$ composer.phar install
Check that everything worked as expected by executing the sami.php
file
without any arguments:
$ php sami.php
Before generating documentation, you must create a configuration file. Here is the simplest possible one:
<?php
return new Sami\Sami('/path/to/symfony/src');
The configuration file must return an instance of Sami\Sami
and the first
argument of the constructor is the path to the code you want to generate
documentation for.
Actually, instead of a directory, you can use any valid PHP iterator (and for that matter any instance of the Symfony Finder class):
<?php
use Sami\Sami;
use Symfony\Component\Finder\Finder;
$iterator = Finder::create()
->files()
->name('*.php')
->exclude('Resources')
->exclude('Tests')
->in('/path/to/symfony/src')
;
return new Sami($iterator);
The Sami
constructor optionally takes an array of options as a second
argument:
return new Sami($iterator, array(
'theme' => 'symfony',
'title' => 'Symfony2 API',
'build_dir' => __DIR__.'/build',
'cache_dir' => __DIR__.'/cache',
'default_opened_level' => 2,
));
And here is how you can configure different versions:
<?php
use Sami\Sami;
use Sami\Version\GitVersionCollection;
use Symfony\Component\Finder\Finder;
$iterator = Finder::create()
->files()
->name('*.php')
->exclude('Resources')
->exclude('Tests')
->in($dir = '/path/to/symfony/src')
;
// generate documentation for all v2.0.* tags, the 2.0 branch, and the master one
$versions = GitVersionCollection::create($dir)
->addFromTags('v2.0.*')
->add('2.0', '2.0 branch')
->add('master', 'master branch')
;
return new Sami($iterator, array(
'theme' => 'symfony',
'versions' => $versions,
'title' => 'Symfony2 API',
'build_dir' => __DIR__.'/../build/sf2/%version%',
'cache_dir' => __DIR__.'/../cache/sf2/%version%',
'default_opened_level' => 2,
));
To generate documentation for a PHP 5.2 project, simply set the
simulate_namespaces
option to true
.
You can find more configuration examples under the examples/
directory of
the source code.
Now that we have a configuration file, let's generate the API documentation:
$ php sami.php update /path/to/config.php
The generated documentation can be found under the configured build/
directory (note that the client side search engine does not work on Chrome due
to JavaScript execution restriction, unless Chrome is started with the
"--allow-file-access-from-files" option -- it works fine in Firefox).
By default, Sami is configured to run in "incremental" mode. It means that
when running the update
command, Sami only re-generates the files that needs
to be updated based on what has changed in your code since the last execution.
Sami also detects problems in your phpdoc and can tell you what you need to
fix if you add the -v
option:
$ php sami.php update /path/to/config.php -v
If the default themes do not suit your needs, you can very easily create a new one, or just override an existing one.
A theme is just a directory with a manifest.yml
file that describes the
theme (this is a YAML file):
name: symfony
parent: enhanced
The above configuration creates a new symfony
theme based on the enhanced
built-in theme. To override a template, just create a file with the same name
as the original one. For instance, here is how you can extend the default
class template to prefix the class name with "Class " in the class page title:
{# pages/class.twig #}
{% extends 'default/pages/class.twig' %}
{% block title %}Class {{ parent() }}{% endblock %}
If you are familiar with Twig, you will be able to very easily tweak every aspect of the templates as everything has been well isolated in named Twig blocks.
A theme can also add more templates and static files. Here is the manifest for the default theme:
name: default
static:
'stylesheet.css': 'stylesheet.css'
global:
'index.twig': 'index.html'
'namespaces.twig': 'namespaces-frame.html'
'classes.twig': 'classes-frame.html'
'pages/opensearch.twig': 'opensearch.xml'
'pages/index.twig': 'doc-index.html'
'pages/namespaces.twig': 'namespaces.html'
'pages/interfaces.twig': 'interfaces.html'
'pages/classes.twig': 'classes.html'
namespace:
'namespace.twig': '%s/namespace-frame.html'
'pages/namespace.twig': '%s.html'
class:
'pages/class.twig': '%s.html'
Files are contained into sections, depending on how Sami needs to treat them:
-
static
: Files are copied as is (for assets like images, stylesheets, or JavaScript files); -
global
: Templates that do not depend on the current class context; -
namespace
: Templates that should be generated for every namespace; -
class
: Templates that should be generated for every class.