Annotation for doc review
John Baldwin
jhb at freebsd.org
Wed Jul 9 20:41:01 UTC 2014
On Friday, July 04, 2014 4:54:42 pm Warren Block wrote:
> The phabricator instance has shown that some review can be done more
> easily.
>
> We've talked before about having periodic reviews of parts of the
> documentation. It turns out that experts rarely read the docs on things
> they know about, but are the ones that can produce very valuable
> feedback.
>
> Phabricator probably does not lend itself well to reviewing our DocBook
> documents. The source and rendered versions are just too different to
> review easily, even for those who are familiar with DocBook.
>
> Ideally, we'd be able to show a rendered HTML version of the document
> and let people comment on it.
Definitely agreed.
> There are commercial services out there for that, but also free
> Javascript implementations that we could use directly, like this:
>
> http://annotatorjs.org/
>
> Note that I am not suggesting this would go on our documentation web
> pages. Instead, we would create a small rendered version of part of a
> document, say one subsection out of a chapter, and put that up somewhere
> for review and annotation. At the end of a limited time, maybe a week
> or two, the annotations would be gone through, adapted, and changes
> applied. Then the process is repeated for a different documentation
> section. The annotated web page is just temporary.
>
> The biggest problems I see are
>
> user authentication: so we can avoid spam and vandalism, and track
> suggestions by user. For best results, this would use existing
> credentials and not require creating a new account
Talk with clusteradm@ about the setup they use for bugzilla (and I
believe are going to adopt for phabric)
> logging: annotations must be saved until they can be processed
>
> If these problems can be addressed, we can make it doc review easy for
> everyone.
This sounds like an excellent idea.
--
John Baldwin
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