11 KiB
Configuration
Guide to all available configuration settings.
Introduction
Project settings are always configured by using a YAML configuration file in the
project directory named mkdocs.yml
.
As a minimum this configuration file must contain the site_name
setting. All
other settings are optional.
Project information
site_name
This is a required setting, and should be a string that is used as the main title for the project documentation. For example:
site_name: Marshmallow Generator
When rendering the theme this setting will be passed as the site_name
context
variable.
site_url
Set the canonical URL of the site. This will add a link tag with the canonical URL to the generated HTML header.
default: null
repo_url
When set, provides a link to your GitHub or Bitbucket repository on each page.
repo_url: https://github.com/example/repository/
default: null
repo_name
When set, provides a link to your GitHub or Bitbucket repository on each page.
default: 'GitHub'
or 'Bitbucket'
if the repo_url
matches those
domains, otherwise null
edit_uri
Path from the base repo_url
to the docs directory when directly viewing a
page, accounting for specifics of the repository host (e.g. GitHub, Bitbucket,
etc), the branch, and the docs directory itself. Mkdocs concatenates repo_url
and edit_uri
, and appends the input path of the page.
When set, provides a link directly to the page in your source repository. This
makes it easier to find and edit the source for the page. If repo_url
is not
set, this option is ignored.
For example, for a GitHub-hosted repository, the edit_uri
would be as follows.
(Note the edit
path and master
branch...)
edit_uri: edit/master/docs/
For a Bitbucket-hosted repository, the equivalent edit_uri
would be as
follows. (Note the src
path and default
branch...)
edit_uri: src/default/docs/
For other repository hosts, edit_uri
works the same way. Simply specify the
relative path to the docs directory.
default: edit/master/docs/
or src/default/docs/
for GitHub or Bitbucket
repos, respectively, if repo_url
matches those domains, otherwise null
!!! note "Note:"
On GitHub, the edit
path opens the page in the online GitHub editor. This
functionality requires that the user have and be logged in to a GitHub
account. Otherwise, the user will be redirected to a login/signup page.
Alternatively, use the blob
path to open a read-only view, which supports
anonymous access. E.g. blob/master/docs/
site_description
Set the site description. This will add a meta tag to the generated HTML header.
default: null
site_author
Set the name of the author. This will add a meta tag to the generated HTML header.
default: null
copyright
Set the copyright information to be included in the documentation by the theme.
default: null
google_analytics
Set the Google analytics tracking configuration.
google_analytics: ['UA-36723568-3', 'mkdocs.org']
default: null
remote_branch
Set the remote branch to commit to when using gh-deploy
to deploy to Github
Pages. This option can be overridden by a command line option in gh-deploy
.
default: gh-pages
remote_name
Set the remote name to push to when using gh-deploy
to deploy to Github Pages.
This option can be overridden by a command line option in gh-deploy
.
default: origin
Documentation layout
pages
This setting is used to determine the set of pages that should be built for the
documentation. For example, the following would create Introduction, User Guide
and About pages, given the three source files index.md
, user-guide.md
and
about.md
, respectively.
pages:
- 'Introduction': 'index.md'
- 'User Guide': 'user-guide.md'
- 'About': 'about.md'
See the section on configuring pages and navigation for a more detailed breakdown, including how to create sub-sections.
default: By default pages
will contain an alphanumerically sorted, nested
list of all the Markdown files found within the docs_dir
and its
sub-directories. If none are found it will be []
(an empty list).
Build directories
theme
Sets the theme of your documentation site, for a list of available themes visit styling your docs.
default: 'mkdocs'
theme_dir
Lets you set a directory to a custom theme. This can either be a relative directory, in which case it is resolved relative to the directory containing your configuration file, or it can be an absolute directory path.
See styling your docs for details if you would like to tweak an existing theme.
See custom themes if you would like to build your own theme from the ground up.
default: null
docs_dir
Lets you set the directory containing the documentation source markdown files. This can either be a relative directory, in which case it is resolved relative to the directory containing you configuration file, or it can be an absolute directory path.
default: 'docs'
site_dir
Lets you set the directory where the output HTML and other files are created. This can either be a relative directory, in which case it is resolved relative to the directory containing you configuration file, or it can be an absolute directory path.
default: 'site'
!!! note "Note:"
If you are using source code control you will normally want to ensure that
your build output files are not committed into the repository, and only
keep the source files under version control. For example, if using git
you might add the following line to your .gitignore
file:
site/
If you're using another source code control tool, you'll want to check its
documentation on how to ignore specific directories.
extra_css
Set a list of CSS files in your docs_dir
to be included by the theme. For
example, the following example will include the the extra.css file within the
css subdirectory in your docs_dir.
extra_css:
- css/extra.css
- css/second_extra.css
default: []
(an empty list).
extra_javascript
Set a list of JavaScript files in your docs_dir
to be included by the theme.
See the example in extra_css for usage.
default: []
(an empty list).
extra_templates
Set a list of templates in your docs_dir
to be built by MkDocs. To see more
about writing templates for MkDocs read the documentation about custom themes
and specifically the section about the variables that are available to
templates. See the example in extra_css for usage.
default: []
(an empty list).
extra
A set of key value pairs, where the values can be any valid YAML construct, that will be passed to the template. This allows for great flexibility when creating custom themes.
For example, if you are using a theme that supports displaying the project version, you can pass it to the theme like this:
extra:
version: 1.0
default: By default extra
will be an empty key value mapping.
Preview controls
use_directory_urls
This setting controls the style used for linking to pages within the documentation.
The following table demonstrates how the URLs used on the site differ when
setting use_directory_urls
to true
or false
.
Source file | Generated HTML | use_directory_urls=true | use_directory_urls=false |
---|---|---|---|
index.md | index.html | / | /index.html |
api-guide.md | api-guide/index.html | /api-guide/ | /api-guide/index.html |
about.md | about/index.html | /about/ | /about/index.html |
The default style of use_directory_urls=true
creates more user friendly URLs,
and is usually what you'll want to use.
The alternate style can occasionally be useful if you want your documentation to remain properly linked when opening pages directly from the file system, because it create links that point directly to the target file rather than the target directory.
default: true
strict
Determines if a broken link to a page within the documentation is considered a warning or an error (link to a page not listed in the pages setting). Set to true to halt processing when a broken link is found, false prints a warning.
default: false
dev_addr
Determines the address used when running mkdocs serve
. Setting this allows you
to use another port, or allows you to make the service accessible over your
local network by using the 0.0.0.0
address.
As with all settings, you can set this from the command line, which can be useful, for example:
mkdocs serve --dev-addr=0.0.0.0:80 # Run on port 80, on the local network.
default: '127.0.0.1:8000'
Formatting options
markdown_extensions
MkDocs uses the Python Markdown library to translate Markdown files
into HTML. Python Markdown supports a variety of extensions
that customize how pages are formatted. This setting lets you enable a list of
extensions beyond the ones that MkDocs uses by default (meta
, toc
, tables
,
and fenced_code
).
For example, to enable the SmartyPants typography extension, use:
markdown_extensions:
- smarty
Some extensions provide configuration options of their own. If you would like to
set any configuration options, then you can nest a key/value mapping
(option_name: option value
) of any options that a given extension supports.
See the documentation for the extension you are using to determine what options
they support.
For example, to enable permalinks in the (included) toc
extension, use:
markdown_extensions:
- toc:
permalink: True
Note that a colon (:
) must follow the extension name (toc
) and then on a new
line the option name and value must be indented and seperated by a colon. If you
would like to define multipe options for a single extension, each option must be
defined on a seperate line:
markdown_extensions:
- toc:
permalink: True
separator: "_"
Add an additional item to the list for each extension. If you have no configuration options to set for a specific extension, then simply omit options for that extension:
markdown_extensions:
- smarty
- toc:
permalink: True
- sane_lists
!!! note "See Also:" The Python-Markdown documentation provides a list of extensions which are available out-of-the-box. For a list of configuration options available for a given extension, see the documentation for that extension.
You may also install and use various [third party extensions][3rd]. Consult
the documentation provided by those extensions for installation instructions
and available configuration options.
default: []