Documentation guidelines
The nRF Connect SDK documentation is written in two formats:
reStructuredText (RST) for conceptual documentation
doxygen for API documentation
RST guidelines
See Zephyr’s Documentation Guidelines for a short introduction to RST and Zephyr documentation conventions. More information about RST is available in the reStructuredText Primer.
The nRF Connect SDK documentation follows the Zephyr style guide, with the addition of the following rules.
Title and headings
Keep titles and headings short and to the point.
Add a reference label above the title.
For example, this page has the reference label
.. _doc_styleguide:
. You can see this in the RST source file of this page.Do not repeat the section name in the titles of subpages, such as sample when adding a sample.
Table of contents
If your page uses sections, add the .. contents::
directive just under the page title.
This will add a linked table of contents at the top of the page.
For easy navigation, do not include a table of contents if the page has a list of subpages.
Subpages
Use the .. toctree::
directive at the bottom of a page to list pages that are located further down in the hierarchy.
For example, the nRF Connect SDK documentation page has a list of subpages, which includes this page you are currently reading.
For a clean structure, pages with the subpages section must not contain heading-based sections or a table of contents.
Linking
You can use different linking and inclusion methods, depending on the content you want to link to.
Hyperlinks
External links
All external links must be defined in the links.txt
file.
Do not define them directly in the RST file.
This creates one location for validating links, making it easier to update broken links.
Define each link only once in links.txt
.
If you are adding a new link, make sure it has not already been added.
To use the link, use `link text`_
.
If you want to change the link text, you can override it with the following syntax: `new link text <original link text_>`_
.
If you need to use several different link texts for the same link, you can add more default link texts in the links.txt
file, for example:
.. _`nRF Programmer`:
.. _`nRF Programmer mobile app`: https://www.nordicsemi.com/Products/Development-tools/nrf-programmer
Internal links
For internal links, use :ref:
followed by the label of the target document or section in backticks:
:ref:`target_label`
If the link is targeted to another documentation set, for example Zephyr:
:ref:`zephyr:coding_style`
If you want to change the link text:
:ref:`Zephyr coding style <zephyr:coding_style>`
Replacements
If you need to repeat some information, do not duplicate the text.
Use the .. |tag| replace:: replacement
command to reuse the text.
Whenever you use the tag in an RST document, it will be replaced with the text specified for the tag.
You can reuse the content with the tag either on one page or on multiple pages:
To reuse the text on one page, define the
|tag|
and the replacement text before the reference label and the page title.To reuse the text on multiple pages, define the
|tag|
and the replacement text innrf/doc/nrf/shortcuts.txt
.
For example, on this page, the |gl|
tag is defined for local usage and will be replaced with guidelines.
This tag is not available on other pages.
The page is also using the |NCS|
tag that is defined in shortcuts.txt
and can be used on all documentation pages in the nRF Connect SDK project.
Breathe
The Breathe Sphinx plugin provides a bridge between RST and doxygen.
The doxygen documentation is not automatically included in RST.
Therefore, every group must be explicitly added to an RST file.
For example, the code below adds the bluetooth_throughput
group to the RST document, and includes the public members of any classes in the group.
The Breathe documentation contains information about what you can link to and how to do it.
.. doxygengroup:: bluetooth_throughput
:project: nrf
:members:
Note
Including a group on a page does not include all its subgroups automatically.
To include subgroups, add the :inner:
option.
However, if subgroups are defined in separate files, you should rather list them manually on the page of the group they belong to, so that you can include information on where they are defined.
To link directly to a doxygen reference from RST, use the following Breathe domains:
Function:
:c:func:
Structure:
:c:struct:
Type:
:c:type:
Enum (the list):
:c:enum:
Enumerator (an item):
:c:enumerator:
Macro or define:
:c:macro:
Structure member:
:c:member:
Kconfig
To link to the Kconfig options from RST, use the :kconfig:option:
domain:
:kconfig:option:`CONFIG_DEBUG`
Doxygen guidelines
These are the guidelines for the doxygen-based API documentation.
General documentation guidelines
Always write full sentences, and end them with a period.
Exception: Sentence fragments are acceptable for descriptions of variables, structs, and enums.
Ensure that all documented items belong to a correct group (see the section below).
Use capitalization sparingly. When in doubt, use lowercase.
Break the line after 100 characters.
Use
@note
only in the details section, and only when really needed for emphasis.Use
@warning
only if an operating procedure or practice, which, if not correctly followed, could result in personal injury or loss of life.
File headers and groups
@file
element is always required at the start of a file.@brief
is not needed for@file
.@defgroup
or@addgroup
usually follows@file
. You can divide a file into several groups.@{
must open the group,@}
must close it.
Add
@brief
for every defgroup.@details
is optional within the defgroup.
/**
* @file
* @defgroup bt_gatt_pool BLE GATT attribute pool API
* @{
* @brief BLE GATT attribute pools.
*/
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
#include <zephyr/bluetooth/gatt.h>
#include <zephyr/bluetooth/uuid.h>
/**
* @brief Register a primary service descriptor.
*
* @param _svc GATT service descriptor.
* @param _svc_uuid_init Service UUID.
*/
#define BT_GATT_POOL_SVC_GET(_svc, _svc_uuid_init) \
{ \
struct bt_uuid *_svc_uuid = _svc_uuid_init; \
bt_gatt_pool_svc_get(_svc, _svc_uuid); \
}
[...]
/** @brief Return a CCC descriptor to the pool.
*
* @param attr Attribute describing the CCC descriptor to be returned.
*/
void bt_gatt_pool_ccc_put(struct bt_gatt_attr const *attr);
#if CONFIG_BT_GATT_POOL_STATS != 0
/** @brief Print basic module statistics (containing pool size usage).
*/
void bt_gatt_pool_stats_print(void);
#endif
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif
/**
* @}
*/
Functions
Do not use
@fn
. Instead, document each function where it is defined.@brief
is mandatory.Start the brief with the imperative form (for example “do something”).
/** @brief Request a read operation to be executed from Secure Firmware. /** @brief Send Boot Keyboard Input Report.
@details
is optional. You can introduce the additional information using@details
or a blank line after@brief
.Use
@param
for every parameter.Always add a parameter description. Use a sentence fragment (no verb) with a period at the end.
Make sure the parameter documentation within the function is consistently using the parameter type:
[in]
,[out]
, or[in,out]
.* @param[out] destination Pointer to destination array where the content is * to be copied. * @param[in] addr Address to be copied from. * @param[in] len Number of bytes to copy.
If you include more than one
@sa
(“see also”, optional), add them like this:@sa first_function @sa second_function
Use
@return
or@retval
instead of@returns
.Use
@return
to describe a generic return value without a specific value (for example,@return The length of ...
,@return The handle
). Usually, there is only one return value.* @return Initializer that sets up the pipe, length, and byte array for * content of the TX data.
Use
@retval
for specific return values (for example,@retval true
,@retval CONN_ERROR
). Describe the condition for each of the return values (for example, “If the function completes successfully”, “If the connection cannot be established”).* @retval 0 If the operation was successful. * Otherwise, a (negative) error code is returned. * @retval (-ENOTSUP) Special error code used when the UUID * of the service does not match the expected UUID.
Here is an example of a fully defined function:
/** @brief Request a random number from the Secure Firmware.
*
* This function provides a True Random Number from the on-board random number generator.
*
* @note Currently, the RNG hardware runs each time this function is called. This
* consumes significant time and power.
*
* @param[out] output The random number. Must be at least @p len long.
* @param[in] len The length of the output array. Currently, @p len must be
* 144.
* @param[out] olen The length of the random number provided.
*
* @retval 0 If the operation was successful.
* @retval -EINVAL If @p len is invalid. Currently, @p len must be 144.
*/
int spm_request_random_number(uint8_t *output, size_t len, size_t *olen);
Enums
Place the documentation block above the enum. The documentation for the elements inside the enum can be above them or inline.
An example with documentation preceding the documented element:
/** HID Service Protocol Mode events. */
enum hids_pm_evt {
/** Boot mode entered. */
HIDS_PM_EVT_BOOT_MODE_ENTERED,
/** Report mode entered. */
HIDS_PM_EVT_REPORT_MODE_ENTERED,
};
An example with the documentation inline (note the less than sign < after the asterisks **):
/** @brief PDN library event. */
enum pdn_event {
PDN_EVENT_CNEC_ESM, /**< +CNEC ESM error code. */
PDN_EVENT_ACTIVATED, /**< PDN connection activated. */
PDN_EVENT_DEACTIVATED, /**< PDN connection deactivated. */
PDN_EVENT_IPV6_UP, /**< PDN has IPv6 connectivity. */
PDN_EVENT_IPV6_DOWN, /**< PDN has lost IPv6 connectivity. */
Structs
The documentation block must precede the documented element.
Make sure to add :members:
when you include the API documentation in RST; otherwise, the member documentation will not show up.
In the RST file:
API documentation
*****************
| Header file: :file:`include/bluetooth/gatt_dm.h`
| Source file: :file:`subsys/bluetooth/gatt_dm.c`
.. doxygengroup:: bt_gatt_dm
:project: nrf
:members:
In the header file:
/** @brief Event header structure.
*
* @warning When an event structure is defined, application event header must be placed
* as the first field.
*/
struct app_event_header {
/** Linked list node used to chain events. */
sys_dlist_t node;
/** Pointer to the event type object. */
const struct event_type *type_id;
};
Note
Always add a name for the struct. Avoid using unnamed structs due to Sphinx parser issue.
References
To link to functions, enums, or structs from within doxygen itself, use the @ref
keyword.
/** @brief Event header structure.
* Use this structure with the function @ref function_name and
* this structure is related to another structure, @ref structure_name.
*/
Note
Linking to functions does not currently work due to Breathe issue #438.
Typedefs
The documentation block must precede the documented element.
/**
* @brief Download client asynchronous event handler.
*
* Through this callback, the application receives events, such as
* download of a fragment, download completion, or errors.
*
* If the callback returns a non-zero value, the download stops.
* To resume the download, use @ref download_client_start().
*
* @param[in] event The event.
*
* @retval 0 The download continues.
* @retval non-zero The download stops.
*/
typedef int (*download_client_callback_t)(const struct download_client_evt *event);