* How to build flood documentation 1. Get DocBook DTD and XSL For DTD go to: http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/ ...and download recent DocBook DTD (v4.2 at the time of writting). For XSL part go to: http://sourceforge.net/projects/docbook/ and download recent docbook-xsl (1.61.3 at the time of writting). Unpack tarballs and move to suitable directory. Most Linux distros use /usr/share/sgml/docbook for that, but it can be anywhere. To make things simple, please declare enviroment variable DOCBOOK, that points to XSL root directory. 2. Get recent toolchain You'll need decent XSLT procesor, since DocBook stylesheets are complex. Just pick one: Xalan -- http://xml.apache.org/xalan-j/ Saxon -- http://saxon.sf.net/ xsltproc -- http://www.xmlsoft.org/ sablotron -- http://www.gingerall.org/charlie/ga/xml/p_sab.xml XT -- http://www.jclark.com/xml/xt.html Author of this document uses xsltproc most of the time, and because of that Makefile is tailored at this software. If you happen to like other XSLT engine -- please post a patch. 3. Change DTD location Source XML file (docbook/flood.xml) needs to be tweaked a bit. You have to change DTD location there (which reflects my development enviroment) to match your system. Just edit line number 2 with your favourite editor. 3. Translate files Just use your XSLT engine. Feed it: 1. DocBook source -- docbook/flood.xml 2. DocBook XSL -- $DOCBOOK/xhtml/chunked.xsl Of course, you can substitute another format instead of xhtml. Look at XSL root directory to see what formats are available. 4. Read docs, find bugs, post patches You might look for FIXME strings in XML source if you need an issue to work on. When adding new configration element, look for template near end of XML source. You might find following resources handy when preparing patches: http://www.docbook.org/tdg/ http://www.dpawson.co.uk/docbook/ http://docbook.org/wiki/