Kitab is the ideal companion for Documentation-Driven Quality for PHP programs.
The goal of Kitab is twofold, render and test the documentation:
Generate a quality and searchable documentation based on your code. The documentation inside your code is compiled into static HTML files with a powerful static search engine,
Test the documentation itself. Indeed, a documentation contains examples, and these examples are compiled into test suites that are run directly to ensure the examples are still up-to-date and working.
Kitab (كتاب) means “book” in Arabic. It should pronounced /kitaːb/.
Kitab is able to compile the documentation inside your code into static HTML files. A carefully crafted design is provided to ensure a great look for your documentation. This is possible to customize the logo, the project name, etc.
A static search engine is compiled specifically for your documentation. It contains all the modern features we can expect from a search engine, like tokenizing, stemming, stop word filtering, term frequency-inverse document frequency (TF-ID), inverted index etc. The search engine database is pre-computed and optimized to load as fast as possible.
The more your documentation provides details and smart vocabulary, the more the search engine will be able to provide relevant results.
The following command line compiles the documentation from your code
in src
into HTML files stored in doc
:
$ ./bin/kitab compile --open --with-composer --output-directory doc src
The --with-composer
option asks Kitab to use Composer for PSR-4
mapping definitions. This is useful to map README.md
files to
namespace directories, more below. The --open
option opens the
documentation in your default browser as soon as it is generated
successfully.
Documentation test suites, aka DocTest, are generated based on the examples present in your documentation. Examples are compiled into test suites and executed on-the-fly. A cache is generated to avoid to re-compile examples into test suites each time.
For instance, the following example will succeed:
/**
* Classical sum of two integers.
*
* # Examples
*
* ```php
* $x = 1;
* $y = 2;
*
* assert(3 === sum($x + $y));
* ```
*/
function sum(int $x, int $y): int
{
return $x + $y;
}
The following command line generates and executes the documentation
test suites from the src
directory:
$ ./bin/kitab test src
Behind the scene, Kitab uses the atoum test framework.
Kitab requires PHP and NodeJS to be installed: PHP because this is a PHP program, and NodeJS to pre-compile the static search engine (which is written in Elm).
Kitab expects documentation in your PHP code to be written in CommonMark (a standard variant of Markdown). It can be mixed with HTML.
Each block of documentation can declare sections, and any kind of CommonMark elements, like:
/**
* This is a block of documentation, attached to a PHP class.
*
* # Examples
*
* An example illustrates how to use the documented entity, here the
* class `C`.
*
* ```php
* $c = new C();
* ```
*/
class C { }
There are only 2 special section names: Examples, and Exceptions. Use them to introduce one or more examples, and exceptions explanations. This is a common standard used by many other tools.
Any kind of entities can be documented: Classes, interfaces, traits, class attributes, constants, methods, and functions.
Namespaces cannot be documented directly from the code, because of the
way they are declared (entities are declared inside a namespace; the
namespace is not declared as is). However, they can be documented
through special files, named README.md
. If your code
follows the PSR-4 specification, then run
Kitab with the --with-composer
option to specify the location of the
composer.json
file of your project in order to allow Kitab to
automatically find PSR-4 mappings. These mappings are necessary to
transform a namespace into a path to a directory. For each directory
representing a namespace, if a README.md
file exists, then it will
be used as the documentation of this particular namespace. For
instance, Kitab\
maps to src/
, so the documentation for
the Kitab
\Compiler
namespace is
expected to be find in the src/Compiler/README.md
file, that
simple. This is pretty straightforward at usage.
Entity and namespace documentations are inserted at the top of their respective documentation page. This is the introduction. The rest of the page contains information about the entity or the namespace.
Documentation can contain block of codes. This is possible to specify the type of the block with this standard notation:
```type
code
```
where type
can be php
, http
, sh
, html
, css
etc.
The type has 2 impacts:
Indeed, all code blocks inside the Examples and Exceptions Sections
can be compiled into test suites with the ./bin/kitab test
command. For instance, with the php
code block type, one can specify
the expectation of the test case:
php
indicates the test case must be a success,php,ignore
indicates the test case must be skiped (only
rendered, not tested),php,must_throw
indicates the test case must throw an exception
of any kind,php,must_throw(E)
indicates the test case must throw an
exception of kind E
.Consequently, the following example will be a success:
/**
* Generate a runtime exception.
*
* # Examples
*
* ```php,must_throw(RuntimeException)
* panic('Hello World');
* ```
*/
function panic(string $message): RuntimeException
{
throw new RuntimeException($message);
}
It is possible to write specific code block handlers. It means that
you can write extensions to Kitab to compile your documentation into
specific tests. To learn more, check the
Kitab\Compiler\Target\DocTest\CodeBlockHandler\Definition
interface
and implementations.
It is possible to configure Kitab with external PHP files. The file names are free, but we recommend the following:
.kitab.target.html.php
to configure the compilation of the
documentation to HTML,.kitab.target.doctest.php
to configure the test of the
documentation.Both files must respectively return an instance of the
Kitab\Compiler\Target\Html\Configuration
and
Kitab\Compiler\Target\DocTest\Configuration
classes.
The following example illustrates a common .kitab.target.html.php
file:
$configuration = new Kitab\Compiler\Target\Html\Configuration();
$configuration->defaultNamespace = 'Kitab';
$configuration->logoURL = 'https://example.org/logo.png';
$configuration->projectName = 'Kitab';
$configuration->composerFile = __DIR__ . '/composer.json';
return $configuration;
The following example illustrates a common .kitab.target.doctest.php
file:
$configuration = new Kitab\Compiler\Target\DocTest\Configuration();
$configuration->autoloaderFile = __DIR__ . '/vendor/autoload.php';
$configuration->concurrentProcesses = 4;
return $configuration;
Both commands kitab compile
and kitab test
accept an option named
--configuration-file
to use a particular configuration file for the
defaults, e.g.:
$ ./bin/kitab compile --configuration-file .kitab.target.html.php --output-directory doc src