Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
116 lines (76 loc) · 5.55 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

116 lines (76 loc) · 5.55 KB

Linea documentation

Linea is a developer-ready layer 2 network, scaling Ethereum by providing an Ethereum-equivalent environment in which to execute transactions, which are then submitted to Ethereum Mainnet through a zero-knowledge rollup.

This documentation repository is built using Docusaurus, and the site itself is published at docs.linea.build.

See more information about how Consensys uses Docusaurus.

Contribute to the docs

See something missing? Error in our documentation? Create an issue here.

Alternatively, help us improve our documentation! Fork our repo, create a pull request, and tag us for review! (for help on this, see below).

Take a look at some good first issues to get started.

How to submit a suggestion or change

The best way to suggest a change to these docs is through a process known as a pull request. If you're not familiar with how that works, check out GitHub's guide here.

If you do intend to submit a pull request, please open an issue first, and link to it in your pull request. This is particularly important if you are an ecosystem contributor — submitting your details in an issue first will make it much easier for our docs team to process your contributions.

If that process is too involved for you, you can always open a thread on the Community forum, or a ticket on the Support page.

If you are familiar with making a pull request, we highly recommend that you run a version of these docs locally, and preview your changes locally, before submitting them. In fact, it's part of the PR process.

Contribute to community tutorials

If you've created fleshed-out guides and tutorials, or intend to, we'd love to feature your content in our community tutorials section.

First, create an issue describing the content you want to see added or intend to add. If you're representing an organization (such as a dapp), please use the ecosystem contribution issue form.

When you're ready to start work, fork our repo, create a pull request, and tag us for review!

Contribute to the Zero-Knowledge Glossary

Diving into zero-knowledge rollups and getting stumped by the technical jargon? We've started an open source Zero-Knowledge glossary to define some common terms you might encounter as you dive into the L2 landscape.

Fork our repo, and add a term in alphabetical order to docs/reference/glossary.md. Then, make a pull request and tag us for review!

Additional Resources

View the Consensys doc contribution guidelines for information on how to:

Running locally

You will need to have Node.js installed to run the live previews of the docs locally.

It is highly recommended that you use a tool like nvm to manage Node.js versions on your machine.

Installing recommended Node.js version with nvm

  1. Follow the above instructions to install nvm on your machine, or go here.
  2. Go to root folder of this project in your terminal.
  3. Run nvm install followed by nvm use. This will install the version specified by this project in the .nvmrc file.

Running this project

  1. Navigate to root folder of the project after installing Node.js

  2. Run the following in sequence, which only needs to be done once:

    npm install
    npm run prepare
  3. To preview and for every time afterwards:

    npm run start

Build

$ npm run build

This command generates static content into the build directory and can be served using any static contents hosting service.

Adding new words to the dictionary

This repository includes a linter, which you can think of as a spell-check that also checks code formatting and standards, and a lot more. It's possible that you will use a word in your content that is not known to the linter, and your build, or commit, will fail.

You can run the linter any time with the command npm run lint.

If the linter finds a word that it doesn't recognize, take a look at project-words.txt in the root directory; if the word that the linter caught is correctly spelled, and you wish it to pass the linter's test, add it to project-words.txt, save, add and commit those changes, and see if it passes.

For tidiness, please ensure you adhere to the alphabetical order established in project-words.txt.