Access to Memory is a web-based, open source application for standards-based archival description and access in a multilingual, multi-repository environment. Our target users are archivists, librarians, and anyone working to describe and provide access to archival material. This repository holds the documentation for the AtoM project, including the User, Administrator, and Developer Manuals.
The AtoM documentation can be found on the Access to Memory website, at:
We version the documentation for each major AtoM release. The docs are written in reStructured Text (reST), and generated using the Sphinx documentation generator. Learn more about our documentation here:
You are free to copy, modify, and distribute the AtoM documentation with attribution under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 4.0 (CC-BY-SA-4.0) license. See the LICENCE file for details.
To build a local, offline version of the documentation:
- Decide where the documentation will be stored on your computer.
- In a Terminal window, use the
cd
command to navigate to this location. - Create a local copy of the documentation by running:
git clone https://github.com/artefactual/atom-docs.git
- Move to the documentation repository with:
cd atom-docs
- Create a Python virtual environment to contain all the required tools:
python3 -m venv .env
- Activate the virtual environment:
source .env/bin/activate
- Install the requirements:
pip install -r requirements.txt
- Build the documentation:
sphinx-build -D language=en ./ _build/html/en # for English
- Access the documentation:
python3 -m http.server -d _build/html/
The HTML files for the documentation will be in
atom/_build/html/
.
You can open the files in a browser of your choice, without having any access
to the Internet, by accessing http://localhost:8000
.
While this offline version will not have the AtoM web theme, you will gain access to improved search features.
Thank you for considering a contribution to the AtoM documentation! For more information on contributing, please see the documentation pages on our AtoM wiki. The wiki describes our AtoM documentation, gives instructions on how to contribute to the documentation, and includes a tutorial and style guide of best practices for new contributions. Following these guidelines helps us assess your changes faster and makes it easier for us to merge your submission.
As contributors and maintainers of AtoM, we at Artefactual pledge to respect all people who contribute through reporting issues, posting feature requests, updating documentation, submitting pull requests or patches, and other activities, including participating in our User Forum.
We are committed to making participation in the AtoM project a harassment-free experience for everyone, regardless of level of experience, sex, gender identity and expression, sexual orientation, ability, personal appearance, body size, race, age, or religion.
Examples of unacceptable behavior by participants include the use of sexual language or imagery, derogatory comments or personal attacks, trolling, public or private harassment, insults, or other unprofessional conduct.
Project maintainers have the right and responsibility to remove, edit, or reject comments, commits, code, wiki edits, issues, Forum posts, and other contributions that are not aligned to this Code of Conduct. Project maintainers who do not follow the Code of Conduct may be removed from the project team.
If you feel you've encountered instances of abusive, harassing, or otherwise unacceptable behavior, please let us know.