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2 | 🤝 Contributing Tutorials |
:::warning This tutorial is a community contribution and is not supported by the Open WebUI team. It serves only as a demonstration on how to customize Open WebUI for your specific use case. Want to contribute? Check out the contributing tutorial. :::
Contributing Tutorials
We appreciate your interest in contributing tutorials to the Open WebUI documentation. Follow the steps below to set up your environment and submit your tutorial.
Steps
-
Fork the
openwebui/docs
GitHub Repository- Navigate to the Open WebUI Docs Repository on GitHub.
- Click the Fork button at the top-right corner to create a copy under your GitHub account.
-
Enable GitHub Actions
- In your forked repository, navigate to the Actions tab.
- If prompted, enable GitHub Actions by following the on-screen instructions.
-
Enable GitHub Pages
- Go to Settings > Pages in your forked repository.
- Under Source, select the branch you want to deploy (e.g.,
main
) and the folder (e.g.,/docs
). - Click Save to enable GitHub Pages.
-
Configure GitHub Environment Variables
- In your forked repository, go to Settings > Secrets and variables > Actions > Variables.
- Add the following environment variables:
BASE_URL
set to/docs
(or your chosen base URL for the fork).SITE_URL
set tohttps://<your-github-username>.github.io/
.
📝 Updating the GitHub Pages Workflow and Config File
If you need to adjust deployment settings to fit your custom setup, here’s what to do:
a. Update .github/workflows/gh-pages.yml
-
Add environment variables for
BASE_URL
andSITE_URL
to the build step if necessary:- name: Build env: BASE_URL: ${{ vars.BASE_URL }} SITE_URL: ${{ vars.SITE_URL }} run: npm run build
b. Modify docusaurus.config.ts
to Use Environment Variables
-
Update
docusaurus.config.ts
to use these environment variables, with default values for local or direct deployment:const config: Config = { title: "Open WebUI", tagline: "ChatGPT-Style WebUI for LLMs (Formerly Ollama WebUI)", favicon: "images/favicon.png", url: process.env.SITE_URL || "https://openwebui.com", baseUrl: process.env.BASE_URL || "/", ... };
-
This setup ensures consistent deployment behavior for forks and custom setups.
-
Run the
gh-pages
GitHub Workflow- In the Actions tab, locate the
gh-pages
workflow. - Trigger the workflow manually if necessary, or it may run automatically based on your setup.
- In the Actions tab, locate the
-
Browse to Your Forked Copy
- Visit
https://<your-github-username>.github.io/<BASE_URL>
to view your forked documentation.
- Visit
-
Draft Your Changes
- In your forked repository, navigate to the appropriate directory (e.g.,
docs/tutorial/
). - Create a new markdown file for your tutorial or edit existing ones.
- Ensure that your tutorial includes the unsupported warning banner.
- In your forked repository, navigate to the appropriate directory (e.g.,
-
Submit a Pull Request
- Once your tutorial is ready, commit your changes to your forked repository.
- Navigate to the original
open-webui/docs
repository. - Click New Pull Request and select your fork and branch as the source.
- Provide a descriptive title and description for your PR.
- Submit the pull request for review.
Important
Community-contributed tutorials must include the the following:
:::warning
This tutorial is a community contribution and is not supported by the Open WebUI team. It serves only as a demonstration on how to customize Open WebUI for your specific use case. Want to contribute? Check out the contributing tutorial.
:::
:::tip How to Test Docusaurus Locally
You can test your Docusaurus site locally with the following commands:
npm install # Install dependencies
npm run build # Build the site for production
This will help you catch any issues before deploying :::