Developer Portal

Problem
"Upon arriving on the MediaWiki and Wikitech home pages, I was instantly lost." -- Ashwin Bhumbla

"MediaWiki documentation is not only infamously incomplete, but also terribly scattered." -- Waldyrious

Based on impressions on Project:Support desk, mailing lists, IRC, Phabricator, in outreach programs, etc., we have many potential entrance places for developers interested in certain technical areas.

Some overlap, some links between technologies might be missing, some documentation could be more discoverable, some documentation is dispersed across several websites, sometimes we lack documentation, sometimes we have too much documentation, sometimes our documentation is outdated.

Goal
Create an organization strategy for identifying and maintaining key documentation, and establish a central place which lists all entrance points to relevant documentation about technical areas of Wikimedia's ecosystem. Target groups are existing and future developers of Wikimedia software projects, and developers interacting via code with Wikimedia software projects or Wikimedia hosted services and data.

The main intention of this initiative is funneling and allowing everyone replying to questions where to find developer documentation to ideally point to one single place.

Furthermore, many organizations and companies host single developer portals. There must be some reason. ;)

Ideally, the portal should allow developers to:
 * Discover available tools and technologies
 * Learn how to get started in Wikimedia technical areas
 * Find documentation how to achieve a certain task

Scope

 * Primarily a link hub with a collection of links to existing documentation.
 * Keep it high-level: ideally, one page per area or use case to be linked.
 * The audience is existing and future developers of Wikimedia software projects or interacting via code with Wikimedia software projects or Wikimedia hosted services and data (means: not targeting end users, translators, sysadmins). To be further defined.
 * Writing separate new docs is out of scope (not against it, but not planned as part of this initiative).
 * Moving content around is out of scope (not against it, but not planned as part of this initiative).

Planning
This timeline is high level and subject to change:
 * Financial Year 2020‒21: Focus on research, feedback, and getting a bigger picture of the technical documentation situation
 * Jul 2020‒Sep 2020: Announce project; set up wiki page
 * Oct 2020‒Feb 2021: First iteration: Explorative conversations conversations with a sample of stakeholders (WMF/WMDE) to identify use cases and identify key technical documents to link, understand workflows, and gather technology areas (T260984)
 * Mar 2021‒Apr 2021: Analysis of first iteration and review of portals of other organizations (T260987), leading to a content clustering proposal of use cases and related key docs, to be published in second iteration phase
 * Apr 2021‒May 2021: Second iteration: Publication of initial content clustering proposal with a call for feedback and review by stakeholders (broader community) (T260985)
 * May 2021‒Jun 2021: Discussion and identifying potential improvements
 * Jun 2021: Implementation of improvements
 * Financial Year 2021‒22:
 * ≥Jul 2021: Efforts to improve processes related to keeping key documents structured and updated
 * ≥Jul 2021: Potential implementation of portal as the key entrance point (navigation, hosting, etc), to be further discussed - see "2021-Q3 and later" column on tag/wikimedia-developer-portal/

See the Wikimedia-Developer-Portal project in Phabricator and its workboard for a breakdown of tasks per quarter and more details. (See Phabricator/Help for general information about Phabricator.)

Previous plans, thoughts and research
This list includes historical attempts to establish either some high-level developer documentation hub or holistic approaches to improve cross-project documentation. This list is not about specific content itself.


 * WMF Projects/Technical Documentation and User:Zakgreant/MediaWiki Technical Documentation Plan (2010) "by making small, incremental improvements to the existing documentation process and infrastructure."
 * Requests for comment/Documentation overhaul on MediaWiki Core level (2011)
 * Requests for comment/Add developer link to footer of Wikimedia wikis (2012)
 * T67074 (2014-2015) - "Set up dev.wikimedia.org portal"
 * Web APIs hub (2013-2015); see T308/T299 and notes about a Data & Developer Hub from a Hackathon
 * User:Quiddity (WMF)/Hubs and docs (2017), notes on older existing pages
 * User:Waldyrious/Docs (2013-2019)
 * T169599 (2019) - "Sort out concept for overview/entrance pages targeting our developer audience" (about pages on mediawiki.org only)
 * Core Platform Team/Initiatives/Developer Portal (2019-2020), superseded by lowering scope to an API Portal / API Gateway

Existing high-level entry points
This list is not about specific technology areas but common landing points, either by domain or by links often pointed out to interested newcomer developers.


 * https://www.mediawiki.org (MediaWiki core/extensions/skins, but also random Wikimedia related technology)
 * https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/New_Developers (new Wikimedia developers) and sometimes https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Good_first_bugs
 * https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/How_to_become_a_MediaWiki_hacker (new MediaWiki core/extensions/skins developers)
 * https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Developer_hub (experienced MediaWiki developers)
 * Existing sites:
 * https://mediawiki.org (MediaWiki core/extensions/skins/platform, random other technical things and home of some team pages; in theory not intended for Wikimedia-specific technical documentation)
 * https://wikitech.wikimedia.org (Wikimedia infrastructure/servers/network, Toolforge and Cloud VPS, Analytics -   Docs related to technical projects and infrastructure maintained by WMF; how we use software and how it's configured)
 * https://doc.wikimedia.org (API references for classes) (technical details on content generation; frontpage structure)
 * https://meta.wikimedia.org (less technical; mostly cross-Wikimedia movement stuff for coordination, planning, documentation; some random Wikimedia related technology, maybe home of some engineering team pages)
 * https://api.wikimedia.org/
 * Several external project-specific websites, e.g. https://wikiba.se, https://kiwix.org/, https://commons-app.github.io/, etc. Some of them are self-hosted static microsites, e.g. research.wikimedia.org
 * https://wikimediafoundation.org/technology/
 * https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Tech (as a portal split, recommended by Small wiki toolkits)