This is a public version of the Incident Response process used at PagerDuty. It is also used to prepare new employees for on-call responsibilities, and provides information not only on preparing for an incident, but also what to do during and after. See the about page for more information on what this documentation is and why it exists.
You can view the documentation directly in this repository, or rendered as a website at https://response.pagerduty.com.
We use MkDocs to create a static site from this repository. For local development,
- Install v0.1.0 of MkDocs Bootswatch
pip install mkdocs-bootswatch==0.1.0
- Install v0.1.1 of MkDocs Bootstrap
pip install mkdocs-bootstrap==0.1.1
- Install v0.15.3 of MkDocs.
pip install mkdocs==0.15.3
- Install v0.2.4 of the MkDocs Material theme.
pip install mkdocs-material==0.2.4
- Install MkDocs PyMdown Extensions.
pip install pymdown-extensions
- To test locally, run
mkdocs serve
from the project directory.
-
Run
mkdocs build --clean
to produce the static site for upload. -
Upload the
site
directory to S3 (or wherever you would like it to be hosted).aws s3 sync ./site/ s3://[BUCKET_NAME] \ --acl public-read \ --exclude "*.py*" \ --delete
Thank you for considering contributing! If you have any questions, just ask - or submit your issue or pull request anyway. The worst that can happen is we'll politely ask you to change something. We appreciate all friendly contributions.
Here is our preferred process for submitting a pull request,
- Fork it ( https://github.com/PagerDuty/incident-response-docs/fork )
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create a new Pull Request.