229

I'm trying to use Sphinx to document a 5,000+ line project in Python. It has about 7 base modules. As far as I know, In order to use autodoc I need to write code like this for each file in my project:

.. automodule:: mods.set.tests
    :members:
    :show-inheritance:

This is way too tedious because I have many files. It would be much easier if I could just specify that I wanted the 'mods' package to be documented. Sphinx could then recursively go through the package and make a page for each submodule.

Is there a feature like this? If not I could write a script to make all the .rst files, but that would take up a lot of time.

2
  • 157
    No one said it was hard. OP said it was tedious, which it is. Given that other doc systems can do this, it's not unreasonable.
    – Gregg Lind
    Dec 26, 2010 at 20:22
  • Just use pdoc.
    – K3---rnc
    Apr 15, 2020 at 18:14

7 Answers 7

171

From Sphinx version 3.1 (June 2020), sphinx.ext.autosummary (finally!) has automatic recursion.

So no need to hard code module names or rely on 3rd party libraries like Sphinx AutoAPI or Sphinx AutoPackageSummary for their automatic package detection any more.

Example Python 3.7 package to document (see code on Github and result on ReadTheDocs):

mytoolbox
|-- mypackage
|   |-- __init__.py
|   |-- foo.py
|   |-- mysubpackage
|       |-- __init__.py
|       |-- bar.py
|-- doc
|   |-- source
|       |--index.rst
|       |--conf.py
|       |-- _templates
|           |-- custom-module-template.rst
|           |-- custom-class-template.rst

conf.py:

import os
import sys
sys.path.insert(0, os.path.abspath('../..'))  # Source code dir relative to this file

extensions = [
    'sphinx.ext.autodoc',  # Core library for html generation from docstrings
    'sphinx.ext.autosummary',  # Create neat summary tables
]
autosummary_generate = True  # Turn on sphinx.ext.autosummary

# Add any paths that contain templates here, relative to this directory.
templates_path = ['_templates']

index.rst (note new :recursive: option):

Welcome to My Toolbox
=====================

Some words.

.. autosummary::
   :toctree: _autosummary
   :template: custom-module-template.rst
   :recursive:

   mypackage

This is sufficient to automatically summarise every module in the package, however deeply nested. For each module, it then summarises every attribute, function, class and exception in that module.

Oddly, though, the default sphinx.ext.autosummary templates don't go on to generate separate documentation pages for each attribute, function, class and exception, and link to them from the summary tables. It's possible to extend the templates to do this, as shown below, but I can't understand why this isn't the default behaviour - surely that's what most people would want..? I've raised it as a feature request.

I had to copy the default templates locally, and then add to them:

  • Copy site-packages/sphinx/ext/autosummary/templates/autosummary/module.rst to mytoolbox/doc/source/_templates/custom-module-template.rst
  • Copy site-packages/sphinx/ext/autosummary/templates/autosummary/class.rst to mytoolbox/doc/source/_templates/custom-class-template.rst

The hook into custom-module-template.rst is in index.rst above, using the :template: option. (Delete that line to see what happens using the default site-packages templates.)

custom-module-template.rst (additional lines noted on the right):

{{ fullname | escape | underline}}

.. automodule:: {{ fullname }}
  
   {% block attributes %}
   {% if attributes %}
   .. rubric:: Module Attributes

   .. autosummary::
      :toctree:                                          <-- add this line
   {% for item in attributes %}
      {{ item }}
   {%- endfor %}
   {% endif %}
   {% endblock %}

   {% block functions %}
   {% if functions %}
   .. rubric:: {{ _('Functions') }}

   .. autosummary::
      :toctree:                                          <-- add this line
   {% for item in functions %}
      {{ item }}
   {%- endfor %}
   {% endif %}
   {% endblock %}

   {% block classes %}
   {% if classes %}
   .. rubric:: {{ _('Classes') }}

   .. autosummary::
      :toctree:                                          <-- add this line
      :template: custom-class-template.rst               <-- add this line
   {% for item in classes %}
      {{ item }}
   {%- endfor %}
   {% endif %}
   {% endblock %}

   {% block exceptions %}
   {% if exceptions %}
   .. rubric:: {{ _('Exceptions') }}

   .. autosummary::
      :toctree:                                          <-- add this line
   {% for item in exceptions %}
      {{ item }}
   {%- endfor %}
   {% endif %}
   {% endblock %}

{% block modules %}
{% if modules %}
.. rubric:: Modules

.. autosummary::
   :toctree:
   :template: custom-module-template.rst                 <-- add this line
   :recursive:
{% for item in modules %}
   {{ item }}
{%- endfor %}
{% endif %}
{% endblock %}

custom-class-template.rst (additional lines noted on the right):

{{ fullname | escape | underline}}

.. currentmodule:: {{ module }}

.. autoclass:: {{ objname }}
   :members:                                    <-- add at least this line
   :show-inheritance:                           <-- plus I want to show inheritance...
   :inherited-members:                          <-- ...and inherited members too

   {% block methods %}
   .. automethod:: __init__

   {% if methods %}
   .. rubric:: {{ _('Methods') }}

   .. autosummary::
   {% for item in methods %}
      ~{{ name }}.{{ item }}
   {%- endfor %}
   {% endif %}
   {% endblock %}

   {% block attributes %}
   {% if attributes %}
   .. rubric:: {{ _('Attributes') }}

   .. autosummary::
   {% for item in attributes %}
      ~{{ name }}.{{ item }}
   {%- endfor %}
   {% endif %}
   {% endblock %}
23
  • 5
    Thank you so much for this!!! I was almost about to give up and then finally found this. One question. I was using sys.path.insert(0, os.path.abspath('../../mypackage')) but you only use '../..'. Why does it not make a difference?
    – samlaf
    Nov 6, 2020 at 22:48
  • 3
    No problem, glad it helped. Sphinx nearly drove me insane until I got it figured; now it all works beautifully. In index.rst, you need to explicitly name the package where you want :recursive: docstring extraction to start, so in my example mypackage. In conf.py, you just provide the route to that location. That's because in my example mypackage is a top-level folder in mytoolbox, but if it was (eg.) nested in a source/mypackage subfolder then conf.py would read ../../source. Nov 8, 2020 at 9:58
  • 1
    @jamleed This has been very useful!. Thanks for taking the time and writing Sphinx AutoPackageSummary. You saved me a lot of time. In that github project, the make html part (make.bat) was not available, so "make html" command did not work out of the box. You might have to add some instructions around that or upload that file as well. Otherwise, it worked as a charm. (Edited - included the missing file name)
    – SKG
    Nov 17, 2020 at 15:08
  • 5
    This answer is gold, thanks a lot! Hope your feature request gets implemented. It should indeed be the default behaviour.
    – rickstaa
    Feb 24, 2021 at 15:47
  • 4
    Just a small improvement to custom-module-template.rst, if you add :members: under the .. automodule:: {{ fullname }} (line 3), the documentation for that module will automatically be populated with members (classes, functions, etc.) in addition to the toctree. This gives users the option to quickly scan through the documentation in addition to pinpointing functions using the toctree. Mar 11, 2021 at 16:57
163

You can check this script that I've made. I think it can help you.

This script parses a directory tree looking for python modules and packages and creates ReST files appropriately to create code documentation with Sphinx. It also creates a modules index.

UPDATE

This script is now part of Sphinx 1.1 as apidoc.

11
  • 1
    Where are you supposed to output the files to? I tried outputting them to Sphinx's default _build folder, but running sphinx-build -b html . ./_build doesn't pick them up.
    – Cerin
    Jan 6, 2011 at 18:13
  • 1
    You should put them in the source directory (. in your case). The _build directory is where the HTML files will be created. Check for more info: sphinx.pocoo.org/tutorial.html#running-the-build
    – Etienne
    Jan 6, 2011 at 20:16
  • 1
    @Erienne: fantastic script! just what i was looking for. Wish it generated headings for individual classes (the regular sphinx look isn't nice to classes. they get lost in larger modules)
    – jbenet
    Dec 22, 2011 at 14:40
  • 2
    Even sphinx-apidoc is pretty rudimentary. For a package with one or two modules, it works okay, but we've got modules nested deeply, and sphinx-apidoc produces some pretty unmanageable output.
    – slacy
    Apr 27, 2012 at 20:35
  • 5
    self answering: add .. include:: modules.rst to your index.rst Apr 4, 2013 at 13:27
62

I do not know whether Sphinx had had autosummary extension at the time original question was asked, but for now it is quite possible to set up automatic generation of that kind without using sphinx-apidoc or similar script. Below there are settings which work for one of my projects.

  1. Enable autosummary extension (as well as autodoc) in conf.py file and set its autosummary_generate option to True. This may be enough if you're not using custom *.rst templates. Otherwise add your templates directory to exclude list, or autosummary will try to treat them as input files (which seems to be a bug).

    extensions = ['sphinx.ext.autodoc', 'sphinx.ext.autosummary']
    autosummary_generate = True
    templates_path = [ '_templates' ]
    exclude_patterns = ['_build', '_templates']
    
  2. Use autosummary:: in TOC tree in your index.rst file. In this example documentation for modules project.module1 and project.module2 will be generated automatically and placed into _autosummary directory.

    PROJECT
    =======
    
    .. toctree::
    
    .. autosummary::
       :toctree: _autosummary
    
       project.module1
       project.module2
    
  3. By default autosummary will generate only very short summaries for modules and their functions. To change that you can put a custom template file into _templates/autosummary/module.rst (which will be parsed with Jinja2):

    {{ fullname }}
    {{ underline }}
    
    .. automodule:: {{ fullname }}
        :members:
    

In conclusion, there is no need to keep _autosummary directory under version control. Also, you may name it anything you want and place it anywhere in the source tree (putting it below _build will not work, though).

4
  • 6
    This was a huge help. In point 2, where you have "project.module1" and "project.module2", is there a way to automagically generate that list for every module in a given package? To just put "project" and have it sniff out "module1" and "module2"?
    – Brown
    Jun 22, 2017 at 21:24
  • 1
    Pretty surprised I can't find an answer to this anywhere, dod you ever work it out @Brown? Sep 9, 2017 at 9:18
  • 3
    @AlisdairRobertson No, but the autosummary solution provided ended up being more than adequate for my needs. The only other thing I thought of doing was to write a script to generate the index.rst file and autodetect the module names. However, in practice, the list of modules doesn't change that often, so just editing one file once in a while isn't that unreasonable. I'm sure I already spent much more time looking for a solution than it takes to just edit that one file!
    – Brown
    Sep 13, 2017 at 13:49
  • 1
    Are there no other steps to this? Updating to this is still only doing current directory and not recursive. I also see: WARNING: Error in "autosummary" directive: unknown option: "recursive". Current directory html is made only.
    – lexalenka
    Sep 1, 2021 at 17:58
29

Sphinx AutoAPI does exactly this.

3
13

In each package, the __init__.py file can have .. automodule:: package.module components for each part of the package.

Then you can .. automodule:: package and it mostly does what you want.

3
  • do I just put that string in triple quotes in init.py? Apr 23, 2010 at 21:36
  • 8
    @Cory Walker: It's not "a" string. You can -- and should -- be putting triple-quoted docstrings in every single file. Every one. That includes the __init__.py files in your packages. The docstring can include ANY Sphinx documentation directives, including .. automodule:: for modules within the package.
    – S.Lott
    Apr 24, 2010 at 22:35
  • 2
    Can you post a full example __init__.py showing EXACTLY where this line should be placed, given a module name foo?
    – Raleigh L.
    Oct 12, 2023 at 22:46
1

Maybe what you're looking for is Epydoc and this Sphinx extension.

0

A solution I found was the following: add all the modules to your __init__.py file. When Sphinx autodoc processes your module, it looks for the all attribute to determine which names should be included in the generated documentation.

Project Tree

project
├── src
|   ├── __init__.py
|   ├── bar.py
├── __init__.py
├── foo.py

Inside project/src/ the __init__.py looks like this:

from project/subpackage import foo

__all__ = ["foo"]

Inside project the __init__.py looks like this:

from project/subpackage import bar

__all__ = ["bar"]

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