<sect1 id="intro-repoconvs-extending">
<title>Extending Repository Organization</title>
<para>
Occasionly, you may find that new components of The
CentOS Project corporate visual identity need to be added to
the repository in order to work them out. If that is the case,
the first question we need to ask ourselves, before start to
create directories blindly all over, is: <emphasis>What is the
right place to store it?</emphasis>
</para>
<para>
The best place to find answers is in The CentOS Community (see
page http://wiki.centos.org/Help), but going there with hands
empty is not good idea. It may give the impression you don't
really care about. Instead, consider the following suggestions
to find your own comprehension in order to make your own
propositions based on it.
</para>
<para>
When extending respository structure it is very useful to bear
in mind The CentOS Project corporate visual identity
structure, The CentOS Mission and The CentOS Release Schema.
The rest is a matter of choosing appropriate names. It is also
worth to know that each directory in the repository responds
to a conceptual idea that justifies its existence.
</para>
<para>
To build a directory structure inside the repository, you need
to define the conceptual idea first and later create the
directory, remembering that there are locations inside the
repository that define conceptual ideas you probably would
prefer to reuse. For example, the <filename
class="directory">trunk/Identity/Images/Themes</filename>
directory stores theme artistic motifs, the <filename
class="directory">trunk/Identity/Models/Themes</filename>
directory stores theme design models, the <filename
class="directory">trunk/Manuals</filename> directory stores
documentation files, the <filename
class="directory">trunk/Locales</filename> stores translation
messages, and the <filename
class="directory">trunk/Scripts</filename> stores automation
scripts.
</para>
<para>
To better illustrate this desition process, you can consider
to examin the <filename
class="directory">trunk/Identity/Images/Themes/TreeFlower/3</filename>
directory structure as example. This directory can be read
as: the theme development line of version <quote>3</quote> of
<quote>TreeFlower</quote> artistic motif. Additional, we can
say that <quote>TreeFlower</quote> artistic motif is part of
themes, as themes are part of The CentOS Project corporate
visual identity.
</para>
<para>
The relationship between conceptual ideas can be stablished by
reading each repository documentation entry individually, from
<filename class="directory">trunk</filename> directory to a
deeper directory in the path. For reading repository
documentation entries we use the <code>help</code>
functionality of <command>centos-art.sh</command> script.
</para>
</sect1>