docs: cut 6.1.0 versions for docs, admin_docs, developer_docs, components

Snapshots all four versioned Docusaurus sections at v6.1.0. Built on
top of the version-cutting tooling work in chore/docs-cut-6.1.0-versions
so the snapshot benefits from:

- Auto-gen refresh before snapshotting (database pages from engine
  spec metadata, API reference from openapi.json, component pages
  from Storybook stories) — captured at the SHA we cut from rather
  than whatever happened to be on disk.
- Data-import freeze: country list, feature flag table, database
  diagnostics, and component metadata are copied into snapshot-local
  `_versioned_data/` dirs so the historical version doesn't silently
  mutate when the source files change.
- Depth-aware import-path rewriter that handles deeply-nested
  component MDX files referencing `../../../src/` from the snapshot.

Versioning behavior: `lastVersion` stays at `current` for every
section, so the canonical URLs (`/docs/...`, `/admin-docs/...`,
`/developer-docs/...`, `/components/...`) continue to render content
from master. The `current` version is consistently labeled "Next"
with an `unreleased` banner, and `6.1.0` is a historical pin
accessible only via its explicit version segment.

Component playground: previously `disabled: true` in versions-config.json,
now enabled and versioned. The plugin block in docusaurus.config.ts
was already gated only by the `disabled` flag, so no other code
changes were needed to bring it back online.

The frozen `databases.json` in the snapshot is the canonical 80-database
artifact from the latest committed state in master (preserved by the
generator's input-hash cache), not a fallback regenerated from a
local Flask environment.
This commit is contained in:
Claude Code
2026-05-12 17:28:00 -07:00
parent 8386c3a042
commit cbcfd9599f
2044 changed files with 87956 additions and 6 deletions

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---
title: Deployment
sidebar_position: 7
---
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# Deployment
Once an extension has been developed, the deployment process involves packaging and uploading it to the host application.
Packaging is handled by the `superset-extensions bundle` command, which:
1. Builds frontend assets using Webpack (with Module Federation configuration).
2. Collects backend Python source files and all necessary resources.
3. Generates a `manifest.json` with build-time metadata, including the contents of `extension.json` and references to built assets.
4. Packages everything into a `.supx` file (a zip archive with a specific structure required by Superset).
To deploy an extension, place the `.supx` file in the extensions directory configured via `EXTENSIONS_PATH` in your `superset_config.py`:
``` python
EXTENSIONS_PATH = "/path/to/extensions"
```
During application startup, Superset automatically discovers and loads all `.supx` files from this directory:
1. Scans the configured directory for `.supx` files.
2. Validates each file is a properly formatted zip archive.
3. Extracts and validates the extension manifest and metadata.
4. Loads the extension, making it available for use.
This file-based approach simplifies deployment in containerized environments and enables version control of extensions alongside infrastructure configuration.