diff --git a/Documentation/Doxygen/Concepts.dox b/Documentation/Doxygen/Concepts.dox
index fc6db18d4f..ef8ccad6c4 100644
--- a/Documentation/Doxygen/Concepts.dox
+++ b/Documentation/Doxygen/Concepts.dox
@@ -1,14 +1,15 @@
/**
\page Concepts MITK concepts
The following items describe some issues about MITK on a more abstract level.
If you want to start using MITK, you also want to see \ref Development
\li \subpage GeometryOverviewPage
\li \subpage InteractionPage
\li \subpage OverviewPage
+\li \subpage MicroServices_Overview
\li \subpage PropertiesPage
\li \subpage Rendering
\li \subpage RenderingTests
*/
diff --git a/Documentation/Doxygen/NewPlugin.dox b/Documentation/Doxygen/NewPlugin.dox
index ecf45d04be..fcba7ae993 100755
--- a/Documentation/Doxygen/NewPlugin.dox
+++ b/Documentation/Doxygen/NewPlugin.dox
@@ -1,97 +1,97 @@
/**
\page NewPluginPage How to create a new MITK Plug-in
The MITK Plugin Generator is a command line tool to simplify the process of creating your own MITK project
(optional) and plug-ins. It can either be downloaded here
or used from an existing MITK build.
The Plugin Generator takes the following command line arguments:
\verbatim
./MITKPluginGenerator -h
A CTK plug-in generator for MITK (version 1.2.0)
-h, --help Show this help text
-o, --out-dir Output directory (default: /tmp)
-l, --license Path to a file containing license information (default: :/MITKLicense.txt)
-v, --vendor The vendor of the generated code (default: DKFZ, Medical and Biological Informatics)
-q, --quiet Do not print additional information
-y, --confirm-all Answer all questions with 'yes'
-u, --check-update Check for updates and exit
-n, --no-networking Disable all network requests
Plug-in View options
-vc, --view-class The View's' class name
-vn, --view-name * The View's human readable name
Plug-in options
-ps, --plugin-symbolic-name * The plugin's symbolic name
-pn, --plugin-name The plug-in's human readable name
Project options
--project-copyright Path to a file containing copyright information (default: :/MITKCopyright.txt)
--project-name The project name
--project-app-name The application name
[* - options are required]
\endverbatim
If a project name is provided via the --project-name argument, the new plug-in will be generated
as part of a new project.
\section NewPluginOnly Creating a new MITK plug-in
Here is an example call to the Plugin Generator, creating one plug-in with the symbolic name
com.mycompany.myplugin and a View named My View:
\verbatim
./MITKPluginGenerator --plugin-symbolic-name org.mycompany.myplugin --view-name "My View"
\endverbatim
If you did not already specify the final location of the plug-in via the --out-dir argument, move the
directory (in our example /tmp/org.mycompany.myplugin) to your existing project. Do not forget to add the
plug-in in your project's build system (usually in the file <your-project>/Plugins/Plugins.cmake).
\section NewPluginWithProject Creating a new MITK project
\subsection NewPluginProjectPrerequisites Prerequisites
-MITK-based projects creating with the Plugin Generator need the same prerequisites as MITK itself. See the
+MITK-based projects created with the Plugin Generator need the same prerequisites as MITK itself. See the
\ref BuildInstructionsPage for MITK for details.
Here is an example call to the Plugin Generator, creating the same plug-in as above but integrated in a new project:
\verbatim
./MITKPluginGenerator --plugin-symbolic-name org.mycompany.myplugin --view-name "My View" --project-name "MyProject" --project-app-name "MyApp"
\endverbatim
The generated project is completely self-contained and can be configured via CMake immediately. When building the
generated project, it will first download all required dependencies (like MITK itself). For an explanation of the
project's build directory layout and how to configure MITK from your project's superbuild CMake configuration,
see SetupAMITKBasedProject.
\subsection NewPluginLimitations Limitations
The Plugin Generator supports only a very limited set of possible configuration options. For more customizations of your
project or plug-in, you must familiarize yourself with CMake and the generated build system.
Further, the generator is not able to modify existing projects, it can only create new ones.
\section NewPluginBuildSystem Build system for plug-ins
Just put new files in your plug-in's \c src or \c src/internal directory and edit the \c files.cmake file there.
If you have any fancy stuff like external libraries and include directories you should have a look at the CMake manual and general MITK build system documentation.
\section NewPluginTroubleshooting Troubleshooting
\par I get "Could not find library" messages and similar stuff when I try to start my project's executable.
This is mostly due to wrong environment settings. On Windows, make sure that you use the supplied batch files to start
Visual Studio or your project's executable. If you still get errors, double check the value of the PATH variable in
your batch files (it must contain MITK's binary directory and paths to the ITK, VTK and Qt libraries.
\par
On Linux, set your LD_LIBRARY_PATH variable accordingly.
*/