Source repository for CHTC website
-
"Fork" the Github source repository (look for the fork button at the top right of this page: https://github.com/CHTC/chtc-website-source).
-
Clone the source repository to your own computer.
git clone https://github.com/CHTC/chtc-website-source
-
cd
into thechtc-website-source
folder and add your Github fork to the list of remotes:git remote add mycopy https://github.com/myusername/chtc-website-source
-
Create a branch for new work and switch to it:
git branch feature-name git checkout feature-name
Your changes will now be saved in this branch.
-
Make changes to files and add/commit them, following the usual git add/commit workflow. You can test your changes at any time by following the instructions below.
-
Once you're satisfied with your changes and have committed them, push the branch to your fork:
git push mycopy feature-name
-
On Github, go to your fork of the repo. There will likely be a message prompting you to open and submit a pull request.
If you need to update the pull requests, make the necessary changes on your computer, commit them, and then push the same branch to your fork.
To update your local copy of the source repository, make sure that you're on the master
branch; then pull from the original CHTC Github repository:
git checkout master
git pull origin master
❗ This is a new feature!
To test changes on a publicly viewable development location do the following steps.
- Populate a branch with the changes you would like to preview and prepend the name of the branch with 'preview-'
- For this example we will call our branch 'preview-helloworld'
- Push the branch to the remote repository at 'https://github.com/CHTC/chtc-website-source.git'
- View the changes at:
- https://chtc.github.io/web-preview//
- In this demo we would look in https://chtc.github.io/web-preview/preview-helloworld/
You can continue to push commits to this branch and have them populate on the preview at this point!
- When you are satisfied with these changes you can create a PR to merge into master
- Delete the preview branch and Github will take care of the garbage collection!
- Install Docker if you don't already have it on your computer.
- Open a terminal and
cd
to your local copy of thechtc-website-source
repository - Run the
./edit.sh
script. - The website should appear at http://localhost:8080. Note that this system is missing the secret sauce of our setup that converts
the pages to an
.shtml
file ending, so links won't work but just typing in the name of a page into the address bar (with no extension) will.
-
Install Docker if you don't already have it on your computer and open a terminal.
-
Pull the
jekyll
containerdocker pull jekyll/jekyll
-
cd
to your local copy of thechtc-website-source
repository -
Start Docker:
docker run -it --rm=true -v $PWD:/srv/jekyll --publish 8080:8080 jekyll/jekyll jekyll serve -P 8080
The first time you do this, you'll have to wait for about 3-5 minutes for jekyll to build all its dependencies and then render the website.
-
The website should appear at http://localhost:8080. Note that this system is missing the secret sauce of our setup that converts the pages to an
.shtml
file ending, so links won't work but just typing in the name of a page into the address bar (with no extension) will.
This is a useful reference for most common markdown features: https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/
To format code blocks, we have the following special formatting tags:
```
Pre-formatted text / code goes here
```
{:.sub}
.sub
will generate a "submit file" styled block; .term
will create a terminal style, and .file
can
be used for any generic text file.
We will be using the pound sign for headers, not the ==
or --
notation.
For internal links (to a header inside the document), use this syntax:
- header is written as
## A. Sample Header
- the internal link will look like this:
[link to header A](#a-sample-header)
Right now, most of our pages are written in html and have a .shtml
extension. We are
gradually converting them to be formatted with markdown. To easily convert a page, you
can install and use the pandoc
converter:
pandoc hello.shtml --from html --to markdown > hello.md
You'll still want to go through and double check / clean up the text, but that's a good starting point. Once the
document is converted from markdown to html, the file extension should be .md
instead. If you use the
command above, this means you can just delete the .shtml
version of the file and commit the new .md
one.