Skip to content

esciencecenter-digital-skills/workshop-template

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Build Jekyll site

The Workshop Template

This repository is a template for creating a workshop page for eScience Center Digital Skills, and the Carpentries Software Carpentry, Data Carpentry, Library Carpentry. We are committed to offering a pleasant setup experience for our learners and organizers. If you run into problems, or would like to suggest improvements, please submit an issue or mail us.

Use this template

  1. Before you start to build the website, check if the data.csv file is complete (data.csv file in the Instructors Sharepoint - folder for your specific workshop).

  2. Please do not fork this repository directly on GitHub. Instead, use GitHub's function to copy this template repository and customize it for your workshop. On this page (https://github.com/esciencecenter-digital-skills/workshop-template), click on the green Use this template button (top right).

  3. Select the owner for your new repository. This should be esciencecenter-digital-skills GitHub organisation.

  4. Choose a name for your workshop website repository. This name should have the form YYYY-MM-DD-carpentry-curriculum, e.g., 2016-12-01-ds-gpu, where YYYY-MM-DD is the start date of the workshop, ds stands for Digital Skills, and gpu is the workshop name in this example.

  5. Make sure the repository is public, leave "Include all branches" unchecked (don't worry about the gh-pages branch, it will be created by a github action). Click on "Create repository from template". You will be redirected to your new copy of the workshop template repository.

  6. Go to the the workshop repository that is just created. Manually run the 'Build and deploy Jekyll site to GitHub Pages' github action. See instructions for manually triggering workflows here

  7. Your new website will be rendered at https://owner_name.github.io/YYYY-MM-DD-type-curriculum. For example, if esciencecenter-digital-skills is the owner, the workshop's URL will be https://esciencecenter-digital-skills.github.io/2021-11-02-ds-gpu/. Please note that the github action that builds the website can take a few minutes to complete!

  8. Click on "Settings" tab. In the left sidebar, click on "Pages". Under "GitHub Pages", use the gh-pages branch from drop-down menu and press "save". For more information, see GitHub documentation.

  9. Please do your work in the repository's main branch. A GitHub action is used for deployment that creates a gh-pages branch. See building a Jekyll site using a GitHub Action for more information.

  10. To trigger deployment of a new version of the website, create a new release of your repository

Required information and customizing your workshop page

  1. The file data.csv in _data directory contains the workshop information. See the documention.

  2. The file eventbrite.json in _data directory contains eventbrite code. See the documention.

  3. Additional lesson information lives in a folder in workshop metadata repository. See the documention.

  4. In some cases you want to deviate from the default lesson information (also known as 'workshop metadata'). The steps are as follows:

    1. In the corresponding folder in the workshop metadata repository add a new file. Give it a suitable name. For example, if you want a different schedule for your workshop create a new file called schedule-2.md or schedule-in-person.md.
    2. Add the desired workshop information to the file and commit to the main branch.
    3. In the workshop repository edit the index.md file. Find where the default workshop metadata markdown file that you want to replace is included. For example: the schedule.md file is included here Instead of the default file, point to your new file (i.e. schedule-in-person.md).
  5. Once you commit this, the github action will rebuild the workshop website. The index.md file will point to the alternative workshop metadata markdown file, so that will be included in the workshop website.

  6. There is a collaborative_document.md in the files directory of this repository. You can use it as a template to create a collaborative document on hackmd. Please note that you need to sign in.

If you are already familiar with Git, you can clone the lesson and workshop repositories, and edit these files. Then push your changes back to the repository. Otherwise, you can edit files using the GitHub web interface.

Preview changes locally

If you want to set up Jekyll so that you can preview changes on your own machine before pushing them to GitHub, you must install the software described in the lesson example setup instructions. Then, you can preview your site locally with:

make serve

and go to http://0.0.0.0:4000 to preview your site. Alternatively, if you'd like to run Jekyll inside a Docker container, you may run

make docker-serve

Creating Extra Pages

In rare cases, you may want to add extra pages to your workshop website. You can do this by putting either Markdown or HTML pages in the website's root directory and styling them according to the instructions given in the lesson template.

Troubleshooting

Understanding how the workshop metadata is retrieved

Sometimes the template is not picking up the right metadata from https://github.com/esciencecenter-digital-skills/workshop-metadata. When something goes wrong it can help to understand how this workshop template links different data sources together.

  1. See this line in index.md. In the lines following we try to find the workshop metadata url based on the curriculum and the flavor if it exists.
  2. The flavor and curriculum are obtained from the flavor and curriculumcolumn of _data/data.csv.
  3. The metadata is fetched from the metadata url

My commits do not trigger a new build github pages action, help!

This is on purpose. We only trigger a new build upon creating a new release.

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • HTML 45.6%
  • Python 43.3%
  • SCSS 4.2%
  • R 2.6%
  • CSS 2.1%
  • JavaScript 0.8%
  • Other 1.4%