This guide will help you get set up so you can make changes to the project, view them locally and verify that the site will deploy correctly when opening a pull request.
This repository contains the GitHub Pages content and some additional Ruby and NodeJS tooling to help verify changes as part of publishing the site.
To get a local clone of the repository:
git clone https://github.com/up-for-grabs/up-for-grabs.net.git
If you have a fork of the repository on GitHub, replace the first up-for-grabs
with your GitHub account.
We require Ruby 2.6, Bundler 2 and Node 10+ to test the site. You can check these are present by running these commands in a terminal:
$ ruby -v
ruby 2.6.4p104 (2019-08-28 revision 67798) [x86_64-darwin18]
$ bundle -v
Bundler version 2.0.2
$ node -v
v10.16.3
There are two recommended ways to test the site locally, based on what OS you are currently using:
- for macOS or Linux contributors - either approach is fine
- for Windows contributors - Docker is recommended because Ruby on Windows has some issues that need familiarity with the toolchain to properly workaround
Within your local clone of the up-for-grabs repository, run these commands to install the dependencies needed:
bundle install
Once you've done that, this command will build the site and make it available to view using a local development server:
bundle exec jekyll serve
The site should be accessible in your browser at localhost:4000
.
Docker can also be used to build and test the site, for contributors who don't want to install the tooling locally. Check the setup instructions for your OS for more information:
Once you have that installed, use the docker-compose
command to build and
view the site:
docker-compose up
If that completes without error, open your browser to localhost:4000
to view
the site.
We have a suite of additional tooling that can be run to verify the contents of the repository. These are run as part of any pull request or build on GitHub, and it is recommended to run these locally before pushing changes to save time with reviews.
This script scans all the data files under _data/projects
to verify they can be
parsed correctly, and have the expected schema defined.
$ ruby scripts/cibuild.rb
If you run this and it reports an error, check the file and fix the error before continuing.
We use jest
to test the JavaScript modules in the project:
$ npm test
If this command reports errors, it is likely that the site functionality has been impacted by a change. Please investigate and address the issue before proceeding.
We also use eslint
and prettier
in this project to lint and apply consistent
formatting to the JavaScript modules in the project:
$ npm run lint
$ npm run prettier
Both of these tools have "auto-fix" options, which may fix the problems reported without needing manual work:
$ npm run lint-fix
$ npm run prettier-fix