Slovenski prevod publiccode.eu
 
 
 
 
Go to file
erik.ds 5e3b49dcef added SLAT logo 2017-09-04 09:35:53 +02:00
site added SLAT logo 2017-09-04 09:35:53 +02:00
.drone.yml I'm with stupid <-- me! 2017-06-13 10:09:53 +02:00
.gitignore add form spammer detection, and note down extreme misuse 2017-03-28 00:33:44 +02:00
000-default.conf remove multiviews and indexes from apache config 2017-06-19 22:52:03 +02:00
CONTRIBUTORS.md added myself to the contributors list 2017-03-20 20:56:31 +01:00
Dockerfile reinstate htaccess file and enable apache rewrite module 2017-06-19 23:06:51 +02:00
README.md update README to cover the build and path changes 2017-06-19 23:51:56 +02:00
hosts Added playbook for Ansible 2017-06-13 08:54:28 +02:00
playbook.yml Added forms data 2017-08-31 21:01:25 +02:00

README.md

PMPC Web Site

This website is the core of the "Public Money, Public Code" campaign. It is based on Hugo, a modern static website generator.

The page is visible at publiccode.eu. Please do not spread this URL. The website requires authentication to be visited. Username is pmpc, password is publicmoneypubliccode. Please do not spread this information to outside people not involved in the website development.

Contributing to the website

Prerequisites

In order to modify the website, you need hugo and git installed on your computer. If Hugo isn't available in your package manager, obtain it from its official website. We tested the website build with Hugo from version 0.19 upwards. Please make sure that you use an as recent version as possible to avoid errors.

Configuring Git

First of all, you'll need an account on git.fsfe.org. With an FSFE account (FSFE Fellowship/supporter/volunteer) you can simply login with your normal username and password. If you don't have an FSFE account yet, please contact Erik, Jonas or Max about it. Without an account, you can download this repository but you won't be able to push modifications to this repository.

As part of the campaign team you can get full write access to this repository. Please contact one of pmpc's admins to give your account the necessary privileges.

In the FSFE's wiki, you'll find information about our Git server installation, and some guides for basic procedures.

Cloning the website

Although the mentioned Git guides will enable you to understand how to download the website's repository, here's a short howto: Navigate to a directory on your computer where you want the PMPC website to be stored. In this example, it's FSFE/PMPC/website in your user's directory.

mkdir -p ~/FSFE/PMPC/                           # Create the directory if it doesn't exist yet
cd ~/FSFE/PMPC/                                 # go to the newly created PMPC directory
git clone git@git.fsfe.org:pmpc/website.git     # clone the website to the folder website

In the newly created folder pmpc-website you'll find all source files the website consists of now. The hugo files are located under site/, whereas in the root directory you'll only find files informational files and those relevant for our build process (Drone, Ansible, Docker, Apache).

Your first modification

For more experienced Git users we recommend the Fork & Pull Request workflow, which you'll also find in the wiki's Git Guides section (not available yet). However, beginners can also directly commit to the repository which saves them some steps.

As an example, we will modify the website a bit, review the changes and push them to the repository to make them available to other users and the live website.

  1. Navigate to the website's root directory (in the last example ~/FSFE/PMPC/website/) and open a terminal window there. Type in git pull. This will get the latest changes from the server
  2. After you received the latest version, you can edit the website. For testing purposes, open the file CONTRIBUTORS.md, scroll to the very end, and add your name there. No worries, this won't have any visible effect on the website.
  3. In the terminal, execute cd site/ to navigate in the right directory for hugo's website build.
  4. Now check whether the website looks fine. Execute hugo server on your terminal. You will see a link containing localhost:1313. Open it and you see a preview of what the website looks like. This will help you to understand whether your changes actually have the effect you wanted.
  5. If you're happy with it, you can execute hugo. This will build the website in its final form to the subfolder public. Make sure that the output of that command doesn't contain any errors or warnings. Note that your local built won't be sent to the server because it builds the website itself.
  6. Check with git status what files have been changed on your side. In this example, you should see the file ../CONTRIBUTORS.md marked red. This means that the file has been changed but you didn't mark it as to be pushed to the server yet. If there're more files listed, make sure that you actually intended to modify these files!
  7. Add the changed file to the commit queue with git add ../CONTRIBUTORS.md. In case you have changed more files, you can also type git add . in the repositories root level to add all files at once. With git status you should see all files marked green now, which means that they're ready to be committed.
  8. Commit the files with git commit -m "added myself to the contributors list". In the comment after -m you should always write something meaningful that helps people to understand what you actually did.
  9. Unlike with SVN, you're not finished yet. You will have to execute git push to actually upload the modifications to the server.

Important file paths

The website structure is very easy. The most important files and directories are:

  • site/config.toml: Headlines, site title, many texts.
  • site/data/resources/: Content of the 3-column "resource" boxes which you can hover over and click to see the text.
  • site/data/share/: Services where people can share to. Is being used in the "Spread" section and the left-side sharing icons
  • site/static/: CSS, images, and Javascript files for the design.
  • site/static/img/share/: Image files for share buttons.
  • site/static/css/custom.css: File where all custom CSS code should be written to.
  • site/layouts/: HTML structure (scaffold) for the website. Useful if you want to add another section or modify anchor links or CSS classes.
  • site/public/: Built files which are used to display the website. Generated by running hugo.

Technical information about building

The FSFE uses Drone to automatically deploy the PMPC website. The website is automatically deployed when there's a push to the master branch of the repository, as well as once an hour (to update signatures).

This is the latest build status:

Build Status