This site was developed by the Code4Lib 2020 Conference Committee Website Working Group based on a design by the 2016 working group. A great deal of conference and organizational info can be found on the Code4Lib Wiki and the Code4Lib Site, but this site should serve as a gateway to the various sources of Code4Lib information while providing visitors with a user-friendly way to find conference-specific info.
This site was designed with future users in mind, so the group chose platforms that would be accessible to a wide range of users: Jekyll and GitHub Pages.
More details are available in the GitHub wiki.
Jekyll is a Ruby gem that generates static websites from markdown, HTML, and other formats. See the official Jekyll documentation for details.
Steps for contributing have been documented in the wiki on the 2016 site's GitHub page and will be updated as needed.
See a list of open issues. The following example uses "issue#3" as a subject. That's the branch name and is used in the commit message.
git clone
the repo from GitHub- cd to repo root and
git pull
bundle install
- Continue with step 3 below
- Make sure you're on the master branch
git checkout master
- Make sure your master branch is up to date
git pull origin master
- Start up jekyll
bundle exec jekyll serve
- open http://localhost:4000 in your browser
- Create a new branch for your changes
git checkout -b issue#3
- Make changes, check http://localhost:4000 to see your changes live
- We strongly recommend performing an accessibility audit (e.g. with Chrome) if you've made structural or stylistic changes (not adding text content or additional posts)
- Add your changed files
git add {changed-files}
- Commit your changes with a fancy message
git commit -m "fixes issue #3"
- Add your branch to the repo
git push --set-upstream origin issue#3
- Switch back to the master branch
git checkout master
- Go to https://github.com/code4lib/2020.code4lib.org
- Make a pull request base:master and compare:issue-3
- Wait for someone to test your changes and merge the pull request
- Do the dance of joy
- Follow steps 1 - 3 above
- Get any remote branches
git fetch
- Switch to the branch in question
git checkout BRANCHNAME
bundle exec jekyll serve
- Check http://localhost:4000 that nothing is broken
- Merge that branch into master (easiest to manage on the GitHub site)
As an experiment the site is also available via Dat which you can view in the Beaker Browser at dat://2020.code4lib.org. If you would like to clone the site you'll need to install Dat and then:
dat clone dat://2020.code4lib.org
If you want to update the Dat site you'll need to import the secret key from a friend:
dat keys import < 2020.code4lib.org
Then you'll need to:
rm -rf _site
dat clone dat://2020.code4lib.org _site
jekyll build
cd _site
dat sync