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Sheffield Bioinformatics Core Website

This repository contains the source for the Sheffield Bioinformatics Core, built with Jekyll. It is based on the Research Software Engineering (RSE) pages at The University of Sheffield

The website is hosted on GitHub Pages and can be found at https://sbc.shef.ac.uk.

All content (excluding logos or where explicitly stated) licensed under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.

Development

Install Dependencies

  1. Install Ruby

    • On Windows, this installer can be used https://rubyinstaller.org/

    • On Linux, follow the instructions according to your distribution e.g. for Debian/Ubuntu:

      sudo apt install ruby-full
  2. Install bundler (via a terminal):

    gem install bundler
  3. Install other dependencies:

    cd path/to/clone/of/this/repo
    bundle config set path vendor/bundle
    bundle install

Note: if you get an error related to the public_suffix package, try installing and updating bundler before rebuilding the site:

gem install public_suffix --version 3.0.3
bundler update

Updating Dependencies

Ensure ruby packages are up to date, to avoid differences between local and GitHub/GitHub Actions builds:

bundle update --all

Serving a Local Copy of the Website

To build and serve a local copy of the website, run

bundle exec jekyll serve

The website can then be found at http://127.0.0.1:4000

Note that if you are running Ruby 2.7 then you will see lots of deprecation warnings until Jekyll 4.1 is released.

Building HTML files

bundle exec jekyll build

Generated HTML files can be found in _site.

Writing Content

Content can be written in Markdown, reStructuredText or as HTML.

Assets: Images, PDFs etc

Resources such as images should be stored in the assets directory. E.g. assets/images/image.png.

This can then be included in your markdown file via:

![description of image](/assets/images/image.png){: .img-fluid}

This applies the img-fluid css class to the generate <img> element, to make the image responsive.

PDFs

PDFs or other very large binary files should be stored in an alternate repository, to avoid polluting the main website source with very large files.

Seminar-slides

For seminar content, use the RSE-Sheffield/seminar-slides repository. Detailed instructions are provided in the README.md for how to add files, and how to link to them.

Others

Other files could be stored in an appropriate directory within assets, or alternatively another repository could be set up similar to RSE-Sheffield/seminar-slides.

Linking to Local Content

Ideally link to other pages using either Jekyll's Liquid variables, relative or root-relative) links.

e.g. [Target]({{site.url}}/target/page/), [Target](target/page/) or [Target](/target/page/)

Avoid absolute links such as https://rse.shef.ac.uk/target/page/ which prevent local testing.

Pages

The general website pages are stored in pages/, as Markdown or HTML files.

See the Jekyll Docs /pages/ for more information.

Staff Pages

Staff pages contain biographies of current and alumni (previous) members of the team. There are a few key fields that require careful attention to when adding a new member or updating details of those who have left the team.

The header of each Markdown file is written in yaml with intuitive and self-explanatory fields names.

New Members

When adding a new member a new Markdown file should be created under RSE-Sheffield.github.io/_people/<forename>-<surname>.md with the following example YAML header.

---
alumnum: false
level: 2
published: true

othernames: <forename>
surname: <surname>
role: <role>
---

Most fields required for the header are self-explanatory. One key field is that of level which should be completed according to the level of appointment as detailed in the table below.

Level Description
0 Head of Department
1 Senior Research Software Engineer
2 Research Software Engineer
3 Junior Research Software Engineer

Details of alumni of the RSE team are kept and this is defined by the alumnum field. Whilst a member of the team this should be false and their profile will be listed under Contact > RSE TEAM, but after having left the team it should be true which means their details will be listed under Contact > Alumni.

Blog Posts

Blog posts are located in the _posts directory.

The filename MUST be prepended with a date (ISO 8601) e.g. 2018-01-01-foo-bar.md.

Each blog post has a YAML FrontMatter, which must contain a slug (unique), title, author, date and excerpt_separator. Optional fields can also be included, such as layout, category (or categories), tags etc. image is an optional field and will override the default image (RSE logo) for social cards.

The YAML header should look something like:

---
slug: foo-bar
title: foo-bar
author: Baz
date: 2018-01-01 00:00:00
excerpt_separator: <!--more-->
category:
tags:
social_image: /assets/images/logo/rse-logoonly-stroke.png
---

The excerpt_separator defines a token, which when placed in the blog post causes the remainder of the post to be omitted from blog post previews shown around the website (e.g. here. It is recommended that blog posts account for the excerpt by having the first paragraph/s act as an introduction to the blog post's content. If excerpt_separator is not included in the front-matter, the first line-break will be treated as the end of the excerpt, the suggested seperator <!--more--> is a html comment so will not be visible within blog posts.

Warning: GitHub will refuse to serve Jekyll sites that include funny characters (e.g. & or @ in the title: YAML field unless the entire title is enclosed in double-quotes, even though the Jekyll site will build locally without warnings.

Warning: Social Card images cannot be SVGs.

Events

Events are located in the _events directory.

Events have a YAML FrontMatter, which must include category, date, from and to.

The category variable classifies the type of event. The list of existing categories can be found at _data/event-categories.yml.

Different categories of event may expect or make use of additional variables, such as speaker, institute and title for the seminar category. See other examples of the same category for further details.

The following are some of the FrontMatter variables which can be set:

Category Description
category Tagname of the category that your event belongs to
permalink If you have dedicated pages for each event category, use this to place the event's permalink in the correct page, e.g. for deep learning events at /training/deeplearning/, you might want to set the permalink as /training/deeplearning/2019-01-01-myevent/
title Title of your event
date Starting date with format: YYYY-MM-DD
end-date Optional The end date for events that run over multiple days, with format: YYYY-MM-DD
from Starting time with format: HH:MM
to Ending time with format: HH:MM
location Location of your event
tags searchable tags, (not implemented yet)

Note - Permalinks should end with a trailing / so the event can be accessed with or without the trailing /. E.g. permalink: /mycategory/2019-01-01-myevent/ will allow the page to be accessed at https://rse.shef.ac.uk/mycategory/2019-01-01-myevent/ and https://rse.shef.ac.uk/mycategory/2019-01-01-myevent.

Event Categories

_data/event-categories.yml provides the details of existing event categories

Each category is identified with a unique key, such as seminar. Categories should have an associated image representation and a text value for display.

i.e.

seminar:
    image: "/assets/images/icons/icons8-training-50.png"
    text: "Seminar"

To create a new category, add a new YAML element with a unique key to _data/event-categories.yml.

Events with categories: workshop, carpentry, dltraining and gitzerohero are included in the list on the training page.

Creating a new category listing

To create a new page which lists all events of a given category:

  1. Create a new page, i.e. pages/newcategory.md

  2. Include the event_list.html template with the key from your new category:

    {% include events_list.html category="newcategory" %}

Adding/editing info re RSE team projects

Each project listed in _data/projects.csv should have a description in a markdown file in the _project_descriptions/ folder. The markdown file must be named identically to the text in the key column of projects.csv.

The following project data (and metadata) are to be populated in projects.csv:

Field Description Mandatory
ID Project ID from RSE Admin No
key A code that links this table to the markdown file containing the full project description. Yes
title Project title used in RSE Admin. Yes
long_title A descriptive project title. Yes
tech_methods Technology and methods used in the project including programming languages. Each item in this list should be separated by a comma and a space. Yes
rses Comma seperated list of RSEs involved (firstname lastname). Yes
start Project start date dd/mm/yyyy Yes
end Project end date dd/mm/yyyy; leave as the empty string if ongoing No
department Collaborator department. Yes
level Priority level for display - currently set to 1 if project has a description, 2 if not.
show Set to 1 if the project is to be displayed, 0 if not.

Project descriptions are to be written in markdown with a header containing the project key:

---
key: <key>
---

The text should address the following:

  • A general description of the project, its aims and objectives, link to project website (if available).
  • What does / did the RSE collaboration add to the project?
  • Current and planned project outputs linked to RSE contribution (e.g. GitHub link, papers, talks).
  • Project impact beyond software (societal benefits, policy change, improved media output, financial / business, public engagement, health benefits).

Layout and Style

The structure of Jekyll websites are controlled through Layouts, found in _layouts directory which can be specified per-page in the YAML header.

Layouts (or pages) may reference includes which are re-usable sections of markup, found in _includes.

Style should primarily be controlled through CSS, both through the site theme and any custom CSS rules. Custom CSS should be specified in assets/css/custom.css

Table Formatting

Markdown tables generated by jekyll are not well-themed by the website theme / bootstrap by default, as classes need adding to the table to improve the formatting. This can be achieved in jekyll using a Kramdown feature as follows:

| Example | Table | A |
|---------|-------|---|
|       1 |     2 | 3 |
|       4 |     5 | 6 |
|       7 |     8 | 9 |
{:.table.table-bordered.table-striped.table-hovered}

Enabling page redirects

Sometimes you want to change the name or permalink of a page. A Jekyll plugin has been enabled to help with that: you can create redirects to a page by adding something like the following to the page's YAML header:

redirect_from:
  - /events/some-page-that-might-not-exist.html

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