This guide is now located at curriculum-guide.datahub.berkeley.edu.
The information in the guide is primarily intended for instructors who either currently are or will be teaching a course in the UC Berkeley Data Science Education Program: either a connector course, a data-enabled course, or a course featuring a data science module. However, anyone else who wants to learn more about the program, the courses, and the technology is encouraged to look through the guide.
If you've created ssh
keys previously, please skip to the next step.
If you're running Ubuntu, regular installation/VM or WSL2, and have NOT previously generated SSH keys please execute the following commands:
ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 8192
For added security, you can choose to enter a passphrase during key creation. This is optional.
If you're using macos, and have NOT previously generated SSH keys please execute the following commands:
ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 8192
For added security, you can choose to enter a passphrase during key creation. This is optional.
If you're running Windows, please install either WSL2 native linux or gitbash.
Open a terminal, and run the following command. WSL2 is preferred, but there are a few additional steps required.
ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 8192
For added security, you can choose to enter a passphrase during key creation. This is optional.
Please follow the instructions to upload your SSH public key to GitHub. This allows you to authenticate while using git
in a repo.
When you log in to your terminal, you will be in your home directory. We
recomend creating a sub-directory named something like src
or repos
. This
will help you manage any other repos you might download.
$ pwd
/home/username
$ mkdir repos
$ cd repos
Next, go to the Curriculum Guide github repo
and create a fork. To do this, click on the fork
button and then
Create fork
.
Now clone the Curriculum Guide repo on your local device. You
can get the URL to do this by licking on the green Code
button in the primary
Curriculum Guide
repo (not your fork) and clicking on ssh
and copying the value in the box.
Before you clone, make sure that you're in the subdirectory that will contain this repo:
$ pwd
/home/username/repos
Now you can run the git clone
command:
git clone [email protected]:berkeley-cdss/curriculum-guide.git
Now cd
in to curriculum-guide
directory and set up your local repo
to point both at the primary repo (upstream
) and your fork (origin
). After
the initial clone, origin
will be pointing to the main repo and we'll need
to change that.
Here is an example, including output, of how to set up your remotes:
$ cd curriculum guide
$ git remote -v
origin [email protected]:berkeley-cdss/curriculum-guide.git (fetch)
origin [email protected]:berkeley-cdss/curriculum-guide.git (push)
$ git remote rename origin upstream
$ git remote add origin [email protected]:<your github username>/curriculum-guide.git
$ git remote -v
origin [email protected]:<your github username>/curriculum-guide.git (fetch)
origin [email protected]:<your github username>/curriculum-guide.git (push)
upstream [email protected]:berkeley-dsep-infra/curriculum-guide.git (fetch)
upstream [email protected]:berkeley-dsep-infra/curriculum-guide.git (push)
The raw commands to copy and paste are below:
cd curriculum-guide.git
git remote -v
git remote rename origin upstream
git remote add origin [email protected]:<your github username>/curriculum-guide.git
git remote -v
Now you can sync your local repo from upstream
, and push those changes to
your fork (origin
):
git checkout main && \
git fetch --prune --all && \
git rebase upstream/main && \
git push origin main
When making changes to anything in this repo, always work in a fork and on a feature branch. You should also make sure that your local repo is up-to-date with this one (upstream) prior to making and committing changes. This is because other contributors may have pushed changes after you last synced with this repo.
git checkout main && \
git fetch --prune --all && \
git rebase upstream/main && \
git push origin main
To create a new feature branch and switch to it, run the following command:
git checkout -b <branch name>
Make changes to files in the faq or general or technology or workflow directories. The pages and corresponding files can be found in _toc.yml. Add any new pages to _toc.yml.
After you make your changes, you can use the following commands to see
what's been modified and check out the diffs: git status
and git diff
.
When you're ready to push these changes, first you'll need to stage them for a commit:
git add <file1> <file2> <etc>
Commit these changes locally:
git commit -m "commit description"
Now push to your fork:
git push origin <branch name>
Once you've pushed to your fork, you can go to the
Curriculum Guide repo
and there should be a big green button on the top that says Compare and pull request
.
Click on that, check out the commits and file diffs, edit the title and
description if needed and then click Create pull request
.
Once you create a pull request, a github action will run to build the jupyterbook and publish it to https://curriculum-guide.datahub.berkeley.edu/intro.html as a public facing website. Github action will fail if there are issues with the commit.
If you are new to git
, or just want to learn a bit more about it, I highly
recommend taking a look at the official git
online book.
Specifically, please read/review the following chapters:
Credits: Shane's instructions in https://github.com/berkeley-dsep-infra/datahub-usage-analysis