# Open Project theme by Ribose
Open Project is a theme for Jekyll oriented towards presenting open efforts
such as open-source software and specifications in a navigable and elegant way.
Open Project fits two types of sites:
that describe one individual project, and that combine projects into sort of an open hub.
See also: CI_OPS for how to set up automated build and deployment of the site
to AWS S3.
## Contents
* Creating a site: [quick-start](#starting-a-site-with-this-theme)
* [Universal site setup](#universal-setup)
* [Hub site setup](#hub-site)
* [Project site setup](#project-site)
* Describing open projects:
[Project data structure](#describing-a-project-shared-data-structure)
* Customizing site looks without violating theme design constraints:
* [Style customization](#style-customization)
* [SVG guidelines](#svg-guidelines)
* [Content guidelines](#content-guidelines)
* [Select layout reference](#select-layout-reference)
## Starting a site with this theme
### Getting started with Ruby
If you aren’t using Ruby often, the recommended way to install it is with RVM.
Refer to RVM docs and use it to install a fresh Ruby version.
The currently recommended version is 2.4.4, it’s known to not work under 2.3
and it hasn’t been tested on newer versions.
### Start new Jekyll site
jekyll new my-open-site
### Installing theme
Add this line to your Jekyll site's `Gemfile`,
replacing default theme requirement:
```ruby
gem "jekyll-theme-open-project"
```
(Jekyll’s default theme was “minima” at the time of this writing.)
Also in the `Gemfile`, add two important plugins to the `:jekyll_plugins` group.
(The SEO tag plugin is not mandatory, but these docs assume you use it.)
```ruby
group :jekyll_plugins do
gem "jekyll-seo-tag"
gem "jekyll-data"
gem "jekyll-data"
gem "jekyll-theme-open-project-helpers"
# ...other plugins, if you use any
end
```
Execute the following to install dependencies:
$ bundle
### Configuring site
Edit _config.yml to add necessary site-wide configuration options,
and add necessary files and folders to site contents. This step depends
on the type of site you’re creating: open hub or individual open project site.
Below sections explain core concepts of open project and hub, and go
into detail about how to configure a project or hub site.
### Building site
Execute to build the site locally and watch for changes:
$ bundle exec jekyll serve --host mysite.local --port 4000
This assumes you have mysite.local mapped, otherwise omit --host
and it’ll use localhost.
## Universal setup
These settings are required to both site types (hub and project).
- You may want to remove the default about.md page added by Jekyll,
as this theme does not account for its existence.
- Add `hero_include: home-hero.html` to YAML frontmatter in `index.md`.
- Add following items to _config.yml
(don’t forget to remove default theme requirement):
```yaml
title: Site title
description: Site description
# The above two are used by jekyll-seo-tag for things such as
# `
` and ` ` tags, as well as elsewhere by the theme.
tagline: Site tagline
pitch: Site pitch
# The above two are used on home hero unit.
permalink: /blog/:month-:day-:year/:title/
theme: jekyll-theme-open-project
social:
links:
- https://twitter.com/
- https://github.com/
```
### Logo
Logo consists of a symbol and site name.
**Symbol** is basically an icon for the site.
Should look OK in dimensions of 30x30px, and fit inside a square.
Should be in SVG format (see also the SVG guidelines section).
Place the symbol in _includes/symbol.svg.
**Site name** displayed to the right of the symbol.
Limit the name to 1-3 words.
By default, the title you define in site config is used (for project site,
it is the name of the project).
Alternatively, you can place site name in _includes/title.html with custom HTML
or SVG. (In that case it must look good when placed in a 30px tall container,
and in case of SVG same SVG guidelines apply).
### Legal small text
You may want to supply _includes/legal.html with content like this:
```html
Copyright © 2018 MyCompany. All rights reserved.
Terms
Privacy
```
### Blog
Project sites and hub site can have a blog.
In case of the hub, blog index will show combined timeline
from hub blog and projects’ blogs.
#### Index
Create blog index page as _pages/blog.html, with nothing but frontmatter.
Use layout called "blog-index", pass `hero_include: index-page-hero.html`,
and set `title` and `description` as appropriate for blog index page.
Example:
```yaml
---
title: Blog
description: >-
Get the latest announcements and technical how-to’s
about our software and projects.
layout: blog-index
hero_include: index-page-hero.html
---
```
#### Posts
In general, posts are authored as per usual Jekyll setup.
The following _additional_ data is expected within post document frontmatter:
```yaml
---
author:
email:
name:
social_links:
- https://twitter.com/username
- https://facebook.com/username
- https://linkedin.com/in/username
---
```
For hub-wide posts, put posts under _posts/ in site root and name files e.g.
`2018-04-20-welcome-to-jekyll.markdown` (no change from the usual Jekyll setup).
For project posts, see below about shared project data structure.
## Hub site
The hub represents your company or department, links to all projects
and offers a software and specification index.
Additional items allowed/expected in _config.yml:
```yaml
is_hub: true
# Since a hub would typically represent an organization as opposed
# to individual, this would make sense:
seo:
type: Organization
```
### Project, spec and software data
See the section about project data structure.
_When used within hub site_ (only), each project subdirectory
must contain a file "index.md" with frontmatter like this:
```yaml
title: Sample Awesome Project
description: >-
A sentence or two go here.
# Whether the project is included in featured three projects on hub home page
featured: true | false
home_url:
```
### Project index page
Create software index in _pages/projects.html, with nothing but frontmatter.
Use layout called "project-index", pass `hero_include: index-page-hero.html`,
and set `title` and `description` as appropriate.
Example:
```yaml
---
title: Open projects
description: Projecting goodness into the world!
layout: project-index
hero_include: index-page-hero.html
---
```
### Software index page
Create software index in _pages/software.html, with nothing but frontmatter.
Use layout called "software-index", pass `hero_include: index-page-hero.html`,
and set `title` and `description` as appropriate.
Example:
```yaml
---
title: Software
description: Open-source software developed with MyCompany’s cooperation.
layout: software-index
hero_include: index-page-hero.html
---
```
### Specification index page
Create spec index in _pages/specs.html, with nothing but frontmatter.
Use layout called "spec-index", pass `hero_include: index-page-hero.html`,
and set `title` and `description` as appropriate.
Example:
```yaml
---
title: Specifications
description: Because specifications are cool!
layout: spec-index
hero_include: index-page-hero.html
---
```
## Project site
When project is set up as a standalone site, _config.yml should include
site-wide `title` that is the same as project name.
Additional items allowed/expected in _config.yml:
```yaml
authors:
- name: Your Name
email: your-email@example.com
author: "Company or Individual Name Goes Here"
```
File layout is the same as described in the section
about shared project data structure, with _software, _specs, _posts, _includes
directories found in the root of your Jekyll site.
## Describing a project: shared data structure
Each project is expected to have a machine-readable and unique name, a title,
a description, a symbol, and one or more software products and/or specs.
Following data structure is shared and used to describe projects,
whether on hub home site or each individual project site:
- /
- _posts/
- 2038-02-31-blog-post-title.markdown
- _includes/
- symbol.svg
- _software/
- .md
- /
- _includes/
- symbol.svg
- _specs/
- .md
### Blog
Author project site blog posts as described in the universal setup section.
### Software and specs
An open project serves as an umbrella for related
software products and/or specifications.
Each product or spec is described by its own .md file with frontmatter,
placed under _software/ or _specs/ subdirectory, respectively,
of your open project’s Jekyll site.
A software product additionally is required to have a symbol in SVG format,
placed in /_includes/symbol.svg under _software/ directory.
YAML frontmatter that is expected with both software and specs:
```yaml
title: A Few Words
# Shown to the user
# and used for HTML metadata if jekyll-seo-tag is enabled
description: A sentence.
# Not necessarily shown to the user,
# but used for HTML metadata if jekyll-seo-tag is enabled
tags: [Python, Ruby]
```
### Software product
YAML frontmatter required for software:
```yaml
repo_url: https://github.com/riboseinc/asciidoctor-rfc
docs:
git_repo_url: git@example.com:path/to-repo.git
git_repo_subtree: docs
```
About the `docs` key in this frontmatter, see nearby section
about documentation.
### Specification
YAML frontmatter specific to specs:
```yaml
rfc_id: XXXX
# IETF RFC URL would be in the form
# http://ietf.org/html/rfc
ietf_datatracker_id: some-string-identifier-here
ietf_datatracker_ver: "01"
# IETF datatracker URL would be in the form
# https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/[-]
source_url: https://example.com/spec-source-markup
```
### Documentation for specs and software
Documentation contents for software should be kept in software
package’s own repository, under a directory such as `docs/`.
Inside that directory, place a file called `navigation.md` containing
only frontmatter, in format like this:
```yaml
sections:
- name: Introduction
items:
- overview
- installation
- name: Usage
items:
- basic
```
In the same directory, place the required document pages—in this case, overview.md,
installation.md, and basic.md. Each document page is required to contain
standard YAML frontmatter with at least `title` specified.
During project site build, Jekyll will pull docs for software products
that are hosted under that project site.
### Symbol
Should look OK in dimensions of 30x30px, and fit inside a square.
Should be in SVG format (see also the SVG guidelines section).
Place the symbol in _includes/symbol.svg within project directory.
## SVG guidelines
- Ensure SVG markup does not use IDs. It may appear multiple times
on the page hence IDs would fail markup validation.
- Ensure root element specifies its viewBox,
but no width or height attributes.
- You can style SVG shapes using in site’s assets/css/style.scss.
## Content guidelines
- Project, software, spec title: 1-3 words, capital case
- Project, software, spec description: about 12 words, no markup
- Project description (featured): about 20-24 words, no markup
- Blog post title: 3–7 words
- Blog post excerpt: about 20–24 words, no markup
## Select layout reference
Normally you don’t need to specify layouts manually, except where
instructed in site setup sections of this document.
Commonly used layouts are:
- blog-index: Blog index page. Pages using this layout are recommended
to supply hero_include.
- post: Blog post
- project-index: Open project index page (hub site only).
Suggested to supply hero_include.
Will show a list of open projects across the hub.
- software-index: Software index page (hub site only).
Suggested to supply hero_include.
Will show a list of software across projects within the hub.
- spec-index: Specification index page (hub site only).
Suggested to supply hero_include.
Will show a list of specs across projects within the hub.
- product: Software product (project site only)
- spec: Open specification (project site only)
### Page frontmatter
Typical expected page frontmatter is `title` and `description`. Those are
also used by jekyll-seo-tag plugin to add the appropriate meta tags.
Commonly supported in page frontmatter is the hero_include option,
which would show hero unit underneath top header.
Currently, theme supports _includes/index-page-hero.html as the only value
you can pass for hero_include (or you can leave hero_include out altogether).
## Style customization
To customize site appearance, create a file in your Jekyll site
under assets/css/style.scss with following exact contents:
```
---
---
// Font imports can go here
// Variable redefinitions can go here
@import 'jekyll-theme-open-project';
// Custom rules can go here
```
There are two aspects to theme customization:
* Cutomize SASS variables before the import (such as colors)
* Define custom style rules after the import
### Custom rules
One suggested custom rule would be to change the fill color for SVG paths
used for your custom site symbol to white, unless it’s white by default.
The rule would look like this:
```scss
.site-logo svg path {
fill: white;
}
```
### SASS variables
Following are the variables along with their defaults:
```scss
$font-family: Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif !default;
# Primary color—should be bright but dark enough to be readable,
# since some text elements are set using this color:
$primary-color: lightblue !default;
# Darker variation of primary color used for background on elements where
# text is set in white:
$primary-dark-color: navy !default;
# Bright color for accent elements, such as buttons (not yet in use).
# Text on those elements is set in bold and white, so this color
# should be dark enough:
$accent-color: red !default;
# Below are used for `background` CSS rule for top header, and for
# hero unit respectively. Gradients can be supplied.
$header-background: $primary-dark-color !default;
$hero-background: $primary-dark-color !default;
# This is for the big big hero unit on home page.
$superhero-background: $primary-dark-color !default;
# Below customize colors for different sections of the site.
$hub-software--primary-color: lightsalmon !default;
$hub-software--primary-dark-color: tomato !default;
$hub-software--hero-background: $hub-software--primary-dark-color !default;
$hub-specs--primary-color: lightpink !default;
$hub-specs--primary-dark-color: palevioletred !default;
$hub-specs--hero-background: $hub-specs--primary-dark-color !default;
```
## Contributing
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub
at https://github.com/riboseinc/jekyll-theme-open-project.
This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration,
and contributors are expected to adhere
to the [Contributor Covenant](http://contributor-covenant.org) code of conduct.
## Theme development
Generally, this directory is setup like a Jekyll site. To set it up,
run `bundle install`.
To experiment with this code, add content (projects, software, specs)
and run `bundle exec jekyll serve`. This starts a Jekyll server
using this theme at `http://localhost:4000`.
Put your layouts in `_layouts`, your includes in `_includes`,
your sass files in `_sass` and any other assets in `assets`.
Add pages, documents, data, etc. like normal to test your theme's contents.
As you make modifications to your theme and to your content, your site will
regenerate and you should see the changes in the browser after a refresh,
like normal.
When your theme is released, only files specified with gemspec file
will be included. If you modify theme to add more directories that
need to be included in the gem, edit regexp in the gemspec.
### Building and releasing
To check your theme, run:
./develop/build
It’ll build Jekyll site and run some checks, like HTML markup validation.
To build new gem and push it to rubygems.org, run:
./develop/release
## License
The theme is available as open source under the terms of the [MIT License](https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT).