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Instructions for contributing to The Carpentries' lesson materials using graphical or command line interfaces with git and GitHub

Prerequisites and other options

Note: The GitHub webpage interface works well for making relatively small edits, like adding a link, fixing typos, or adding several lines of explanation. For larger edits, the command line interface is recommended.

Contents

Glossary of some version control vocabulary related to git and GitHub

For more details, see the Carpentry git lesson reference page

  • repository (short form: repo)
    • a storage area for a project containing all the files for the project and the history of all the changes made to those files
  • local copy
    • the version of file stored on your own computer
  • remote copy
    • the version of a file stored outside of your own computer, for example stored on an external server, perhaps at GitHub. Remotes are referenced by nicknames, e.g. origin or upstream.
  • branch
    • a branch is a named series of commits. The default branch when you download a Carpentry lesson is usually called gh-pages or main. Creating a new branch makes a parallel version of a repository where changes can be made that affect the new branch only and not the original (base) version of the repository. New branches are often used to test changes or new ideas, which can later be merged with the base branch. Moving from one branch to another is called checking out a new branch.
  • fork (GitHub-specific term)
    • to copy a repository from another user and store it under your own GitHub account. Can also refer to the copied repo itself.
  • gh-pages (GitHub-specific term)
    • stands for "GitHub Pages". This is often the default branch in Carpentry lesson material repositories. Branches called gh-pages can be published as webpages hosted by GitHub.
  • origin
    • the main remote repository you want to download files from or compare local changes you have made to. When you've forked a repository, your origin is your new copy of the repository in your account.
  • upstream
    • the original repository you made your fork from. Both origin and upstream are remote repositories.
  • commit
    • save changes in your working directory to your local repository
  • push
    • send committed changes you have made on your local computer to a remote repository. For a change to show up on GitHub, the committed changes must be pushed from your computer to the remote repository.
  • pull
    • download changes from a remote repository to your local version of the same repository. This is useful when other people have made changes to a shared project, and you want to download (pull) the changes from the shared remote repository to your own computer.
  • pull request (GitHub-specific term, abbreviated as 'PR')
    • send proposed changes from a specific version of a repository back to the main version of a repository to be considered for incorporation by the people maintaining the repository (the maintainers). You are requesting that the maintainers pull your changes into their repository.

Making lesson changes with GitHub

  1. Identify the url and repository name for the lesson you want to make changes for, e.g., https://github.com/swcarpentry/git-novice. The default branch for many of The Carpentries lesson repositories is called gh-pages, but some lessons use main.

  2. It’s not possible for you to directly edit the version of the lesson in the Carpentry repository, so the overall idea of “GitHub Flow” is that you can submit edits by:

    1. making your own copy of the lesson repository, then

    2. making a branch in your own copy, then

    3. making the changes on that dedicated branch, and then

    4. sending your proposed changes back to the Carpentry version of the repository by creating a pull request.

Option 1 - Use a graphical interface (the GitHub webpage)

  1. Have you already forked the repository for this lesson?

    If NO (you have not yet forked the repository for this lesson):

    a) Fork a copy of the lesson repository's default branch into your account. Do this by selecting the default branch on the dropdown option of branches on the left hand side of the repository's page, then clicking the 'Fork' button in the upper right:

    alt text

    b) When the “Where should we fork this repository?” screen appears, click on your GitHub username (or other organizational account, if you are a member of any other organizations on GitHub).

    c) The lesson will then be forked into a new copy of the repository under your username or your organizational account (it may take a minute or two for the copying to complete). Now you are ready to make edits. Go to the Making Your Edits section below.

    If YES (you have already forked the repository for this lesson):

    a) If you just made the fork, go on to the Making Your Edits section below.

    b) If you made the fork a while ago, make sure it is up to date with the latest changes in the Carpentry lesson repository with these instructions before starting to edit:

    Check the status of your repository - look if there is a message underneath the navigation bar, such as "This branch is <#> commits behind ..."

alt text

  • If the message says that your branch is even, proceed to the Making Your Edits section below.

  • If it says that your branch is behind, click the "Compare" icon (below the "Clone or download" button) on the right:

alt text

After clicking "Compare" you will most likely see a message saying there isn’t anything to compare, such as -

alt text

That means that GitHub is comparing your repository ("head") with the origin repository ("base"). The message there isn’t anything to compare means all of the content of your repository is also present in the origin repository. In order to make the opposite comparison - to compare the origin repository with your repository - click on the “switching the base” link. This will make your repository the basis of the comparison ("base") and compare the changes in the origin repository to your repository ("head").

After clicking the “switching the base” link, you should now see something similar to:

alt text

Note that the base and head forks have now been switched, so GitHub is now comparing the origin repository to yours (as opposed to comparing your repository to the origin).

Click “Create pull request” - this is creating a pull request to you (for your repository) asking to pull changes from the origin repository into your repository. Enter a title for the request and then click the "Create pull request" button.

alt text

On the next screen click “View pull request” to view the pull request you just created for your repository. Towards the bottom of the screen, look for this message:

alt text

Click on “Merge pull request”, add any notes you want, then click “Confirm merge”.

The status should now be “Merged”, and your repository will be up to date with all the changes from the origin repository! Congrats, you are ready to start making your edits!

Making your edits

  1. Create a new branch in your fork of the base repository. It's best practice to make each significant change in a separate fork so each significant change can be submitted as a separate pull request. Create a new branch by clicking on the 'Branch' dropdown, and entering a new branch name in the “Find or create a branch…” dialog

alt text

Click the “create branch” button and this will create a copy of whatever branch you have selected in the drop-down into a new branch named whatever you enter for the name.

  1. Make your changes to files in the branch you just created. Since you are making changes in a branch you just created, select “Commit directly” and then click “Commit changes”:

alt text

  1. You’ll now see that your new branch with the edits will be a commit ahead of the base branch - click on “Pull request” to open the pull request submission screen to submit those changes to the master repository for consideration:

alt text

  1. Add a short explanation of your suggested changes, then click “Submit Pull Request” at the bottom of the page. It will be helpful if your description is more detailed than the commit message (e.g., you can explain why you changed something). People will be able to see the code you changed though, so you don’t have to repeat every single thing you changed.

If you make more changes to this branch after making the pull request, those changes will automatically get added to the existing pull request, as long as the pull request hasn't been closed.

  1. Wait for feedback from the community on your pull request!

  2. If you receive feedback, make the changes on GitHub and the pull request will update automatically.

  3. Congrats on completing the tutorial and thank you for taking the time to submit suggestions to this open-source lesson material! You can use this process of creating a branch with specific edits and submitting it as a pull request for review to contribute to other projects too (including improving this document), keeping in mind the repository names and organization will probably be different between projects.

Option 2 - Use a command line interface with git

  1. Have you already forked the repository for this lesson?

    If NO (you have not yet forked the repository for this lesson):

    a) Fork a copy of the lesson repository's default branch into your account. Do this by selecting the default branch on the dropdown option of branches on the left side of the repository's page, then clicking the 'Fork' button on the upper right:

    alt text

    b) When the “Where should we fork this repository?” screen appears, click on your GitHub username (or other organizational account, if you are a member of any other organizations on GitHub).

    c) The lesson will then be forked into a new copy of the repository under your username or your organizational account (it may take a minute or two for the copying to complete). Once it's done, click the “Clone or download” button on the right side of the screen, and copy the url that pops up below:

    clone_or_download_url1

    clone_or_download_url2

    The url will end in .git and look something like this: https://github.com/yourgithubusername/lessonname.git

    For example, if your username was daisieh and you forked the git-novice lesson the url will be:

    https://github.com/daisieh/shell-novice.git
    

    d) Open your terminal, navigate to a folder you want to keep your copy of the lesson in, use git clone to copy the files from your repository on GitHub to your local computer, and change to that directory:

    git clone https://github.com/yourgithubusername/lessonname.git cd lessonname

    e) Lastly, add the Carpentry repository you forked from as a remote using the format git remote add upstream https://github.com/url/for/lesson.

    For example:

    git remote add upstream https://github.com/swcarpentry/shell-novice

    Note using upstream is a convention, not a git command, you could name the remote repository something else by replacing upstream with another name you choose.

    Confirm the new remote shows up with git remote show. You should see at least two names, including origin (which should point to your fork of the online repository) and the name of your remote, e.g., upstream.

    f) You’re all set up - go to step 4 to make your edits.

    If YES (you have already forked the repository for this lesson):

    a) Confirm what remote repositories your local copy of the lesson can connect to:

    git remote show

    • In the output, if you see two or more names, including origin (your repository online), and either the name of the account you forked from, e.g., swcarpentry, or upstream, referring to the account you forked from, go on to the next step.

    • If you only see origin, you need to add the repository you forked from as a remote using git remote add upstream https://github.com/url/for/lesson

    For example, to add the shell-novice lesson as a remote named upstream: git remote add upstream https://github.com/swcarpentry/shell-novice

    Confirm the new remote shows up with git remote show and you're ready for the next step.

    b) It’s best practice to make sure your copy of the lesson is up-to-date with the latest changes to the Carpentry version of the lesson, so the difference between your proposed changes and the existing lesson will only be the edits you’re about to make.

    c) Make sure you're on the default branch (we will use gh-pages as the branch name for our examples) in your local copy:

    git checkout gh-pages

    d) Make sure your copy of this default branch doesn't have any uncommitted changes:

    git status

    If it has changes that you're willing to overwrite, reset the branch:

    git reset --hard

    e) Now we’re going to use git pull to overwrite your current version of the lesson with the most recent version from the Carpentry repository:

    git pull upstream gh-pages

    f) Commit your update, using the -m flag to include a short message explaining what changed inside quote marks:

    git commit -m "updates from latest Carpentry lesson"

    g) Push your newly updated local copy of the default branch back to your own remote repository too:

    git push

    Now you’re ready to start editing with step 4 below!

    Note: some open source projects refer to the default branch as main or master, so you may see this term used in other examples online, instead of gh-pages or the 'base' branch.

Making your edits

  1. For each change or group of changes you want to make, start by making a new branch on your local copy of the default with git checkout -b newbranchname gh-pages. It’s helpful to give the branch a relevant name e.g.,

    git checkout -b extraexamples gh-pages

    or

    git checkout -b fixtypo gh-pages

    You can see a list of existing branches and the branch you’re currently on with the command git branch.

  2. On your new branch, make your edits, then add and commit the changes in that branch.

    For example, if you edited a file called 03-create.md, your adding and committing the file might look like:

    git add 03-create.md

    git commit -m “Fixed typos in solution”

    or

    git add 03-create.md

    git commit -m “Update 'Moving and Copying example'”

  3. Staying on the same branch, push your local edited branch to your fork of the lesson on GitHub with git push origin newbranchname.

    For example: git push origin extraexamples

  4. Go back to your forked repository on GitHub in your internet browser and navigate to your new branch using the dropdown menu under the branch button:

    navigating_to_a_branch1

    navigating_to_a_branch2

  5. Once on your new branch, press the “Compare and Pull Request" button on the right:

    compare_and_pull_request Example where the name of the most recently pushed branch is called 'test-branch'.

  6. Add a short explanation of your suggested changes, then press “Submit Pull Request” at the bottom of the page. It will be helpful if your description is more detailed than the commit message (e.g., you can explain why you changed something). People will be able to see the code you changed though, so you don’t have to repeat every single thing you changed.

  7. Wait for feedback from the community on your pull request!

  8. As long as the pull request is open (it has not been merged or closed) you can add additional changes (e.g., if you got feedback or think of related improvements). To do this, use the terminal to switch back to the branch on your local version that you made the previous edits on. You can see the name of the pull request's branch at the top of the pull request. The git command to return to a branch is git checkout newbranchname, e.g., git checkout extraexamples.

Then make your additional changes, and commit and push them with git push, e.g.,

git add file_you_edited.md

git commit -m "made additional improvement XYZ"

git push

You do not need to repeat git push origin branchname (this will re-push the branch).

When you look at the pull request on GitHub it will update automatically to add the new commits you've pushed to the existing pull request from this branch.

  1. Congrats on completing the tutorial and thank you for taking the time to submit suggestions to this open-source lesson material! You can use this process of creating a branch with specific edits and submitting it as a pull request for review to contribute to other projects too (including improving this document), keeping in mind the repository names and organization will probably be different between projects.