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ClusterLabs.org website

Installing Jekyll

ClusterLabs.org is partially generated by Jekyll, a Ruby gem. The following dependencies are required by Jekyll:

  • nodejs
  • npm
  • Ruby
  • Bundler

See src/Gemfile.lock for the currently required versions of those dependencies.

Once you have these four dependencies, install Jekyll by changing to the src directory and running bundle install.

Note: If your development environment is not lucky enough to have the required versions, these instructions might help:

  • Install Ruby Version Manager and its dependencies:
    • sudo dnf install rvm gcc g++ zlib-devel autoconf
  • Then, use rvm to install OpenSSL and the desired Ruby version:
    • rvm pkg install openssl
    • rvm install $RUBY_VERSION --rubygems $GEMS_VERSION --with-openssl-dir=$HOME/.rvm/usr
    • rvm use $RUBY_VERSION
  • Then, use gem to install the desired version of any gems.
    • gem install $GEM_NAME:$GEM_VERSION

Using Jekyll

ClusterLabs.org's jekyll source is under the src directory. Jekyll will generate static content to the html directory.

To generate content in a checkout for development and testing, change to the src directory and run bundle exec jekyll build (to merely generate content) or bundle exec jekyll serve (to generate and test via a local server). To generate content on the production site, run JEKYLL_ENV=production bundle exec jekyll build (which will enable such things as asset digests).

If src/Gemfile changes, re-run bundle install afterward.

Updating Ruby gems

Display Ruby dependencies, with their current version:

bundle list

Show available updates:

bundle outdated

Show where a gem comes from:

bundle info $GEM

Update one gem and dependencies (will update Gemfile.lock, which must be committed):

bundle update $GEM

If a gem can't update due to not supporting the local Ruby version or installable versions of other gems, or you need to raise a dependency version to fix a security issue, you can edit Gemfile to add a version restriction like:

gem "gem-name", "2.7.0"		-> exact version
gem "gem-name", ">= 2.0.2, < 5.0"	-> version within range
gem "gem-name.rb", "~> 0.6.0"	-> last number may increase

Images, stylesheets and JavaScripts

We use the jekyll-assets plugin to manage "assets" such as images, stylesheets, and JavaScript. One advantage is that digest hashes are automatically added to the generated filenames when in production mode. This allows "cache busting" when an asset changes, so we can use long cache times on the server end. Another advantage is that sources are minified when in production mode.

How CSS is managed:

  • CSS is generated from SASS sources
  • src/_assets/stylesheets/main.scss is just a list of imports
  • all other *.scss files beneath src/_assets/stylesheets contain the SASS to be imported by main.scss
  • jekyll will generate html/assets/main.css (or main-_HASH_.css) as the combination of all imports
  • web pages can reference the stylesheet via {% stylesheet main %}

JavaScript is managed similarly:

  • src/_assets/javascripts/main.js is just a list of requires
  • src/_assets/javascripts/*.js contain the JavaScript to be required by main.js
  • jekyll will copy these to html/assets
  • jekyll will generate html/assets/main.js (or main-_HASH_.js) as the combination of all JavaScript
  • web pages can reference the script via {% javascript main %}

How images are managed:

  • src/_assets/images/* are our images
  • web pages can add an img tag using {% image _NAME_._EXT_ %}
  • web pages can reference a path to an image (e.g. in a link's href) using {% asset_path _NAME_._EXT_ %}
  • CSS can reference a path to an image using url(asset_path("_NAME_._EXT_"))
  • only images that are referenced in one of these ways will be deployed to the website, so _assets may contain image sources such as SVGs that do not need to be deployed
  • Tip: http://compresspng.com/ can often compress PNGs extremely well

Site icons

Site icons used to be easy, right? favicon.ico seems downright traditional.

Unfortunately, site icons have become an ugly mess of incompatible proprietary extensions. Even favicon.ico is just a proprietary extension (and obsolete, as well). Now, there are also apple-touch-icon[-NxN][-precomposed].png (with at least 12 different sizes!), browserconfig.xml, manifest.json, link tags with rel=(icon|shortcut icon|apple-touch-icon-*), and Windows Phone tile overlay divs.

If you want to be discouraged and confused, see:

There is no way to handle the mess universally. In particular, some devices do much better when different icon sizes are provided and listed in the HTML as link tags, and will pick the size needed, whereas other devices will download every single icon listed in those link tags, crippling page performance -- not to mention the overhead that listing two dozen icon sizes adds to the HTML.

We've chosen a simple approach: provide two site icons, a 16x16 favicon.ico, and a 180x180 apple-touch-icon.png, both listed in link tags in the HTML. Most browsers/devices will choose one of these and scale it as needed.

Web server configuration

The clusterlabs.org web server is configured to redirect certain old URLs to their new locations, so be careful about renaming files.