Editing the expo website is an adventure. Until now, there was no guide which explains the whole thing as a functioning system. Learning it by trial and error is non-trivial.
The website needs improvement, perhaps a complete overhaul. However, it is impossible to go about fixing it properly until we know how the whole thing works.
This manual is organized in a how-to sort of style. The categories, rather than referring to specific elements of the website, refer to processes that a maintainer would want to do.
Contents
How to update things on cucc.survex.com/expo
Getting a username and password
Contact Mark Shinwell.
Version control
No changes should be made directly to any files on the server. Instead, we use a version control system to allow collaborative editing and so that any changes can be rolled back if necessary. In the past this was CVS (Concurrent Version System), and there was guide to using that system. Now we use SVN (Subversion).
To edit the website, you need an SVN client. If you are using windows, [1] is highly recommended. Once you've downloaded and installed it, the first step is to create what is called a checkout of the website or section of the website which you want to work on. This creates a copy on your machine which you can edit to your heart's content. The command to check out the entire expo website is
svn co svn+ssh://cucc.survex.com/home/cucc/svn/trunk/expoweb
In TortoiseSVN, merely right-click on a folder you want to check out to, choose "SVN checkout," and enter
svn+ssh://cucc.survex.com/home/cucc/svn/trunk/expoweb
After you've made your changes, check them back in using
svn ci
or right clicking on the folder and going to check in in TortoiseSVN.
None of your changes will take effect, however, until you've run the expoweb-update script.
The expoweb-update script
The script at the heart of the website update mechanism is a shell script at
/cucc.survex.com/home/cucc/bin/expoweb-update
To run scripts on the server, you need to log in via SSH. The best way to do this in windows is to download PuTTY.
Updating cave pages
Cave description pages are automatically generated from a comma separated values (CSV) table named CAVETAB2.CSV by a perl script called make-indxal4.pl . make-indxal4.pl is called automatically.
The first step is to check out, edit, and check in CAVETAB2.CSV, which is at
/home/cucc/www/expo/noinfo/CAVETAB2.CSV
You need to be somewhat careful with the formatting; each cell needs to be only one line long (i.e. no newlines) or the script will get confused.
And then run expoweb-update as above.
Updating expo year pages
Each year's expo has a documentation index which is in the folder
/home/cucc/www/expo/years
, so to checkout the 2007 page, for example, you would use
svn co svn+ssh://cucc.survex.com/home/cucc/svn/trunk/expoweb/years/2007
Adding typed logbooks
To be written.
Ticking off QMs
To be written.
Maintaining the survey status table
At [2] there is a table which has a list of all the surveys and whether or not they have been drawn up, and some other info.
This is generated by the script /home/cucc/www/tablizebyname-csv.pl from the input file /home/cucc/www/Surveys.csv
Automation on cucc.survex.com/expo
Script location | Input file | Output file | Purpose | |
---|---|---|---|---|
/svn/trunk/expoweb/noinfo/make-indxal4.pl | /svn/trunk/expoweb/noinfo/CAVETAB2.CSV | many | produces all cave description pages | |
/svn/trunk/expoweb/noinfo/make-folklist.py | /svn/trunk/expoweb/noinfo/folk.csv | http://cucc.survex.com/expo/folk/index.htm | Table of all expo members | |
/svn/trunk/surveys/tablize.pl /svn/trunk/surveys/tablizebyname-csv.pl |
/svn/trunk/surveys/Surveys.csv |
http://cucc.survex.com/expo/surveys/surveytable.html http://cucc.survex.com/expo/surveys/surtabnam.html |
Survey status page: "wall of shame" to keep track of who still needs to draw which surveys | |
Prospecting guide | ||||
Website mysteries
The following are questions for people who know the expo website well, which stumped Aaron.
- Why is there a /home/cucc/www/expo/surveys as well as a /home/cucc/www/surveys , and is there any difference?