Difference between revisions of "UCVM Release Planning"

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== Types of Documentation with axis: ==
 
== Types of Documentation with axis: ==
help learning – help working and theoretical knowledge – practical knowledge
+
* help learning – help working
1. tutorials  - learning oriented
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* theoretical knowledge – practical knowledge
2. how-to guides – task-oriented
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# tutorials  - learning oriented
3. Background/Concept explanations – understanding-oriented
+
# how-to guides – task-oriented
4. technical reference – information-oriented
+
# Background/Concept explanations – understanding-oriented
 
+
# technical reference – information-oriented
  
 
== DOCUMENTATION TYPES ==
 
== DOCUMENTATION TYPES ==

Revision as of 20:52, 5 September 2021

Key UCVM Improvements:

  1. Convergence of versions
  2. Large files next release stored on S3
  3. CI setup
  4. Documentation Updated into new structure
  5. Tests output
  6. Code Metadata included in repo
  7. Tags from USGS Thesarus
  8. Post DOI badge on UCVM
  9. Test with singularity on an XSEDE system
  10. UCVM Communitee
  11. Code of Conduct
  12. Open Source Metrics setup
  13. Code coverage statements
  14. Identification of sub-licenses in distribution
  15. Authorship contributions noted

Standard Contents of Git repo:

  1. A README with pictures/gifs of the product in action and a nice logo.
  2. Documentation.
  3. Code QA (Static Code Analysis).
  4. Contributing instructions.
  5. A well-defined setup section.
  6. Support (Respond to Issues/PR)
  7. Publish software news in every possible way.

Contents of README.md

When someone is looking at your project, they want to know:

  1. what is it?
  2. how good the code is?
  3. how much support is available?
  4. what’s included?
  5. what does it look like?
  6. how set it up?

Science Code Manifesto Elements:

  1. Code
  2. Copyright
  3. Citation
  4. Credit
  5. Curation

Steps To Software Product:

1. Create citable, definitive version of software with doi, license, and repository. 2. Define reference publication used to cite software. 3. Define software as reference implementation of a method, and define a set of approved software acceptance/regression tests that can be used to establish a software implements that “method”. 4. Create software maintenance organization with commit authority for pull requests and approval process for change requests, and process of approving new releases. 5. Establish software community through registrations, newsletters, activity, regular calls, regular meetings, define community and roles.

Adoption of Fork and Pull Git Repo Model

  • Use the model used by the majority of open-source projects (including pyCSEP).
  • The “maintainer” of the shared repo assigns rights to “Collaborators”
  • Collaborators do not have push access to main (upstream) repo
  • Core development teams accepts (PRs) from collaborators, reviews them, then merges them into main repo

Contributor Process:

Working with shared projects on GitHub 1. Fork the repository 2. Clone your forked copy 3. Sync your personal repo with shared repo a. Git merge/git rebase 4. Make a contribution a. Pull request

How we want it Cited:

  • Example Citation:
  • Example Acknowledgements:
  • Example Reference:

Basic Recommendations:

1. Make source code publicly accessible 2. Make software easy to discover by providing software metadata via a popular community registry (Examples of community registries of software metadata are bio.tools (Ison et al., 2016), (Ison et al., 2016) biojs.io (Corpas et al.,2014; Gómez et al., 2013) and Omic Tools (Henry et al., 2014) in the life sciences and DataCite (Brase, n.d.) as a generic metadata registry for software as well as data. 3. Adopt a license and comply with the license of third party dependencies 4. Define clear and transparent contribution, governance and communications processes (For instance the Galaxy project’s website describes the team’s structure, how to be part of the community, and their communication channels.)

Types of Documentation with axis:

  • help learning – help working
  • theoretical knowledge – practical knowledge
  1. tutorials - learning oriented
  2. how-to guides – task-oriented
  3. Background/Concept explanations – understanding-oriented
  4. technical reference – information-oriented

DOCUMENTATION TYPES

  • CODE DOCUMENTATION - Semantic identifiers, comments, API, engineering, dependencies, requirements
  • USER DOCUMENTATION - How to get, run, use the software; parameters, data model, etc.; license
  • MAINTENANCE DOCUMENTATION - How to build, release, review code, publish
  • DEVELOPER DOCUMENTATION - How to contribute, contribution templates (issues, pull/merge requests)
  • METADATA - Software metadata (CodeMeta), Citation File (CFF), "references" (dependencies)
  • PROJECT DOCUMENTATION - Rationale, teams, governance, community (contact, code of conduct)

Where Documentation Lives

Documentation lives where the source code lives! (This is never in an email, chat, or similar!) Conceptual Documentation:

  • Requirements
  • Projects

Hands-on documentation

  • How-tos, getting started
  • Templates for issues, pull/merge
  • Contribution guidelines

Reference documentation

  • API
  • Tests
  • Metadata

Toolbox Documentation:

Toolbox documentation should describe the steps off analysis in a pedagogical, narrative fashion, with example data that users can load to follow along with and understand the documentation.

Implement Multiple Test Types:

  1. Functional testing – Unit Tests
  2. Integration Testing – Testing interoperability of units
  3. Acceptance testing – Results on user’s system equivalent to results on development system
  4. Regression testing – Confirm equivalent results to previous results.

Recommended Basic Practices:

  1. Training on Software Practices
  2. Code in a Code Repo
  3. Automated Testing
  4. Persistent ID for software versions

UCVM Versus CIG Standards:

Minimum:

  • Version control – ok
  • Code – ok
  • Portable – ok
  • Testing – (a) tests that verify it runs properly (b) accuracy or benchmark tests
  • Documentation – (a) install (b) parameters (c) physics (d) example inputs cookbooks (e) citable pub
  • Userworkflow – ok

Standard:

  • Version control -ok
  • Coding – (a) params at runtime (b) development plan (c) code comments (d) add features without modify main branch (e) useful error reports
  • Portability: (a) dependency cheking (b) automake (c) output configuration and build options
  • Testing – pass fail tests
  • Documentation: (a) workflow for research (b) how to extend code
  • Userworkflow: (a) easy to change sim params (b) user specific directories/filenames for i/o (c) standard binary formats (d) citation for code version.