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qaware-blog-source

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Write Content

Pre-requisites:

  • Github account
  • git
  • IntelliJ
  • hugo (only required if you want test the blog locally --> for installation see details below)

Fork our Github Repository

Writers work on a fork of the repository (and then later create a pull request for merging).

A fork can be created either

GitHub CLI example

gh repo fork qaware/qaware-blog-source

After this step, a fork is created for the current GitHub user of the Writer: https://github.com/<GITHUB_USER>/qaware-blog-source.

To work with it locally on a computer, this fork must first be cloned. :warning: The --recurse-submodules is important as the qaware-blog-theme is included as a git submodule.

git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/<GITHUB_USER>/qaware-blog-source

To track more changes in the remote qaware-blog-theme, update the locally checked-out submodule with

git submodule update --remote

Otherwise, you might see templating errors such as

failed to extract shortcode: template for shortcode "img" not found

Write your post (with or without hugo)

If you don't want to use hugo just add and edit your post md-file manually in content/posts. Then add the meta data at the beginning of your md-file like in the example below!

If you want to use hugo to generate your new post and to test locally, you'll need to install:

  • Hugo extended (in doubt: run hugo version and check if extended is in the version)

Then get used to Hugo.

Now you can use the hugo-commands in your IntelliJ terminal:

  1. hugo new content/posts/<articleTitle>.md (as file name without blanks, e.g. hello-world.md) --> this will locally add a new post as a draft in the blog in content/posts.
  2. edit content: write your blog post in the created md-file
  3. hugo server -D --> this will start the local webserver and show you the blog locally on http://localhost:1313

Edit page meta data

The Hugo Generator creates the content page as a markdown file. After running the generator the meta data must be extended.

Generator example:

---
title: "Hello World"
date: 2020-05-11T10:43:02+02:00
author: ""
type: "post"
image: ""
categories: []
tags: []
draft: true
summary: This post shows you how to ...
---

Post text
  1. Add lastmod attribute. Use value of date attribute for the first version of your new page.
  2. Add author attribute. Add a markdown link to your GitHub profile as value.
  3. Add type attribute with value post. Our theme supports more content type. But for the moment we only use post.
  4. Add image attribute. Put an image to the /static/images folder and write the filename (without images/) into attribute's value. More infos about providing image files can be found in the next chapter.
  5. Add tags: Select one or more fitting tags for your post: e.g. Testing, Architecture, Cloud Native
  6. Add summary: Add a short sentence as summary. This will be the description shown under page name and url in search engine result pages.
  7. draft is initially set to "true", which means that it will only be visible on the test environment https://qawareblog-2ixogl4y4q-ey.a.run.app . Set draft to false when your post is ready!

Final example:

---
title: "Hello World"
date: 2020-05-11T10:43:02+02:00
lastmod: 2020-05-11T10:43:02+02:00
author: "[Josef Fuchshuber](https://github.com/fuchshuber)"
type: "post"
image: "hello-world.jpg"
tags: ["Framework", "Tutorial", "Java"]
draft: true
summary: An introduction to ... 
---

Add images

Please use only own images, images with creative commons licence or search and download your images by gettyimages. Store images for your post in the static/images folder with a self explaining file name and refer them in markdown:

{{< img src="/images/hello-world.jpg" alt="Hello World title picture" >}}

or as a figure with caption:

{{< figure figcaption="Hello World Caption" >}}
  {{< img src="/images/hello-world.jpg" alt="Hello World title picture" >}}
{{< /figure >}}

Create pull request

It is the best to work only on one post at a time and after the work on this post is finished for the time, create a pull request with the changes for the upstream respository.

  1. Commit & push all changes to your fork
  2. Create pull request
gh pr create

Creating pull request for master into master in qaware/qaware-blog-source

? Title Describes pull request creation
? What's next? Submit
https://github.com/qaware/qaware-blog-source/pull/20

Update your fork

Fetch branches and commits from the upstream repo (qaware/qaware-blog-source). You’ll be storing the commits to master in a local branch upstream/master:

git fetch upstream

Checkout your fork’s local master, then merge changes from upstream/master into it.

git checkout master
git merge upstream/master

Push changes to update your fork on Github.

git push

Build and run Dockerfile locally

To test the preview dockerfile locally run.

docker build --tag=qaware-blog-local .
docker run --rm -p 1313:80 qaware-blog-local
open localhost:1313

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