[Bioc-devel] Package reference manuals in html
On 23 December 2016 18:26, Robert M. Flight wrote:
They are "orphan" branches, so they don't follow the parent. This was the original protocol for creating project pages on github for the longest time, you can see an example in the documentation here:https:/ /help.github.com/articles/creating-project-pages-using-the-command-line / They are a pain in the butt to work with, for sure. When I've done deploying vignettes from travis, my solution was to create a separate repo entirely, and then push from the master to gh-pages, as shown in this shell script:https://github.com/rmflight/categoryCompare/blob/ master/.push_gh_pages.sh I'm sure the same could be done using pkgdown. If you don't like the idea of overwriting, Steph Locke has a guide to keeping up with changes, but still autodeploying the docshttps:// itsalocke.com/ auto-deploying-documentation-better-change-tracking-artefacts/ HTH
Thanks, Robert, I will explore this solution too. Laurent
Robert
On Fri, Dec 23, 2016 at 1:14 PM Laurent Gatto <lg390 at cam.ac.uk> wrote:
Dear Sean and Robert,
On 23 December 2016 17:24, Robert M. Flight wrote:
> Yes, this seems like a time where using a non-standard site
directory
> on Github is useful, or as Sean said, using a separate branch to
serve
> the html content.
It's not clear to me how a separate branch is the solution. In
git-svn,
devel, release_3_4, ... are just that, different branches. How
would you
set a gh-pages branch that contains a single dir so that it doesn't
conflict with master?
If I could set branch-specific directives in my .gitignore file,
then I
would set this up for the Bioc branches. This seems to suggest it
is
possible, but I haven't tried yet
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1836742/
using-git-how-do-i-ignore-a-file-in-one-branch-but-have-it-committed-in-another
Would it be possible to set something on the svn side to ignore/
delete
the docs dir automatically, independently of what git does?
Laurent
> -Robert
>
> On Fri, Dec 23, 2016 at 12:19 PM Sean Davis <seandavi at gmail.com>
wrote:
>
> Github allows you to set the branch for the docs directory if
I
> recall. Perhaps a separate branch with a docs directory (not
> master) is a viable way to go?
>
> Sean
>
> > On Dec 23, 2016, at 12:16 PM, Laurent Gatto <
lg390 at cam.ac.uk>
> wrote:
> >
> >
> > There's actually another side-effect for Bioconductor. The
> package
> > website is (by default) generated in the package's ./docs
> > directory. This is very handy, as it can be set directly on
> Github as a
> > Github page and becomes available as https://
username.github.io/
> pkgname.
> >
> > This also means that the docs directory (which is about
5.5M for
> > MSnbase) ends up on hedgehog. It is easy for it not to be
part of
> the
> > package build artefact using .Rbuildignore, but I am not
sure how
> to
> > easily push it to github but not hedgehog when using
git-svn.
> >
> > Laurent
> >
> > On 23 December 2016 16:36, Laurent Gatto wrote:
> >
> >> Dear all,
> >>
> >> I'm following up re my online references suggestion with
my
> recent
> >> experience with Hadley's pkgdown package
> >>
> >> https://github.com/hadley/pkgdown
> >>
> >> It doesn't address the cross-package issue (which is a
difficult
> one
> >> anyway), but does pretty much everything else (with some
caveats
> though,
> >> see below).
> >>
> >> Here are 2 examples
> >>
> >> - MSnbase: http://lgatto.github.io/MSnbase/
> >> - hpar: http://lgatto.github.io/hpar/
> >>
> >> It uses the REAMDE file as index page, creates html
documents
> for all Rd
> >> files in man, an article tab for vignettes (but see below)
and a
> News
> >> tab (but see below)
> >>
> >> The biggest caveats is that only Rmd vignettes are taken
into
> account;
> >> Rnw are completely ignored (they don't show up at all in
the
> Articles
> >> tab). This is not going to be tackled by the developer
[1].
> >>
> >> [1] https://github.com/hadley/pkgdown/issues/220
> >>
> >> I had a quick look at the code and patching pkgdown (and
> probably
> >> rmarkdown) to build Rnw/pdf vignettes would take too much
time I
> could
> >> devote at the moment. I would be satisfied if the Rnw were
not
> build but
> >> at least there were links in the Articles tab pointing to
the
> vignettes
> >> Bioconductor landing pages. On the other hand, I am
migrating to
> >> BiocStyle's html_document2 with the nice floating table of
> contents...
> >>
> >> Regarding the News tab, only NEWS.md (markdown format) are
> considered;
> >> NEWS in Rd are ignored too.
> >>
> >> Hope this helps.
> >>
> >> Best wishes,
> >>
> >> Laurent
> >>
> >> On 16 March 2016 23:33, Andrzej Ole? wrote:
> >>
> >>> Hi all,
> >>>
> >>> I had a discussion earlier today with Martin and Dan on
> providing
> >>> online man pages for Bioconductor packages. As we dived
into
> >>> implementation details, it turned out that this idea is a
> little bit
> >>> more complex and resource-intensive than originally
> anticipated.
> >>>
> >>> The main problem in generating man pages in a
repository-wide
> fashion
> >>> seems to be the cross-linking of packages. Briefly, in
order to
> >>> generate the links, apparently one needs to generate the
html
> pages in
> >>> an R installation which is aware of the other packages.
For
> example,
> >>> the Rd macro \linkS4class{ClassName} takes as argument
only the
> class
> >>> name, and the corresponding package containing the class
> definition is
> >>> "automagically" resolved by R. I'm not sure how this
could be
> done
> >>> manually, on a per-package basis. So by the end of the
day, in
> order to
> >>> generate static man pages, we would need to maintain a
complete
> BioC
> >>> repo installation, possibly on a system with the
> --enable-prebuilt-html
> >>> configure option. Unfortunately, it seems unfeasible to
exploit
> the
> >>> build servers for this, as this would significantly
increase
> the
> >>> computational burden. This is because currently only
around 2/5
> of all
> >>> software and data packages are actually being installed
by the
> build
> >>> system. The rest which does not have any reverse
dependencies
> is
> >>> skipped. Installing the remaining 3/5 of packages on a
regular
> basis,
> >>> not to mention the heavy annotation packages, is a little
bit
> of an
> >>> overkill. So piggy-backing on the existing infrastructure
> doesn't seem
> >>> realistic.
> >>>
> >>> On top of this, even if we would have access to a machine
with
> a
> >>> complete, up-to-date BioC installation (maybe by just
updating
> the
> >>> packages after the repo gets rebuild rather than
re-installing
> them
> >>> each time from scratch), it remains an open question how
> "external"
> >>> links to, let's say, CRAN packages, or even base R
packages,
> should be
> >>> handled.
> >>>
> >>> A lightweight and easy to implement alternative for those
> willing to
> >>> share self-hosted documentation of their packages, could
be to
> provide
> >>> in the package DESCRIPTION file a "Documentation" field
> containing a
> >>> link to external resource, which would then appear on the
> package
> >>> landing page next to the vignettes and pdf manual. The
obvious
> >>> downsides of this solution are: 1. no package
cross-links, and
> 2. the
> >>> burden of keeping the documentation in sync with the
package
> version on
> >>> BioC would be in maintainer's hands...
> >>>
> >>> I will try to contact the authors of rdocumentation.org -
maybe
> they
> >>> have some useful comments or even code which they would
be
> willing to
> >>> share. In any case, it would be good to know what their
> experience is
> >>> and why did they stop maintaining their service. Maybe
the BioC
> >>> community could jump in and help them to resolve the
> bottlenecks and
> >>> keep the website up to date.
> >>>
> >>> Cheers,
> >>> Andrzej
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> On Tue, Mar 8, 2016 at 4:36 PM, Andrzej Ole? <
> andrzej.oles at gmail.com>
> >>> wrote:
> >>>
> >>> Hi Martin,
> >>>
> >>> thank you for your suggestions - I would be happy to
> contribute to
> >>> this! I could help with developing the scripts for
> generating man
> >>> pages, and integrating them with the website layout.
> >>>
> >>> As for rendering the man pages, I suggest that we try a
> similar
> >>> approach to the one used by knitr::knit_rd() rather than
> plain
> >>> tools::Rd2HTML(). It has the advantage that the examples
are
> >>> actually run, and the results, e.g. plots, are included
in
> the
> >>> output documents. I hope you can appreciate the added
value
> by
> >>> comparing the following man page rendered using
> tools::Rd2HTML()
> >>> and knitr::knit_rd(), respectively.
> >>> http://www.huber.embl.de/users/aoles/man/Image.html
> >>> http://www.huber.embl.de/users/aoles/man/
Image-knitr.html
> >>> Regarding the additional dependencies: we kind of
already
> rely on
> >>> knitr when compiling vignettes, so this this shouldn't
add
> much to
> >>> the maintenance burden.
> >>>
> >>> Cheers,
> >>> Andrzej
> >>>
> >>> On Fri, Mar 4, 2016 at 2:20 PM, Morgan, Martin <
> >>> Martin.Morgan at roswellpark.org> wrote:
> >>>
> >>> One thing about accessing the html versions locally
> (e.g., via
> >>> ? with options(help_type="html")] or help.start() or
> Rstudio)
> >>> is that you get the version relevant to your R /
> Bioconductor,
> >>> rather than whatever is at the top of google; I guess
> the same
> >>> applies to the pdf versions, and the reason that there
> isn't
> >>> more current confusion is because the online pdf
> versions are
> >>> not as useful as the off-line help system.
> >>>
> >>> I think Laurent was interested in an integration of
help
> pages
> >>> across packages (which is the appeal of
> rdocumentation.org?),
> >>> not just rendering the help pages in html rather than
> pdf? An
> >>> integration of help pages would definitely be a big
job
> with
> >>> substantial development and maintenance; we will not
be
> >>> undertaking this ourselves.
> >>>
> >>> For the more limited case of adding a (directory of)
> html files
> >>> for the the manual, it's not impossible that we could
> find the
> >>> resources to do this in the next 6 months.
> >>>
> >>> One intermediate and helpful step for those willing to
> help
> >>> would be to develop the code to process help pages
into
> a style
> >>> consistent with the bioconductor web site. One place
> where this
> >>> could be implemented would be the BiocStyle package
> (https://
> >>> github.com/Bioconductor-mirror/BiocStyle but hmm,
seems
> like
> >>> there's a slightly out of sync version at https://
> github.com/
> >>> Bioconductor/BiocStyle that would be more
> convenient...).
> >>> Perhaps this really means only developing a css style
> sheet and
> >>> R's tools::Rd2HTML() (I'm very reluctant to introduce
> >>> dependencies into the build system, and am very
> conservative
> >>> about inclusion of fancy features in the html -- these
> become
> >>> significant maintenance burdens moving forward).
> >>>
> >>> The web site is generated by https://github.com/
> Bioconductor/
> >>> bioconductor.org, with the style sheet at https://
> github.com/
> >>> Bioconductor/bioconductor.org/blob/master/assets/style
/
> >>> bioconductor.css. The package landing pages are
> templated using
> >>> layouts/_bioc_views_package_detail.html. The idea
would
> be to
> >>> end up with layouts/_bioc_man_index.html and
> >>> _bioc_man_body.html that wrapped output from BiocStyle
> in the
> >>> overall bioc page.
> >>>
> >>> The implementation suggestions above are just a sketch
> and
> >>> could be quite misguided. If there's interest then
> probably we
> >>> should set up a hangout to discuss in a little more
> detail.
> >>>
> >>> Martin
> >>>
> >>> ________________________________________
> >>> From: Bioc-devel <bioc-devel-bounces at r-project.org> on
> behalf
> >>> of Hartley, Stephen (NIH/NHGRI) [F] <
> stephen.hartley at nih.gov>
> >>> Sent: Wednesday, March 2, 2016 11:46 AM
> >>> To: Laurent Gatto; bioc-devel
> >>> Subject: Re: [Bioc-devel] Package reference manuals in
> html
> >>>
> >>> I'd like to second this. Currently Bioconductor hosts
> the pdf
> >>> reference manuals, but those are often sub-ideal. The
> page
> >>> breaks make it harder to read, the fixed width
basically
> makes
> >>> it either too small or too big depending on your
> display, you
> >>> can't navigate cross-package links, and in general
using
> >>> paper-formatted software documentation is just poor
> form.
> >>>
> >>> Yihui, the creator of knitr, has a blog post where he
> shows how
> >>> to do this. There are a lot of ways to do this, and
it's
> >>> generally pretty straightforward.
> >>> http://yihui.name/en/2012/10/build-static-html-help/
> >>>
> >>> You can also use a function in knitr, knit_rd(), which
> builds
> >>> the examples as well and inserts the output right onto
> the
> >>> page. That's what I used to make the docs for QoRTs
> (http://
> >>> hartleys.github.io/QoRTs/Rhtml/index.html) and
> JunctionSeq (
).
> >>>
> >>> Or you can use the staticdocs package, which does the
> same
> >>> basic thing but prettier (see ggplot2's docs: http://
> >>> docs.ggplot2.org/current/)
> >>>
> >>> The nuclear option, of course, is to do what CRAN does
> and
> >>> rebuild R on (one of) the servers using the
> >>> --enable-prebuilt-html configure option. That might
> affect
> >>> other things, though, and might not be ideal.
> >>>
> >>> Does any of this seem like a viable option for
> Bioconductor? I
> >>> think it could be an incredibly valuable resource for
> the
> >>> community. Are there any technical issues that haven't
> been
> >>> considered in the above?
> >>>
> >>> Regards,
> >>> Steve Hartley
> >>>
> >>> -----Original Message-----
> >>> From: Laurent Gatto [mailto:lg390 at cam.ac.uk]
> >>> Sent: Tuesday, March 01, 2016 6:42 AM
> >>> To: bioc-devel
> >>> Subject: [Bioc-devel] Package reference manuals in
html
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> Dear all,
> >>>
> >>> I find the http://www.rdocumentation.org/ site very
> useful to
> >>> refer to nicely formatted online man pages
individually.
> >>> Unfortunately, this resource is terribly outdated and
> not
> >>> maintained anymore.
> >>>
> >>> I was wondering if Bioconductor had any interest in
> serving an
> >>> html version of individual reference manuals in
addition
> to the
> >>> pdf that are already available on the package landing
> pages.
> >>>
> >>> Is there anything I or any other members of the
> community could
> >>> help with to get this up and running?
> >>>
> >>> Best wishes,
> >>>
> >>> Laurent
> >>>
> >>> _______________________________________________
> >>> Bioc-devel at r-project.org mailing list
> >>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioc-devel
> >>>
> >>> _______________________________________________
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> >
> > --
> > Laurent Gatto | @lgatt0
> > http://cpu.sysbiol.cam.ac.uk/
> > http://lgatto.github.io/
> >
> > _______________________________________________
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> > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioc-devel
>
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--
Laurent Gatto | @lgatt0
http://cpu.sysbiol.cam.ac.uk/
http://lgatto.github.io/
Laurent Gatto | @lgatt0 http://cpu.sysbiol.cam.ac.uk/ http://lgatto.github.io/