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Berkeley JupyterHubs

Contains a fully reproducible configuration for JupyterHub on datahub.berkeley.edu, as well as the single user images.

UC Berkeley Datahub

UC Berkeley CDSS

Single-user server images

All user images are located in their own repositories located in the Berkeley DSEP infra repo. You can find them either by searching there or from links in the deployment's image/README.md (eg: Datahub's).

Branches

The staging branch always reflects the state of the staging JupyterHub, and the prod branch reflects the state of the production JupyterHub.

Installing the required python packages for working with datahub

In the root directory of this repo, install dev-requirements.txt with the following command: pip install -r dev-requirements.txt. This will install the base python packages that are required to perform the tasks associated with editing, testing, building and deploying hubs.

The other python package definition file, requirements.txt is used solely by our Github Actions CI/CD pipeline.

Pre-Commit hooks: Installing

The previous step, pip install -r dev-requirements.txt, installs the package pre-commit. This is used to run a series of commands defined in the file .pre-commit-config.yaml to help ensure no mistakes are committed to the repo.

After you've installed dev-requirements.txt, execute the following two commands:

pre-commit install
pre-commit run --all-files

Setting up your fork and clones

First, go to your github profile settings and make sure you have an SSH key uploaded.

Next, go to the Datahub github repo and create a fork. To do this, click on the fork button and then Create fork.

Now clone the primary Datahub repo on your local device. You can get the URL to do this by clicking on the green Code button in the primary Datahub repo (not your fork) and clicking on ssh:

git clone git@github.com:berkeley-dsep-infra/datahub.git

Now cd in to datahub and set up your local repo to point both at the primary Datahub repo (upstream) and your fork (origin). After the initial clone, origin will be pointing to the main repo and we'll need to change that.

$ cd datahub
$ git remote -v
origin	git@github.com:berkeley-dsep-infra/datahub.git (fetch)
origin	git@github.com:berkeley-dsep-infra/datahub.git (push)
$ git remote rename origin upstream
$ git remote add origin git@github.com:<your github username>/datahub.git
$ git remote -v
origin	git@github.com:<your github username>/datahub.git (fetch)
origin	git@github.com:<your github username>/datahub.git (push)
upstream	git@github.com:berkeley-dsep-infra/datahub.git (fetch)
upstream	git@github.com:berkeley-dsep-infra/datahub.git (push)

Now you can sync your local repo from upstream, and push those changes to your fork (origin):

git checkout staging && \
git fetch --prune --all && \
git rebase upstream/staging && \
git push origin staging

Procedure

When developing for this deployment, always work in a fork of this repo. You should also make sure that your repo is up-to-date with this one prior to making changes. This is because other contributors may have pushed changes after you last synced with this repo but before you upstreamed your changes.

Syncing your repo

The following commands will sync the local clone of your fork with upstream:

git checkout staging && \
git fetch --prune --all && \
git rebase upstream/staging && \
git push origin staging

Creating a feature branch

To create a new feature branch and switch to it, run the following command:

git checkout -b <branch name>

Checking the status and diffs of your local work

After you make your changes, you can use the following commands to see what's been modified and check out the diffs: git status and git diff.

Adding, committing and pushing changes

When you're ready to push these changes, first you'll need to stage them for a commit:

git add <file1> <file2> <etc>

Commit these changes locally:

git commit -m "some pithy commit description"

Now push to your fork:

git push origin <branch name>

Creating a pull request

Once you've pushed to your fork, you can go to the Datahub repo and there should be a big green button on the top that says Compare and pull request. Click on that, check out the commits and file diffs, edit the title and description if needed and then click Create pull request.

If you're having issues, you can refer to the github documentation for pull requests. The choice for base in the GitHub PR user interface should be the staging branch of this repo while the choice for head is your fork.

Once this is complete and if there are no problems, you can request that someone review the PR before merging, or you can merge yourself if you are confident. This merge will trigger a Github Actions workflow which upgrades the helm deployment on the staging site. When this is complete, test your changes there. For example if you updated a library, make sure that a new user server instance has the new version. If you spot any problems you can revert your change. You should test the changes soon after the merge since we do not want unverified changes to linger in staging.

If staging fails, never update production. Revert your change or call in help if necessary. If your change is successful, you will need to merge the change from staging branch to production. Create another PR, this time with the base set to prod and the head set to staging. This PR will trigger a similar Travis process. Test your change on production for good measure.

SSL: LetsEncrypt Strategy

The Berkeley-based SPA email address, datahub-support@berkeley.edu, is the contact email used to create the SSL certificate for the datahub at LetsEncrypt. The address is only used by LetsEncrypt when there is a problem renewing the certificate.

The SPA email address is connected to anyone in ds-infrastructure@lists.berkeley.edu.