William Chargin 91f0459753
Use relative paths for lexically static assets (#671)
Summary:
This is the first observable step toward #643. Assets whose paths are
known as literals at server-side rendering time are now referenced via
relative paths. This means that the favicon and JavaScript bundle can be
loaded from an arbitrary gateway. The actual bundle code will still only
work when loaded from `/`.

This commit stands alone so that the enclosing change to the Webpack
config can be in as small a change as possible.

Test Plan:
  - Note that `yarn start` still works.
  - Run `./scripts/build_static_site.sh` to build the site into, say,
    `/tmp/gateway`.
  - Run a static web server from `/tmp/gateway/` and note that (a) the
    paths listed in the page source are relative, and (b) everything
    works as intended, with no console messages in either Chrome or
    Firefox.
  - Run a static web server from `/tmp/` and navigate to `/gateway/` in
    the browser. Note that the favicon and JavaScript are correctly
    noted, but that the router raises an error because it is trying to
    load a non-existent route. (This behavior is unchanged.)

wchargin-branch: relative-lexically-static
2018-08-15 15:30:23 -07:00
2018-08-10 19:44:02 -07:00
2018-08-15 15:20:59 -07:00
2018-02-03 17:58:49 -08:00
2018-08-10 13:15:49 -07:00

SourceCred

Build Status Discord

Vision

Open source software is amazing, and so are its creators and maintainers. How amazing? It's difficult to tell, since we don't have good tools for recognizing those people. Many amazing open-source contributors labor in the shadows, going unappreciated for the work they do.

SourceCred will empower projects to track contributions and create cred, a reputational measure of how valuable each contribution was to the project. Algorithmically, contributions will be organized into a graph, with edges representing connections between contributions. Then, a configurable PageRank algorithm will distill that graph into a cred attribution.

SourceCred is dogfooding itself. People who contributes to SourceCred—by writing bug reports, participating in design discussions, or writing pull requests—will receive cred in SourceCred.

Design Goals

SourceCred development is organized around the following high-level goals.

  • Transparent

It should be easy to see why cred is attributed as it is, and link a person's cred directly to contributions they've made.

  • Community Controlled

Each community has the final say on what that community's cred is. We don't expect an algorithm to know what's best, so we'll empower communities to use algorithmic results as a starting point, and improve results with their knowledge.

  • Decentralized

Individual projects and communities will control their own SourceCred instances, and own their own data. The SourceCred creators won't have the power to control or modify other projects' cred.

  • Forkable

Forking is important to open source, and gives people the freedom to vote with their feet. SourceCred will support forking, and forks will be able to modify their cred independently of the original.

  • Flexible & Extensible

SourceCred is focused on open-source projects for now, but we think it can be a general system for building reputation networks. We're organizing around very flexible core abstractions, and a plugin architecture for specific domains.

Current Status

As of July 2018, it's still early days for SourceCred! So far, we've set the following foundations:

  • the graph class is the heart of SourceCred, and we've spent a lot of time polishing those APIs 🙂
  • the GitHub plugin downloads data from GitHub and imports it into a graph
  • the Git plugin clones a Git repository and imports it into a graph
  • our PageRank implementation does cred attribution on the graph
  • the cred explorer makes the PageRank results transparent

The PageRank results aren't very good yet - we need to add more configurability to get higher quality results. We're working out improvements in this issue.

Roadmap

The team is focused right now on building an end-to-end beta that can import GitHub repositories and produce a reasonable and configurable cred attribution. We hope to have the beta ready by November 2018.

Running the Prototype

If you'd like to try it out, you can run a local copy of SourceCred using the following commands. You need to have node and yarn installed first. This repo is stable and tested on Node version 8.x.x, and Yarn version 1.7.0. You also need to get a GitHub API access token. This token does not need any specific permissions.

git clone https://github.com/sourcecred/sourcecred.git
cd sourcecred
yarn install
yarn backend
export SOURCECRED_GITHUB_TOKEN=YOUR_GITHUB_TOKEN
node bin/sourcecred.js load REPO_OWNER/REPO_NAME
# this loads sourcecred data for a particular repository
yarn start
# then navigate to localhost:3000 in your browser

For example, if you wanted to look at cred for ipfs/js-ipfs, you could run:

$ export SOURCECRED_GITHUB_TOKEN=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
$ node bin/sourcecred.js load ipfs/js-ipfs

replacing the big string of zeros with your actual token.

Contributing

Wed love to accept your contributions! Please join our Discord to get in touch with us, and check out our contributing guide to get started.

Description
a reputation protocol for open collaboration
Readme
Languages
JavaScript 96.1%
Shell 3.7%
Python 0.1%