Maneage is a framework for starting and growing projects, see these slides for an introduction. Through Maneage, the complete data lineage of a project is recorded with its history and can easily be published or archived, enabling exact reproducibility. Maneage is a recipient of the RDA Europe Adoption grant.

Start building your project in Maneage

To start a new project, simply run these commands to clone it from its Git repository.


git clone https://git.maneage.org/project.git     # Clone Maneage, default branch `maneage'.
mv project my-project && cd my-project            # Set custom name and enter directory.
git remote rename origin origin-maneage           # Rename remote server to use `origin' later.
git checkout -b master                            # Make new `master' branch, start customizing.
                    

You are now ready to configure and make the raw template with the commands below. If they are successful, you can start customizing it.


./project configure    # Build all necessary software from source.
./project make         # Do the analysis (download data, run software on data, build PDF).
                    

See the Customization Checklist in the cloned README-hacking.md file for the next steps to start customizing Maneage for your project.

Merge/Pull requests

As you continue customizing Maneage for your own project, you will notice generic improvements that can be useful for other projects too. In such cases, please send us those changes to implement in the core Maneage branch and let them propagate to all projects using it. If you look through the history of the Maneage branch, you'll notice many users have already started doing this, and this is how Maneage is planned to grow. The recommended process is very similar to this forking tutorial. Here is a summary:

  1. Go to the maneage branch and create a new branch from there like below:
    
    git checkout maneage
    git branch -b my-fix
                                
  2. Commit your fix over this new branch.
  3. Build a new project on your favorite Git repository (GitLab, BitBucket, or GitHub for example) and assign it to a new Git remote in your project. Let's call it my-remote. You only need to do this once and keep this for future fixes.
  4. Push your branch to that remote:
    
    git push my-remote my-fix
                                
  5. Submit a link to your fork and the corresponding branch on Savannah. If you are registered on Savannah, you can also submit it as a bug or a task.