FOSS Field Trip (Activity)

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{{Learning Activity Overview
 
{{Learning Activity Overview
 
|title=
 
|title=
FOSS Field Trip - Browsing a Forge
+
FOSS Field Trip - Browsing for FOSS Projects
 
|overview=  
 
|overview=  
 
Learners will explore the breadth of available FOSS projects as well as differences between GitHub and OpenHub.
 
Learners will explore the breadth of available FOSS projects as well as differences between GitHub and OpenHub.
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=== Background ===
 
=== Background ===
  
FOSS predates the Web, but the Web has been essential for the growth of FOSS.
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FOSS predates the web, but the web is now essential for most FOSS projects.
People use the Web to locate and access FOSS projects, and FOSS communities use the Web to collaborate.
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People locate and access FOSS projects on the web, and FOSS communities collaborate on the web.
There are also websites (called '''forges''') that provide a home and visibility for many FOSS projects,
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A FOSS project has a set of files (including source code, documentation, etc), usually organized into folders.
although many large FOSS projects have their own websites.
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Most FOSS projects keep the complete history of every file, to know what changes were made, by who, and when.
 +
The set of files and their history is a '''repository''', or a '''repo''' for short.
 +
 
 +
Most FOSS projects also use web-based collaborative tools to develop and share code and documentation,
 +
track who does what, and discuss questions, problems, and suggestions.
 +
A software platform with these tools is a '''forge'''.
 +
Some forges support ''one'' FOSS project (usually a ''large'' project),
 +
and other forges host ''many'' independent FOSS projects.
 +
Well known forges include [https://github.com GitHub], [https://sourceforge.net SourceForge], and [https://bitbucket.org Bitbucket].
 +
Note that the software used by such sites is also called a '''forge''';
 +
for example, [https://gitlab.com GitLab], [https://redmine.org RedMine], and [https://trac.edgewall.org Trac]
 +
are FOSS forges that anyone can install and modify, unlike [https://github.com GitHub].
 +
 
 +
This activity also uses '''OpenHub''' (formerly '''Ohloh'''),
 +
which is ''not'' a forge, but mines data from forges to analyze project activity.
  
 
=== Directions ===
 
=== Directions ===
  
POSSE Attendees: Please post your answers to the following questions on your foss2serve wiki.
+
* ''POSSE Attendees'': Post your answers on your foss2serve wiki page.
 +
* ''Students'': Ask your instructor how to report your answers.
  
 
==== Part 1 - GitHub ====
 
==== Part 1 - GitHub ====
  
One of the best known forges is '''GitHub'''.
+
In Part 1 you will search '''GitHub''' for projects. Do the following:
In this part of the activity you will search GitHub for projects. Do the following:
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# Open a new browser tab and go to: https://github.com
# Go to: https://github.com
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# Find the search box near the top of the page, type "education", and press enter or click on the search icon.
# Search for ''education'' projects. To do this, find the search box near the top of the page, type "education", and press enter or click on Search.
+
## How many ''repositories'' are found for "education"? {{Answer|~25,000 (as of 2019-01)}}
## How many repositories are found?
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## How many of these repos use the JavaScript language? (Hint: Find a summary table.) {{Answer|~3000 (as of 2019-01)}}
## Click on the first project to see its overview page. Click on ''Graphs'' (''Insights''), then ''Commits''. What information is shown?
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## In the first page of results, which repo was updated ''most'' recently? Which was updated ''least'' recently? {{Answer|Answers will vary, and may range from a few hours ago to several years ago.}}
# Go back to the main GitHub page and search for ''humanitarian'' projects.
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# Many repos are small and inactive. To see the most active repos, find ''Sort'' and pick ''most stars''.
## How many repositories are found?
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## Which ''education'' repo has the most stars? How many? {{Answer|freeCodeCamp with ~300k (as of 2019-01)}}
## Locate the HTBox/crisischeckin project. When was the last update?
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# Click on this repo to see its overview page. Scroll down past the list of files to see a project description.
# Search for ''disaster management'' projects.
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# In GitHub, each reported problem or suggestion is an '''issue''', the code and documentation to fix an issue is a '''pull request''', and a pull request that is accepted and added to a repo is a '''commit'''. Each issue and pull request is either ''open'' (in progress) or ''closed'' (done). (You will learn more about all of this later.)
## How many repositories are found?
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## At the top of the overview page, click on the ''Issues'' tab. You should see a list. How many issues are ''open''? ''closed''? {{Answer|~350 and ~13k for freeCodeCamp (as of 2019-01)}}
 +
## Click on the ''Pull requests'' tab. You should see a list. How many pull requests are ''open''? ''closed''? {{Answer|~5000 and ~16k for freeCodeCamp (as of 2019-01)}}
 +
## Click on the ''Insights'' tab. What do you see? {{Answer|Bargraphs of issues, pull requests, and commits this week.}}
 +
## Within ''Insights'', go to the left menu and click on ''Commits''. What do you see? {{Answer|A bargraph showing the number of commits each week for the last year.}}
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# Go back to the main GitHub page.
 +
## Search for "humanitarian" projects. How many repos are found? {{Answer|~350 (as of 2019-01)}}
 +
## Find ''HTBox/crisischeckin''. How many stars does it have? What language(s) does it use? When was the last update? {{Answer|~200 stars, C#, date will vary (as of 2019-01)}}
 +
## Search for "disaster management", or terms that interest you. How many repos are found? {{Answer|Varies}}
  
Keep this browser tab open while you move onto Part 2.
+
Keep the GitHub browser tab open as you move on to Part 2.
  
 
==== Part 2 - OpenHub ====
 
==== Part 2 - OpenHub ====
  
In this part of the activity, you will search '''OpenHub''' for projects. Do the following:
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In Part 2, you will search '''OpenHub''' for projects. Do the following:
# Go to: https://www.openhub.net
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# Open a new browser tab and go to: https://www.openhub.net
 
# In the search box, type "education".
 
# In the search box, type "education".
## The listing shows the number of ''pages'', not the number of ''projects''. By default, each page shows 10 projects. How many ''projects'' were found?
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## The listing shows the number of ''pages'', not the number of ''projects''. By default, each page shows 10 projects. How many ''projects'' were found? {{Answer|~230 pages -> ~2300 projects (as of 2019-01)}}
## Click on ''KDE Education'' (near the top of the list), and then click on ''Code Locations'' (on the right side of ''KDE Education'').
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# Many projects are small and inactive. To see the most active projects, find ''Sort by'' and pick ''Activity Level''.
## The listing shows repository locations. Are any of them on GitHub?
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## Which (if any) of the most active projects do you recognize? {{Answer|Varies, maybe Moodle, Sakai, DSpace.}}
## Go back to ''KDE Education'', and click on ''Similar Projects'' (below ''Code Locations''). How many similar projects are listed?  
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# In the ''Sort by'' text box pick ''Relevance''. If necessary, go to the bottom of the screen and advance to pages 2, 3, ... in the listing until you find ''KDE Education'', and click on it.
## Scroll down. What info does OpenHub provide about each similar project?
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## From the ''KDE Education'' page, click on ''Code Locations'' (on the right side). Are any of the repo locations on GitHub? {{Answer|No, all are on kde.org (as of 2019-01)}}
# Search for both "humanitarian" and "disaster management".
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## Go back to ''KDE Education'', and click on ''Similar Projects'' (below ''Code Locations''). How many similar projects are listed? {{Answer|~10 (as of 2019-01)}}
## How many projects did each search return?
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## This page contains general information for the similar projects. What info is shown for each? {{Answer|name, activity level, language, license (as of 2019-01)}}
## Some projects show 'Activity Not Available'. Click on the pyramid icon and read the info provided. Why do so many projects show 'activity not available'?
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# Repeat your OpenHub search for both "humanitarian" and "disaster management", or terms that interest you.
# Click on ''Organizations'' (near the top of the page).
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## How many projects did each search return? {{Answer|Varies. ~30 for humanitarian, ~30 for disaster mgmt (as of 2019-01)}}
## What info is shown?
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# Some projects show "Activity Not Available". Click on the pyramid icon and read the page shown. Why is "activity not available"? {{Answer|OpenHub could not access or analysis project data.}}
# Search for "OpenMRS".
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# Click on ''Organizations'' (near the top of the main OpenHub page).
## When was the last commit for ''OpenMRS Core''?
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## What info is shown? {{Answer|Most active orgs, newest orgs, stats by sector, etc (as of 2019-01)}}
# Go back to '''GitHub''' and search for ''OpenMRS Core''.   
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# From ''Organizations'', search for "OpenMRS".
## When was the last commit?  
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## Do the search results show projects or organizations? {{Answer|Organizations}}
## Why do you think these sites have different info?
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## Find the project "OpenMRS Core". When was the last commit? {{Answer|Varies. 11 months ago (as of 2019-01)}}
# What are some benefits & drawbacks of searching for a project in both GitHub & OpenHub?
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# Go back to '''GitHub''' and search for the project "OpenMRS Core".  When was the last commit? {{Answer|Varies. 4 days ago (as of 2019-01)}}
 +
## Why do you think these sites have different info? {{Answer|OpenHub might be looking in the wrong place, or misreading data.}}
 +
# What are some benefits & drawbacks of searching for a project in both GitHub & OpenHub? {{Answer|???}}
  
 
=== Deliverables ===
 
=== Deliverables ===
  
POSSE: Please post the answers to these questions on your foss2serve user wiki page.
+
* ''POSSE Attendees'': Please post the answers to these questions on your foss2serve user wiki page.
 
+
* ''Students'': Wiki posting describing your explorations of GitHub and OpenHub.
Students: Wiki posting describing your explorations of GitHub and OpenHub.
+
  
 
= Notes for Instructors =
 
= Notes for Instructors =
Line 107: Line 130:
  
 
* What should the instructor know before using this activity?
 
* What should the instructor know before using this activity?
* What are some likely difficulties that an instructor may encounter using this activity?
+
* What are some likely difficulties that an instructor might encounter using this activity?
  
 
=== Variants and Adaptations: ===
 
=== Variants and Adaptations: ===

Latest revision as of 15:07, 14 April 2019


Title

FOSS Field Trip - Browsing for FOSS Projects

Overview

Learners will explore the breadth of available FOSS projects as well as differences between GitHub and OpenHub.

Prerequisites

None.

Learning
Objectives
After successfully completing this activity, the learner should be able to:
  1. Search for FOSS projects on both GitHub and OpenHub.
  2. Use and describe different features of GitHub and OpenHub.
Process Skills
Practiced
  1. Critical Thinking
  2. Information Processing


Background

FOSS predates the web, but the web is now essential for most FOSS projects. People locate and access FOSS projects on the web, and FOSS communities collaborate on the web. A FOSS project has a set of files (including source code, documentation, etc), usually organized into folders. Most FOSS projects keep the complete history of every file, to know what changes were made, by who, and when. The set of files and their history is a repository, or a repo for short.

Most FOSS projects also use web-based collaborative tools to develop and share code and documentation, track who does what, and discuss questions, problems, and suggestions. A software platform with these tools is a forge. Some forges support one FOSS project (usually a large project), and other forges host many independent FOSS projects. Well known forges include GitHub, SourceForge, and Bitbucket. Note that the software used by such sites is also called a forge; for example, GitLab, RedMine, and Trac are FOSS forges that anyone can install and modify, unlike GitHub.

This activity also uses OpenHub (formerly Ohloh), which is not a forge, but mines data from forges to analyze project activity.

Directions

  • POSSE Attendees: Post your answers on your foss2serve wiki page.
  • Students: Ask your instructor how to report your answers.

Part 1 - GitHub

In Part 1 you will search GitHub for projects. Do the following:

  1. Open a new browser tab and go to: https://github.com
  2. Find the search box near the top of the page, type "education", and press enter or click on the search icon.
    1. How many repositories are found for "education"?
    2. How many of these repos use the JavaScript language? (Hint: Find a summary table.)
    3. In the first page of results, which repo was updated most recently? Which was updated least recently?
  3. Many repos are small and inactive. To see the most active repos, find Sort and pick most stars.
    1. Which education repo has the most stars? How many?
  4. Click on this repo to see its overview page. Scroll down past the list of files to see a project description.
  5. In GitHub, each reported problem or suggestion is an issue, the code and documentation to fix an issue is a pull request, and a pull request that is accepted and added to a repo is a commit. Each issue and pull request is either open (in progress) or closed (done). (You will learn more about all of this later.)
    1. At the top of the overview page, click on the Issues tab. You should see a list. How many issues are open? closed?
    2. Click on the Pull requests tab. You should see a list. How many pull requests are open? closed?
    3. Click on the Insights tab. What do you see?
    4. Within Insights, go to the left menu and click on Commits. What do you see?
  6. Go back to the main GitHub page.
    1. Search for "humanitarian" projects. How many repos are found?
    2. Find HTBox/crisischeckin. How many stars does it have? What language(s) does it use? When was the last update?
    3. Search for "disaster management", or terms that interest you. How many repos are found?

Keep the GitHub browser tab open as you move on to Part 2.

Part 2 - OpenHub

In Part 2, you will search OpenHub for projects. Do the following:

  1. Open a new browser tab and go to: https://www.openhub.net
  2. In the search box, type "education".
    1. The listing shows the number of pages, not the number of projects. By default, each page shows 10 projects. How many projects were found?
  3. Many projects are small and inactive. To see the most active projects, find Sort by and pick Activity Level.
    1. Which (if any) of the most active projects do you recognize?
  4. In the Sort by text box pick Relevance. If necessary, go to the bottom of the screen and advance to pages 2, 3, ... in the listing until you find KDE Education, and click on it.
    1. From the KDE Education page, click on Code Locations (on the right side). Are any of the repo locations on GitHub?
    2. Go back to KDE Education, and click on Similar Projects (below Code Locations). How many similar projects are listed?
    3. This page contains general information for the similar projects. What info is shown for each?
  5. Repeat your OpenHub search for both "humanitarian" and "disaster management", or terms that interest you.
    1. How many projects did each search return?
  6. Some projects show "Activity Not Available". Click on the pyramid icon and read the page shown. Why is "activity not available"?
  7. Click on Organizations (near the top of the main OpenHub page).
    1. What info is shown?
  8. From Organizations, search for "OpenMRS".
    1. Do the search results show projects or organizations?
    2. Find the project "OpenMRS Core". When was the last commit?
  9. Go back to GitHub and search for the project "OpenMRS Core". When was the last commit?
    1. Why do you think these sites have different info?
  10. What are some benefits & drawbacks of searching for a project in both GitHub & OpenHub?

Deliverables

  • POSSE Attendees: Please post the answers to these questions on your foss2serve user wiki page.
  • Students: Wiki posting describing your explorations of GitHub and OpenHub.

Notes for Instructors

The remaining sections of this document are intended for the instructor. They are not part of the learning activity that would be given to students.

Assessment

  • How will the activity be graded?
  • How will learning will be measured?
  • Include sample assessment questions/rubrics.
Criteria Level 1 (fail) Level 2 (pass) Level 3 (good) Level 4 (exceptional)
The purpose of the project
Why the project is open source

Comments

  • What should the instructor know before using this activity?
  • What are some likely difficulties that an instructor might encounter using this activity?

Variants and Adaptations:

POGIL-style combined FOSS Field Trip and Project Evaluation used by Chris Murphy in his FOSS Course, UPenn, Murphy.

ACM BoK
Area & Unit(s)
ACM BoK
Topic(s)
Difficulty
Estimated Time
to Complete

30-60 minutes

Environment /
Materials

Access to Internet/Web and web browser.

Author(s)
Source

Detailed FOSS Field Trip

License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License

CC license.png


Suggestions for Open Source Community

Suggestions for an open source community member who is working in conjunction with the instructor.

Personal tools
Namespaces
Variants
Actions
Events
Learning Resources
HFOSS Projects
Evaluation
Navigation
Toolbox