/opendatahub.io

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OpenDataHub.io Website

Creating a blog post

All blog posts are located in the src/content/blog directory. Each file is a Markdown (.md) file. Files should be named YYYY-MM-DD-unique-title.

Metadata schema

// type is used to feature different types of content in different places
type: blog | release | video | {or a new category i.e. audio, podcast, file, etc.}

// author is the author of the content
author: string

// title is the title of the content
title: string

// preview is the preview text that will be shown on the card
preview: string

// date is the date the content was published
date: YYYY-MM-DD

// categories is a list of categories that the content belongs to. Avoid spaces in the category names.
categories: string, string, string, ... 

// featured is a boolean value that determines if the content should be featured on the home page and or community page
featured: true | false

// permalink is the url path to the content and is not required. This is used if the content is not in the markdown file but in a different external location.
permalink: string
---
type: blog
author: Sample Author
title:  Sample Title
preview: This is a blog post preview sample
date: 2022-10-31
categories: jupyter, model-serving, gpu
featured: true
---

Referencing images and files

Images and files can be included in the markdown using relative links to files in the src/content/assets/img or src/content/assets/files directories.

For example to reference the image src/content/assets/img/architecture.png you would use the following markdown:

![alt text](../assets/img/architecture.png)

However images and files used only for that markdown file should be organized with this folder structure: src/content/assets/img/pages/{posts | docs}/{markdown_file_name}/{image_file}.png

Linking to pages within the site

To link to pages within the site you can use relative or absolute links to the page. For example to link to the opendatahub.io/docs/tiered-components/ page you would use the following markdown:

[link text](/docs/tiered-components)

Or use relative links for when the the markdown is nearby. This is useful for linking to other blog posts.

[link text](./{other_blog_post})

Creating a video post

Video posts are located in the src/content/blogs directory. Each file is a Markdown (.md) file. They are like blog post except content should only include the frontmatter and no markdown content.

---
type: video
author: Sample Author
title:  Sample Title
preview: This is a blog post preview sample
date: 2022-10-31
categories: jupyter, model-serving, gpu
featured: true
permalink: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1234567890
---

Creating a release post

Release posts are identical to blog posts with the exception that the type is set to release.

Creating a new page

Creating a new page with markdown

All markdown pages are located in the src/content/pages directory. Each file is a Markdown (.md) file. Files should be named whatever you want the url to be. For example if you want the url to be opendatahub.io/about then the file should be named about.md. If you want the url to be opendatahub.io/about/team then the file should be encased in a folder named about and the file should be named team.md. You may also still have a file named about.md in the src/content/pages directory. This will be the landing page for the about url.

Do not create any markdown files in the src/content/pages directory with the following names: docs.md, blog.md, or community.md as these are reserved for the landing pages of those sections.

Creating a new page with React

All React pages are located in the src/pages directory. Each file is a React (.tsx) file. Files should be named whatever you want the url to be. For example if you want the url to be opendatahub.io/about then the file should be named about.tsx. If you want the url to be opendatahub.io/about/team then the file should be encased in a folder named about and the file should be named team.tsx. You may also still have a file named about.tsx in the src/pages directory. This will be the landing page for the about url.

Just like with markdown pages, do not create any React files in the src/pages directory that match names in the src/content/pages directory.