This project is a fork of the
tor-metrics-tasks.git project. If you have that one
already cloned locally, you can use
git clone --reference /path/to/your/tor-metrics-tasks.git/incarnation mirror_URL
to save bandwidth during cloning.
description | Technical reports and code snippets for Tor Project metrics analyses |
owner | delber@riseup.net |
last change | Sat, 4 Aug 2012 15:46:41 +0000 (4 15:46 +0000) |
URL | git://repo.or.cz/tor-metrics-tasks/delber.git |
| https://repo.or.cz/tor-metrics-tasks/delber.git |
push URL | ssh://repo.or.cz/tor-metrics-tasks/delber.git |
| https://repo.or.cz/tor-metrics-tasks/delber.git (learn more) |
bundle info | delber.git downloadable bundles |
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README
Welcome to the metrics-tasks code repository!
This repository contains technical reports and code snippets for metrics
analyses. Most of this code was written with the single purpose of
answering a metrics question. Once it's answered, we're done. But the
code should be somewhere in case we want to answer a similar question in
the future. And this "somewhere" shouldn't be someone's desktop.
The rules are simple:
- Whenever we feel like we want to share technical report sources or
Java, R, Python code for metrics analyses, we create a new subdirectory
here. The naming convention is simply that we use the ticket number
that Trac assigns as subdirectory name. For example, code for ticket
#1234 should go in subdirectory task-1234/. If there's no Trac ticket
yet, then why are you working on it? Go create a Trac ticket first!
- There should be a README file in every subdirectory saying what the
code does, what libraries are required, and so on. Don't spend much
time on writing a good README, but imagine that you might want to know
what's going on in 3, 6, or 12 months.
- Don't check in binaries. We assume that whoever checks out code from
this repository knows how to download libraries and compile sources.
- If we open a follow-up ticket to a ticket that has code in this
repository, we `git mv` the files and create a tiny text file in the
original ticket directory saying where the code moved.
- The code in a ticket may never rely on the code of another ticket in
this repository. Consider the subdirectories as small projects that we
were just too lazy to create new Git repositories for. Other than that
subdirectories here have nothing in common.
So much about the rules. Now go answer fine metrics questions!