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This repository describes how to generate a CITATION.cff, about.md and installer.sh from a codemeta.json file using Pandoc.

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Codemeta + Pandoc Examples

In this repository you see three examples of using Pandoc, Pandoc templates and codemeta.json to create an about page, a CITATION.cff and an installer.sh file.

Generating a CITATION.cff

The codemeta.json file can be use to generate a CITATION.cff file using the Pandoc template codemeta-cff.tmpl.

    echo '' | pandoc -s --metadata title='Citation' \
                        --metadata-file codemeta.json \
                        --template codemeta-cff.tmpl \
                        >CITATION.cff

Generating an about page

Like CITATION.cff we can generate a standard about page, about.md from our codemeta.json using the Pandoc template codemeta-about.tmpl.

    echo '' | pandoc -s --metadata title='About' \
                        --metadata-file codemeta.json \
                        --template codemeta-about.tmpl \
                        >about.md

Generating version.sql

If you're building a Postgres+PostgREST application it is nice to have an end point the shows the name and version of the web application you are building. This can be done with the codemeta-version-sql.tmpl Pandoc template.

    echo '' | pandoc -s metadata title='Version Info' \
                     --metadata-file codemeta.json \
                     --template codemete-version-sql.tmpl \
                     >version.sql

Generating an installer.sh

The nice thing about the Pandoc approach is you can also use it as a shell script generator. Today (2023) many software tools[1] developers use have installation instructions like

    curl https://caltechlibrary.github.io/datatools/installer.sh | sh

With a single POSIX shell installer script you easily install your tools on macOS and Linux.

The codemeta.json file provides much of what is needed to generate the installer script from codemeta-installer.tmpl. There are three addition Pandoc metadata variables needed not explicitly found in the codemeta.json. The installer script expects to use a Zip file as an q0Additionally you need to name the zip archive of the content to be installed needs to be predictably named.

To have Pandoc generate a workable installer script requires to parts. First the name of your installation zip files need to be predictable.

Secondly the codemeta-installer.tmpl file needs to know some metadata inorder for the generated script to be runable.

The [codemeta.json] file provides much of the information needed to render our installer.sh. Our template, does make some specific assumptions

  • You've installation files are in a zip archive
  • There hosted under the GitHub in the releases directory for your repository
  • The name of the zip file is in the form of <PACKAGE>-v<VERSION>-<OS_NAME>-<ARCHITECTURE>.zip
  • The version number in the codemeta.json file does NOT have a leading 'v'
  • curl is available on the machine where you want to install the software and it has a network connection

PACKAGE : This would be the name of your Git repository, e.g. datatools

VERSION : This would be the version number without the leading "v", e.g. "0.0.1"

OS_NAME : would be "macOS", "Linux" or "Windows"

MACHINE-TYPE : This would be what is reported by the command uname -m

Rendering the installer.sh file can be done with the following Pandoc command.

echo '' | pandoc -s --metadata title='Installer' \
            --metadata-file codemeta.json \
            --template installer.sh

If you host this installer script can then be uploaded to your website. The curl command would be of the form

    curl <URL_TO_SITE>/installer.sh | sh

[1]: Examples Rust with Rustup and Haskell's GHCup