Pricing Login
Pricing
Back to blog results

October 27, 2016 By Michael Floyd

Sumo Logic Launches New Open Source Site on Github Pages

github-pages-sumo-logicThis week we deployed our new Github pages site, Sumo Logic Developers, to showcase some of the cool open-source projects that are being built in and around Sumo Logic. The goal is to share the knowledge and many projects that are being built by our customers, partners and everything in the wild.

Aside from the official Sumo Logic repositories, there’s also a lot of tribal knowledge: Our Sales Engineers and Customer Success teams work daily with our customers to solve real-world problems. Often those solutions include search queries, field extraction rules, useful regular expressions, and configuration settings that are often captured in Github and other code registries. Sumo Logic Developers aggregates this knowledge in one place under Sumo Experts.

Likewise, we’re seeing more organizations creating plugins and otherwise integrating Sumo Logic into to their products using our REST APIs. So under Integrations you’ll find a Jenkins Publisher plugin, along with tools for working with Twillio, Chef, DataDog, FluentD and many others.

sumo-logic-github-pages-sm

Sumo Logic Developers also provides everything our customers need to collect and ingest data including APIs and documentation, educational articles and walkthroughs from our Dev Blog, and links to all of our supported apps and integrations.

The project was an enjoyable break from daily tasks and for those considering building a Github Pages site, I’d like to share my experience in building Sumo Logic Developers. If you’d like to contribute or add your project or repo to one of the lists on Sumo Logic Developers simply reply to this thread on our community site, Sumo Dojo. Alternatively, you can ping me on Twitter @codejournalist.

Deploying Sumo Logic Developers on Github Pages

Sumo Logic Developers is built on Github pages using Jekyll as a static site generator. Github pages are served from a special repository associated with your User or Organization account on Github. So all the code is visible unless you make it private. Github pages supports Jekyll natively so it’s easy to run builds on your local machine and review changes on a localhost before deploying to Github.

Using Bootstrap

I used the Bootstrap JavaScript framework to make the site responsive and mobile friendly. In particular Bootstrap CSS uses a grid system that uses rows and up to 12 columns. The grid scales as the device or viewport size increases and decreases. It includes predefined classes for easy layout options, so I can specify a new row like this:

<div class=”row”>

Within the row, I can designate the entire width of the screen like this:

<div class=”col-xs-12 col-sm-12 col-md-12 col-lg-12 hidden-xs”>

This create a full screen area using all 12 columns. Note that Bootstrap CSS lets you specify different sizes for desktop, laptop, tablets and mobile phones. This last example hides the content in this on extra small mobile screens. The following creates an area of 4 units on large and medium screens (most desktops and laptops, 6 units on small screens (most tablets) 8 units on phone devices.

<div class=”col-lg-4 col-md-4 col-sm-6 col-xs-8″>

Using Jekyll and Git

Jekyll is a static site generator that includes the Liquid template engine to create data-driven sites. So using Liquid’s template language I was able to populate open-source projects into the site using data read from a Yaml file. This feature allows our internal teams to quickly update the site without having to muck in the code. A typical entry looks like:


- title: "Sumo Report Generator"
repo_description: "Tool that allows a user to execute multiple searches, and compile the data into a single report."
url: "https://github.com/SumoLogic/sumo-report-generator"

We use a Github workflow, so team members can simply create a new branch off of the master, edit the title, repo_description and url, then make a pull request to merge the request.

You can find all of the source code at https://github.com/SumoLogic/sumologic.github.io

Contributing to the Github Pages Site

At it’s heart, Sumo Logic Developers is really a wiki – it’s informative with an amazing amount of rich content, it’s based on the work of our community of developers and DevOps practitioners, and it operates on a principle of collaborative trust. It’s brimming with tribal knowledge – the lessons learned from those who’ve travelled before you. In fact, the site currently represents:

  • 30 Official Sumo Logic repositories
  • ~ 20 Individually maintained repos by our customers, as well as SE, Customer Success and Engineering teams.
  • 100+ Gists containing scripts, code snippets, useful regular expressions, etc.
  • 3rd-party integrations with Jenkins, FluentD, Chef, Puppet and others.
  • 100+ Blogs
  • Links to our community, API’s and documentation

Our main task now is finding new projects and encouraging members like you to contribute. The goal is to empower the tribe – all of those who use Sumo Logic to build, run and secure their modern applications.

If you’d like to contribute, post your project on Sumo Dojo, or ping us @sumologic.

Michael is the Head of Developer Programs at Sumo Logic. You can follow him on Twitter @codejournalist. Read more of Michael’s posts on Sumo Logic’s DevOps Blog.

Complete visibility for DevSecOps

Reduce downtime and move from reactive to proactive monitoring.

Sumo Logic cloud-native SaaS analytics

Build, run, and secure modern applications and cloud infrastructures.

Start free trial

Michael Floyd

More posts by Michael Floyd.

People who read this also enjoyed