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Courseware Learning VM

Synopsis

The Learning VM (Virtual Machine) is a self contained learning environment. It includes with everything a new user needs to get started learning Puppet. The courses are in an extensible quest-based format to allow users to explore and build on concepts at their own pace.

The Learning VM is written with Puppet Enterprise (PE) in mind, and some of the content is PE-specific. That being said, however, a user interested in Puppet Open Source will likely find the content helpful as well.

Because the VM and Quest Guide are self contained, a user can learn Puppet anywhere; after the initial download, no internet connection is required.

Quest content

Content for the Quest Guide is created in a Markdown (.md) format. We're currently using the (Jekyll)[http://jekyllrb.com/] static site generator to build the Quest Guide from raw Markdown source. While the bulk of content follows standard (Markdown)[http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/] syntax, the content includes a few other elements. We'll go over some conventions and extensions below.

YAML Header

Each quest Markdown file must begin with a yaml header. This allows Jekyll to identify the file and provides variables to be used in processing. Currently, this header will consist of two lines, marked off from the rest of the file by --- lines.

The first defines the title, and should be set to the title of the quest. The second tells Jekyll what layout template to use in generating html from the Markdown. This should always be set to default.

---
title: Resource Ordering
layout: default
---

Title and Headers

Each quest should start with the title of that quest as an h1. In Markdown, h1 is designated with a single # at the beginning of the lines, e.g.:

# Resource Ordering

Next is a Quest Objectives section under an h2 with that name:

## Quest Objectives

In this section, include a brief one paragraph summary of the quest objectives. At the end of this section, include the a sentence like "If you're ready to get started, type the following command:", followed by the start quest command, indented to display as a code block, and with the quest name as its argument. This argument refers to the spec file for that quest, so replace any spaces with underscores to match the spec filename.

quest --start resource_ordering

After this, begin the main content of the quest, using h2 and h3 level headers as appropriate.

Liquid templates

We use the Liquid templating system to extend the syntax available in Markdown and allow us to include asides and custom-formatted task notation.

These custom templates are defined by Ruby files in the Quest_Guide/_plugins directory.

Errors in template syntax will prevent Jekyll from running properly. Before making a pull request with content changes, make sure that Jekyll will run. If there are Liquid syntax errors, Jekyll will throw a Liquid Exception and point you to the offending file.

Code Highlighting

Blocks of code must be wrapped in {% highlight <language> %} {% endhighlight %} tags, like so:

{% highlight puppet %}
user { 'root':
	ensure           => 'present',
{% endhighlight %}

Asides

(NOTE: We're considering deprecating the tip, warning, and fact aside styles or replacing them with to simplify our styles and formatting)

There are three types of aside that will be displayed floating to the right of the text. Each has an icon according to its type and will include the content between the template tags. This content should be kept brief, and you should avoid using too many of these in close succession to avoid clutter.

{% tip %}
Here's a tip!
{% endtip %}

{% warning %}
Here's a warning!
{% endwarning %}

{% fact %}
Here's a fact!
{% endfact %}

There is also an inline-aside style. This is displayed in the main body of the text, but is set off from the flow of the document. Unlike the asides above, this can include a title, which can include spaces. (Some special characters work here, but this hasn't been tested, so be sure to double check that your content renders properly before making a PR.)

{% aside Title of aside %}
Content of the aside.
{% endaside %}

Tasks

Finally, there is a template to be used in numbering tasks and specifying completion steps for the automated testing system. Place this before each task. Because task numbering is associated directly with the VM task tracking function, you must enter each task number manually.

The content of the task template is a block of YAML that scripts the steps required to complete a task. See the Rakefile for the code that implements this content.

The YAML content is parsed into a list of steps. A step can either specify a command to execute and an optional list of inputs to supply if that command opens a subprocess, or give a filename and the content for that file.

An excute command will look something like this:

{% task 2 %}
---
- execute: "puppet describe user | less"
  input:
    - 'q'
{% endtask %}

Note that if you open a subprocess, you must also include an input that will exit that process. In the example above, we send the q command to exit less.

A File command will look like this:

{% task 6 %}
---
- file: /etc/puppetlabs/puppet/environments/production/modules/vimrc/manifests/init.pp
  content: |
    class vimrc {
      file { '/root/.vimrc':
        ensure => 'present',
        source => 'puppet:///modules/vimrc/vimrc',
      }
    }
{% endtask %}

(NOTE: Though these completion steps are currently included in the corresponding quest Markdown files, they will likely be split out into separate files in the future.)

Jekyll

The Quest Guide is a static website generated from source Markdown and served by Jekyll. To view the site, first install the ruby gem Jekyll:

gem install jekyll

When Jekyll is successfully installed, you can serve the website by navigating to the top directory:

cd /path/to/courseware-lvm/Quest_Guide

and entering the command:

jekyll serve --watch

Now open your web browser and point it to:

localhost:4000

To build the HTML without launching the development server, use the command:

jekyll build

Quest ordering

Quest_Guide/_data/quest_order.yml contains a list of quests with url and title. The order of quests in this file determines the order that they will be listed in the website navbar.

Whenever possible, this file should be the single source of quest meta-data.

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