anantamukhta / SEBC

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Services Enablement Boot Camp

This repository contains materials for Cloudera's Services Enablement Boot Camp and Cloudera FCE's internal boot camp.

If you've received this repo as a ZIP file attachment, use the instructions in the email to create your class repo. You can make your GitHub repo Private if you wish, but it is not a free option. For that reason, most students choose to make their GitHub repository public.

NOTE: DO NOT add files to your repository through the GitHub browser interface.

Use GitHub only to receive your lab work by pushing from your local copy. Treat your GitHub repo like a backup to what is on your laptop. Doing so will save a lot of headaches around maintaining the repo, as we will explain in class. The only changes you should make directly to your GitHub copy are Issues and Milestones, which are described in README.md.

Add your instructor(s) as Collaborators to your GitHub repo. The lead instructor's GitHub name is manojsundaram.

Adding your instructors as Collaborators will let them create pull requests on your work. This is a way of editing your submissions without changing them directly. When you review instructor edits, you can choose to reject them. Perhaps you would like to correct problems a different way or ignore them for a while. The pull request stands as a record of that interaction.

We use GitHub's Issues feature to establish a workflow around your lab submissions.

For each lab section, such as Installation or Storage, you will use an Issue to track your progress. You will also use GitHub labels to mark the current state of each lab (e.g., submitted, stuck, review). Your instructors will use labels to evaluate your work once you have marked it for review (such as complete or 'incomplete`).

Finally, we will use GitHub milestones to separate your lab work from your challenge work.

In a large class, it may take some time for an instructor to help you with a difficult problem. Use the Issue to describe the problem and show what diagnostic work you've tried to isolate your problem.

You can include error messages or stack traces as Issue comments, or take a screenshot to show your cluster's current condition. It is quite possible these initial steps will help you solve the problem yourself. Otherwise, they will show an instructor what you have tried so far.

Before you start any labs, make the following changes to your GitHub repo:

One of the instructors will open an issue on your repo to acknowledge your invitation to collaborate. They will also review your repo for all the settings described here, and point out anything that isn't setup correctly. This issue will be the only one you're asked to close. All other issues are to be closed by an instructor to show no further review is needed.