commit | cf9eca9a66d6e0c625570cc9ee8a9f0cb99ffabe | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Benjamin Young <byoung2@wiley.com> | Wed Nov 06 16:42:46 2019 -0500 |
committer | BigBlueHat <byoung@bigbluehat.com> | Mon Nov 11 09:50:12 2019 -0500 |
tree | d1f2cbdc1a0e1bc6a3473eaf279b028555f0735c | |
parent | 7ff79c1a345169c85d15b4ae46761875e185e453 [diff] |
Add Apache Rat configuration Apache Rat (Release Audit Tool) is (or was at least) a preferred code license checking tool used by the ASF. The `.ratignore` file contains a list of files to exclude from scans. The code used to run Apache Rat was: java -jar ~/bin/apache-rat-0.13/apache-rat-0.13.jar -E .ratignore -d . > rat_report.txt Apache Rat: https://creadur.apache.org/rat/
Apache Annotator provides annotation enabling code for browsers, servers, and humans.
We‘re currently pre-releasing development copies of each library that makes up the sum total of Apache Annotator’s code. You can grab any of them from our npm organization.
$ # for example... $ npm install --save @annotator/dom
We use Lerna to juggle the various Apache Annotator libraries. If you‘d like to contribute, you’ll need the following:
$ yarn install
$ yarn test
$ yarn start
Once the test server has started, you can browse a local demo, and run tests in a browser by visiting http://localhost:8080/
.
If you have any Web Annotation Data Model JSON documents, you can validate them using the validate
script:
$ yarn validate --url https://raw.githubusercontent.com/w3c/web-annotation-tests/master/tools/samples/correct/anno1.json
With the --url
option you can pass in a URL or a local path to a JSON file.
Valid:
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/w3c/web-annotation-tests/master/tools/samples/correct/anno1.json
Invalid:
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/w3c/web-annotation-tests/master/tools/samples/incorrect/anno1.json
Apache License 2.0