rOpenSci News Digest, November 2024

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Dear rOpenSci friends, it’s time for our monthly news roundup!

You can read this post on our blog. Now let’s dive into the activity at and around rOpenSci!

rOpenSci HQ

Looking for Maintainers to Support First-Time Contributors

Now open to non-rOpenSci package maintainers!

Making your first contribution to Open Source can be both empowering and intimidating. As such, we’re exited to announce a special series of activities to support first-time contributors! 🎉

Are you an package maintainer who would like to help someone make their first contribution? We limited our initial call to rOpenSci package maintainers, but we still have some room, so have decided to open this up to all package maintainers!

See our blog post for more details and how to sign up (by December 9th).

A fast R-Universe!

Thanks to optimized caching, the web front-end pages load much faster, making it even more fun to browse around the R ecosystem.

Yanina Bellini Saibene’s keynote talk at CarpentryConnect and BioNT 2024

In her keynote Yanina Bellini Saibene invited the audience to reflect on how to measure the impact of our work in our communities. She shared two frameworks we use at rOpenSci and severals tool to measure different aspects of our work and our impact, not only with numbers, but with stories. Slidedeck.

Tradução + Hackathon = Traslatón rOpenSci

We had a very nice and productive event during LatinR, with people registered from thirteen countries. Some people stayed for the whole event and others participated during some of the working sessions.

We discussed the GitHub workflow and the babelquarto and babeldown packages. We also reviewed the translation guidelines and started working on a Portuguese glossary for the translations.

Participants worked on reviewing the rOpenSci dev guide. As a result, we now have two more chapters with their first review started, two chapters with the second review under work, and five chapters merged with the complete translation. We also started the translation of our Code of Conduct. 🚀

We are very grateful to Pedro Faria, Beatriz Milz, Francesca Palmeira, Rafael Fontenelle, Ildeberto Vasconcelos, Samuel Carleial, and Ariana Cabral for their contributions during the Traslatón 🙏.

If you want to participate in this collaborative translation effort, please check out our project and add a comment to the pull request you would like to review.

Community Call “A comunidade R fala português” Resources

All the resources for our first community call in português are now available on our website.

Check the video, speakers slides, and links to other resources related to translation efforts in the R Community.

Give Thanks with the allcontributors Package

Mark Padgham published a blog post about his allcontributors package, which provides a very easy way to acknowledge all contributions to your software.

Coworking

Join us for social coworking & office hours monthly on first Tuesdays! Hosted by Steffi LaZerte and various community hosts. Everyone welcome. No RSVP needed. Consult our Events page to find your local time and how to join.

And remember, you can always cowork independently on work related to R, work on packages that tend to be neglected, or work on what ever you need to get done!

Software 📦

Discover more packages, read more about Software Peer Review.

New versions

The following twenty-one packages have had an update since the last newsletter: rsi (v0.3.1), allcontributors (v0.2.2), av (v0.9.3), comtradr (v1.0.3), FedData (v4.1.0), gitignore (v0.1.8.9000), GLMMcosinor (v0.2.1), jagstargets (1.2.2), lingtypology (v1.1.20v1), nodbi (v0.11.0), occCite (v0.5.9), osmapiR (v0.2.2), osmextract (v0.5.2), readODS (v2.3.1), ruODK (v1.5.1), spatsoc (v0.2.7), stats19 (v3.2.0), tarchetypes (0.11.0), targets (1.9.0), UCSCXenaTools (v1.6.0), and weathercan (v0.7.2).

Software Peer Review

There are twelve recently closed and active submissions and 7 submissions on hold. Issues are at different stages:

Find out more about Software Peer Review and how to get involved.

On the blog

Calls for contributions

Calls for maintainers

If you’re interested in maintaining any of the R packages below, you might enjoy reading our blog post What Does It Mean to Maintain a Package?.

Calls for contributions

Refer to our help wanted page – before opening a PR, we recommend asking in the issue whether help is still needed.

The bib2f package, for parsing BibTeX files into tibbles, would need some help! Issue for volunteering.

Package development corner

Some useful tips for R package developers. 👀

posit::conf(2024) session recordings

The recordings of talks at posit::conf(2024) are now available on YouTube. Particularly relevant for package developers are:

… and more! Happy watching.

API packages and CRAN

Don’t miss the blog post Handling CRAN Requirements for Web API R Packages by James Balamuta!

Also relevant, this chapter of the HTTP testing in R book: CRAN- (and Bioconductor) preparedness for your tests.

Update your GitHub Actions workflow

If you were still using version 3 of the Artifacts action, upgrade as your workflows will start failing. Thanks to Hugo Gruson for pointing this out!

A tip by Jacob Wujciak-Jens: Github provides the dependabot service that can help you keep actions updated hassle free! Just add the following simple yaml file as .github/dependabot.yml in your repo and a friendly bot will open PRs to keep you workflows up to date!

version: 2
updates:
 - package-ecosystem: "github-actions"
 directory: "/"
 schedule:
 interval: "monthly"
 open-pull-requests-limit: 10

An attack vector on GitHub Actions

Thanks to Zhian Kamvar for bringing up the article “ArtiPACKED: Hacking Giants Through a Race Condition in GitHub Actions Artifacts” in our slack workspace. In Zhian’s words: if you upload an artifact that contains the .git/ directory of a cloned repo, the GITHUB_TOKEN is exposed. While it expires at the end of the run, there is a small delay, which is long enough for a targeted attack. The solution is to set persist-credentials: false for every actions/checkout run.

Last words

Thanks for reading! If you want to get involved with rOpenSci, check out our Contributing Guide that can help direct you to the right place, whether you want to make code contributions, non-code contributions, or contribute in other ways like sharing use cases. You can also support our work through donations.

If you haven’t subscribed to our newsletter yet, you can do so via a form. Until it’s time for our next newsletter, you can keep in touch with us via our website and Mastodon account.

To leave a comment for the author, please follow the link and comment on their blog: rOpenSci - open tools for open science.

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