The online data and web publishing system (i.e. "the website") is now large and complicated. The handbook contains info at various levels: simple 'How to add stuff' information for the typical expoer, more detailed info for cloning it onto your own machine for more significant edits, and structural info on how it's all put together for people who want/need to change things.
We have an Overview Presentation (many parts out of date) on how the cave data, handbook and public website are constructed and managed. It contains material which will be merged into this online systems manual.
These pages listed below have been reviewed recently (2019), and a fuller list of "How do I..." instruction pages are on the handbook opening page.
The systems manual is being actively edited to extract and simplify documentation.
Troggle runs the expo cave survey data management, presents the data on the website and manages the Expo Handbook. See the troggle intro.
Some key sections of the online webpages are autogenerated by scripts or by troggle, and are not static files, so you have to edit the base data, not the generated file (e.g cave pages, QM (question mark) lists, expo members list, prospecting pages). All autogenerated files say 'This file is autogenerated - do not edit' at the top - so check for that before wasting time on changes that will just be overwritten
The primary and recommended way of editing this handbook (and the website generally) is to use a laptop which has the version control software installed. The person editing needs to know how to use this software, and also needs to know how to edit raw HTML files using a text editor. The public expo server is on a machine far, far away that we only access remotely.
The Expo laptop has the software installed, so it is best to learn how to do this when sitting at that laptop.
It's important to understand that the pages you can edit by this method are stored in a version control system (see below). This stops us losing data and makes it very hard for you to screw anything up permanently, so don't worry about making changes - they can always be reverted if there is a problem. It also means that several people can work on the site on different computers at once and normally merge their changes easily.
The recommended editing workflow is to (a) use the version control software to synchronise your local laptop copy of the website files with that on the server; (b) edit a set of .html files on your laptop so that all links between them are consistent, save the files locally, and "commit" them locally; (c) "push" the collection of changes to the expo online server as a single action.
See the Expo data management systems manual for a fuller description of the version control software repositories and how to install and use the software.
You can update a single webpage online via a browser. This is best used for urgent edits to a single page, e.g. if the emergency phone at top-camp has to use a new SIM with a different phone number. If you are a logged-on user you will see "Edit this page" on the menu on the left of this page. It appears on nearly all pages in this website. If you click on it you will be able to edit the raw HTML of the page - so you need to know how to do that.
After doing the page editing and saving your work, you need to ask a nerd to finish the process fairly soon as the "Edit this page" mechanism does not tidy-up after itself properly. See these instructions for this tidy-up
We use a distributed revision control system (git, and formerly mercurial) for all the important data. (Note that we just use git: not GitHub, not GitLab, just git.) This means that many people can edit and merge their changes with the expo server in Cambridge at the same time: inlcuding people still on expo in the Tatty Hut and those who have returned to the UK. Also anyone who is up to date can take their laptop somewhere and enter data even if they have no internet access, and the updates will be merged when they get back to civilization.
In principle, survey notes can be typed into a laptop up on the plateau which would then get synchronised when it next gets internet access.
A version control system is inefficient for scanned survey notes which are large files that do not get modified, so they are kept as a plain directory of files 'expofiles'. The same goes for holiday photographs and GPS logs.
In 2019 we had half our version-controlled repositories under mercurial and half under git. The intention is to move entirely to git before the 2020 expo.