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Martin Schott authoredMartin Schott authored
Design
Templates, CI and Design files of the Open Toolchain Foundation
Logo
Find color variations of the above variants in the folder XXXXXXXXXXXX.
Find explanation of the symbolic meanings in the logo hereXXXXXXXXXXXX.
Colors
{: #tanuki-purple}
■ black #000000
Design Elements
Hexagonal shapes and patterns, symbolizing technical efficiency and modularity (elements that fit together like honeycombs).
SVG files are created with inkscape.
License
Getting started
To make it easy for you to get started with GitLab, here's a list of recommended next steps.
Already a pro? Just edit this README.md and make it your own. Want to make it easy? Use the template at the bottom!
Add your files
- Create or upload files
- Add files using the command line or push an existing Git repository with the following command:
cd existing_repo
git remote add origin https://gitlab.fabcity.hamburg/OTFN/design.git
git branch -M main
git push -uf origin main
Integrate with your tools
Collaborate with your team
- Invite team members and collaborators
- Create a new merge request
- Automatically close issues from merge requests
- Enable merge request approvals
- Automatically merge when pipeline succeeds
Test and Deploy
Use the built-in continuous integration in GitLab.
- Get started with GitLab CI/CD
- Analyze your code for known vulnerabilities with Static Application Security Testing(SAST)
- Deploy to Kubernetes, Amazon EC2, or Amazon ECS using Auto Deploy
- Use pull-based deployments for improved Kubernetes management
- Set up protected environments
Editing this README
When you're ready to make this README your own, just edit this file and use the handy template below (or feel free to structure it however you want - this is just a starting point!). Thank you to makeareadme.com for this template.
Suggestions for a good README
Every project is different, so consider which of these sections apply to yours. The sections used in the template are suggestions for most open source projects. Also keep in mind that while a README can be too long and detailed, too long is better than too short. If you think your README is too long, consider utilizing another form of documentation rather than cutting out information.
Name
Choose a self-explaining name for your project.
Description
Let people know what your project can do specifically. Provide context and add a link to any reference visitors might be unfamiliar with. A list of Features or a Background subsection can also be added here. If there are alternatives to your project, this is a good place to list differentiating factors.