I know Matt Jones and the folks at NCEAS have been working on provenance
tracking in R, here's the repo: https://github.com/NCEAS/recordr but it's R
specific.



On Mon, Sep 7, 2015 at 5:05 AM Damien Irving <
[email protected]> wrote:

> My capstone example for Data Management in the Weather and Climate
> Sciences teaches a simple method for recording provenance that doesn't
> require any formal tools (only the ability to write command line programs):
> http://damienirving.github.io/capstone-oceanography/03-data-provenance.html
>
>
>
>
>
> On Mon, Sep 7, 2015 at 6:01 AM, Greg Wilson <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>> There was a discussion on the blog about simple provenance tools back in
>> 2012 [1], and Robin Wilson recently introduced me to another Python-only
>> tool called recipy [2].  What do people on this list currently use to track
>> the provenance of their original data sets and their intermediate and final
>> results?  How well does it work across languages?  How easy was it to
>> learn, and how much effort does it take day-to-day?
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Greg
>>
>> [1]
>> http://software-carpentry.org/blog/2012/10/wanted-an-entry-level-provenance-library.html
>>
>> [2] https://github.com/recipy/recipy
>>
>> On 2015-09-07 10:39 AM, Bartosz wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Raniere,
>>>
>>> You forgot to attach the link, but I guess you meant this project [1].
>>>
>>> We have developed similar project, called sumatra, to track provenance
>>> for python and non-python projects [2,3]
>>>
>>> Sumatra has been used so far in neural modelling and data analysis, but
>>> I am not aware of any reports describing use of sumatra in real world
>>> projects. Perhaps, you could contact the main developer, Andrew Davison (in
>>> cc), who might be able to provide you with more information.
>>>
>>> Yours,
>>>
>>> Bartosz
>>>
>>> [1] https://github.com/gems-uff/noworkflow
>>> [2] http://pythonhosted.org/Sumatra/
>>> [3] https://osf.io/rc5jf/
>>>
>>> Hi everyone,
>>>>
>>>> during last Spring I watched one talk from João Felipe, in copy,
>>>> about his M.S. project noWorkflow [1] that is under MIT license and
>>>> briefly
>>>>
>>>>     aims at allowing scientists to benefit from provenance data
>>>> analysis even
>>>>     when they don't use a workflow system.
>>>>
>>>> João contacted me because he is looking for open science projects
>>>> under developing that he could use as examples for noWorkflow
>>>> or that are interested in testing noWorkflow (I'm sure that he will be
>>>> happy
>>>> to help you doing it as easy as possible if this is the case).
>>>>
>>>> Since I think that many people in this list could be interested
>>>> in João's project I'm sending this email.
>>>> You can contact João directly.
>>>>
>>>> Cheers,
>>>> Raniere
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
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>>>
>>>
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>>
>> --
>> Dr. Greg Wilson    | [email protected]
>> Software Carpentry | http://software-carpentry.org
>>
>>
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