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WikiChron

WikiChron is a web tool for the analysis and visualization of the evolution of wiki online communities.

It analyzes the history dump of a wiki and give you nice graphs plotting that data.

Development

Install

Dependencies

Install instructions

Tkinter

If you are using Linux (and probably Mac OS X too), likely you will need to manually install the tkinter utility. You can check if tkinter is already installed in your system by following these instructions.

To install it, if you are in Ubuntu or derivatives you can use this command:

sudo apt-get install python3-tk

If you are using pyenv, you should follow the instructions posted in this answer of stack overflow.

igraph

The dependency python-igraph needs to compile some C code, so, in order to install it, you priorly need some dev libraries for python, xml, zlib and C compiler utilities.

For Ubuntu 18.04 (bionic) or newer versions you can directly install igraph for python3 with:

sudo apt-get install python3-igraph

For older versions of Ubuntu (16.04 and derivatives), you need to install the following dependencies prior to be able to compile and install igraph with pip:

sudo apt-get install build-essential python3-dev libxml2 libxml2-dev zlib1g-dev

Other deps

After that, simply run: pip3 install -r requirements.txt. pip will install all the remaining dependencies you need.

In case of versions of linux where igraph for python3 is not available in your package manager, you need to use the requirements file which includes the igraph package in order to be built and installed with pip: pip3 install -r requirements+igraph.txt

Using a virtual environment

A good pratice is to use a virtual environment in order to isolate the development environment from your personal stuff. This skips issues about having different Python versions, pip packages in the wrong place or requiring sudo privileges and so on.

In order to do this, first install virtualenv, either from your package manager or from pip.

Then, create a new virtual environment in the repo root folder with: virtualenv -p python3 venv/

Activate the virtual environment: source venv/bin/activate

And finally, install dependencies here: pip install -r requirements.txt

Input wiki data

Likely, the source data for wikichron will come from a XML file with the full edit history of the wikis you want to analyze. Go here if you want to learn more about Wikimedia XML dumps.

In order to get such XML dump, you can follow the instructions explained in the WikiChron's wiki.

Process the dump

Secondly, you'll need to convert that xml raw data into a processed csv that WikiChron can load and work with.

For that transformation, you should use our wiki-dump-parser script. You can find a short guide on how to use this script in this page of the WikiChron's wiki.

Provide some metadata of the wiki

Wikichron needs one last thing in order to serve the visualization of a wiki for you.

You need to have a wikis.json file in your data_dir/ directory with some metadata of the wikis you want to explore; like the number of pages, the number of users, the user ids of the bots, etc.

You can find some helpful instructions on how to edit or automatically generate this file using a script in this page of the WikiChron's wiki.

Run the application

Use: python3 -m wikichron or python3 wikichron/app.py

The webapp will be locally available under http://127.0.0.1:8880/app/

Optionally, you can specify a directory with the csv data of the wikis you want to analyze with the environment variable: WIKICHRON_DATA_DIR.

For instance, suppose that your data is stored in /var/tmp, you might launch wikichron using that directory with:

WIKICHRON_DATA_DIR='/var/tmp' python3 wikichron/app.py

It will show all the files ending in .csv as wikis available to analyze and plot.

Development environment

To get errors messages, backtraces and automatic reloading when source code changes, you must set the environment variable: FLASK_ENV to 'development', i.e.: export FLASK_ENV=development prior to launch app.py.

There is a simple but handy script called run_develop.sh which set the app for development environment and launches it locally.

You can get more information on this in the Flask documentation.

Deployment

The easiest way is to use Docker.

Otherwise, follow the Dash instructions: https://plot.ly/dash/deployment and inspect the deploy.sh script, which launches the app with the latest code in master and provides the appropriate arguments. Check it out and modify to suit your needs.

gunicorn config

For the deployment you need to set some configuration in a file called gunicorn_config.py.

You can start by copying the sample config file located in this repo and then edit the config parameters needed to suit your specific needs:

cp sample_gunicorn_config.py gunicorn_config.py

The documentation about the gunicorn settings allowed in this file can be found in the official gunicorn documentation.

The environment variable WIKICHRON_DATA_DIR is bypassed directly to WikiChron and sets the directory where WikiChron will look for the wiki data files, as it was explained previously in the Run the application section.

Setup cache

If you want to run WikiChron in production, you should setup a RedisDB server and add the corresponding parameters to the cache.py file.

Look at the FlaskCaching documentation for more information about caching.

Flask deployment config

This webapp use some configurable parameters related to the Flask instance underneath. Those paramenters are such as hostname, port and ip address for the cache and need to be set in a file called "production_config.cfg" which should be located inside the directory called "wikichron". An example of the values for those parameters are in the file called "sample_production_config.cfg". So simply copy that file and edit them accordingly:

cp wikichron/sample_production_config.cfg wikichron/production_config.cfg

Docker

You can use Docker to deploy WikiChron. The sample configurations are already set to use get the docker compose working smoothly.

Just copy the sample config files to the appropriate names (as explained above) and run:

docker-compose up

This will start up the wikichron webserver as well as a redis instance to use for the cache.

If, for any reason, you wanted to start a standalone docker instance for wikichron (without redis), you could use a command similar to this one:

docker run --mount type=bind,source=/var/data/wiki_dumps/csv,target=/var/data/wiki_dumps/csv -p 8080:8080 -it wikichron:latest

Third-party licenses

Font Awesome

We are using icons from the font-awesome repository. These icons are subjected to the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. You can find to the terms of their license here. In particular, we are using the following icons: share-alt-solid, info-circle

Modifications in font awesome icons

  • The file: share.svg is a modification of the share-alt-solid.svg file provided by fontawesome.

Publications

WikiChron is used for science and, accordingly, we have presented the tool in some scientific conferences. Please, cite us if you use the tool for your research work:

  • Abel Serrano, Javier Arroyo, and Samer Hassan. 2018. Webtool for the Analysis and Visualization of the Evolution of Wiki Online Communities. In Proceedings of the European Conference on Information Systems 2018 (ECIS '18). 10 pages.
  • Abel Serrano, Javier Arroyo, and Samer Hassan. 2018. Participation Inequality in Wikis: A Temporal Analysis Using WikiChron. In Proceedings of the 14th International Symposium on Open Collaboration (OpenSym '18). ACM, New York, NY, USA, Article 12, 7 pages. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/3233391.3233536.
  • Youssef El Faqir, Javier Arroyo, and Abel Serrano. 2019. Visualization of the evolution of collaboration and communication networks in wikis. In Proceedings of the 15th International Symposium on Open Collaboration (OpenSym '19). ACM, New York, NY, USA, Article 11, 10 pages. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/3306446.3340834