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Wasa2il - ‫وسائل

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Wasa2il is a participatory democracy software project. It is based around the core idea of polities - political entities - which users of the system can join or leave, make proposals in, alter existing proposals, and adopt laws to self-govern.

The goal of this is to make it easy for groups on any scale - from the local whiskey club to the largest nation - to self-organize and manage their intents, goals and mutual understandings.

Staging/demo

The current branches are deployed to Heroku when changes are merged.

master branch:

https://wasa2il-staging.herokuapp.com

development branch:

https://wasa2il-development.herokuapp.com

Login with any of the following 4 user:pass (a:a, b:b, c:c, d:d)

Setup

Note: Setup instructions are OS-agnostic unless otherwise specified. We test on Linux, Mac OS X and Windows.

For production use

Wasa2il must be set up on a web server capable of running Django. Instructions on setting up a Django production environment are however beyond the scope of this project, as well as Git cloning, Python installation and how to use a command line. Plenty of tutorials on these topics exist in various places online and we suggest you take a look at them if any of this seems confusing.

For development use

We recommend the use of virtualenv, but we also try to support docker-compose below.

  1. Clone the project

  2. Create your personal .env file so you can easily override ENV vars like language, W2_SECRET_KEY etc.

    cp env.example .env

  3. Run make help to see what make commands are available.

Using make

You can use make to do most of the things you might need to. Behind the scenes much of what follows runs in a virtualenv under ./.venv. It's encouraged to get to know how to use the virtualenv directly (see next section below).

  1. Create a virtual environment: make venv
  2. Install dependencies etc: make setup (edit the created .env file!)
  3. Create the database: make migrate
  4. Optional: Create some fake data: make load_fake_data
  5. Run the development server: make run

Using virtualenv

  1. Create a virtual environment (usually either kept under .venv or venv)

    python3 -m venv venv

  2. Load the virtual environment in your current shell:

    source venv/bin/activate

  3. Install dependencies

    pip install -r requirements.txt

  4. Create the database by running migrations (Only the first time)

    python manage.py migrate

  5. Optional: Reset the database and populate with a large volume of test data. This should populate the database with a small amount of random data, including four users with varying levels of access (users a, b, c and d - each with their own username as a password).

    manage.py load_fake_data --full --reset

  6. Start server

    python manage.py runserver

Docker Compose

If you have docker-compose installed, you need to:

  1. Start web + db containers:
    docker-compose up

  2. Run database migrations (if needed):
    docker-compose run app python manage.py migrate

  3. If the db container is not started before the web container tries to access it, resulting in a Django error, restart the web container:
    docker-compose restart app

Vagrant (Virtual machines)

Three are a few examples of virtual machines setting up the project. These are found under the vagrants/ directory.

These are mostly meant to make sure that we have solid examples of how to set up the project on a brand new computer, including necessary system packages.

So these can be used to debug system-level problems, and also to test out changes made at that level, as opposed to at the python package level.

SASS / SCSS / CSS

To watch and compile .scss automatically:
cd core/static/css and scss --watch application.scss

Tests

Run tests with ./manage.py test

Contributing

Pull requests are welcome. Update translations by running manage.py makemessages and edit the appropriate translation file, such as wasa2il/locale/is/LC_MESSAGES/django.po.

Development process

  1. Select an unassigned issue from the backlog, assign it to yourself, create a branch from the issue and check out the branch on your local machine

  2. Make changes to the code that address the issue (and preferably don't stuff much more in there) and push them. Note: small changes will make for way quicker reviews

  3. Monitor the pipeline on Gitlab, cross your fingers and hope for it to pass through

  4. Create a merge request into development branch and assign it to someone.

  5. If all is well the merge request will be approved into to development and the cahnges deployed to staging

Project concepts

Polities

A polity is a political entity which consists of a group of people and a set of laws the group has decided to adhere to. In an abstract sense, membership in a polity grants a person certain rights and priviledges. For instance, membership in a school's student body may grant you the right to attend their annual prom, and membership in a country (i.e. residency or citizenship) grants you a right to live there and do certain things there, such as start companies. stand in elections, and so on.

Each polity has different rules - these are also called statutes, bylaws or laws - which affect the polity on two different levels.

Firstly, there are meta-rules, which describe how rules are formed, how decisions are made, how meetings happen, and how governance in general happens. Wasa2il has to be flexible enough to accomodate the varying meta-rules of a given polity, otherwise the polity may decide that Wasa2il isn't useful to them. Sometimes these rules are referred to as "rules of procedure" or "constitution", depending on the type of polity which is using them.

Secondly there are external rules, which are the decisions the polity makes which don't affect its internal decisionmaking process.

Wasa2il needs to have the capacity to manage both types of rules and present both in a coherent and comprehensive way. In particular, there needs to be an available list of the laws which the polity has adopted, and changes to those laws which have meta-effects must alter the way Wasa2il works for that polity.

Topics, Issues, Documents and Votes

Within any polity, there can be any number of different topics that need to be discussed. The members of a polity decide which topics are relevant to them. The way in which this is decided depends on the meta-rules of the polity.

Topics are used to manage and display a list of issues. Issues are conversations which have been brought to discussion within a polity, and can belong to numerous topics. The purpose of an issue and its associated conversation is to arrive at a decision. The decision is represented by a document which can be adopted or rejected.

Documents which have been adopted represent the law of the polity. Sometimes laws need to change, so it needs to be possible to propose changes to a law even after it has been adopted. Doing so would cause a new issue to be raised and deliberated on.

The decision making process is normally concluded by a vote. Votes can take many forms. There are multiple methods of voting and multiple ways of calculating the results. While in most cases the correct approach for the creation of new laws would be to decide on one unique result.

[As a side: If faced with multiple options for a particular article, for instance, the Condorcet method may be the best way to get an acceptable result. It might even be determined that if no Condorcet winner exists amongst the proposals, there should be some process to push closer to a consensus. This is tricky, as if the Schultze method is simply used to create a winner there could be a complaint that results are being forced out, whereas if there is a simple method to postpone an issue indefinitely opponents could gang up to game the system and eliminate the possibility of a Condorcet winner. Some middle ground should exist, and Wasa2il should support the creation of that.]

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