===============================================
-=== Depedendencies ============================
+=== Getting Selectricity ======================
===============================================
-To use Selectricity, you'll need to install the following gems in
-addition to rails and its dependencies:
+Selectricity is free software and is distributed under the GNU Affero
+General Public License version 3. You are free to use, modify, and
+distribute, or rework Selectricity under the terms of that license. Of
+course, we'd sure like it if you would send fixes back to us and tell us
+about cool stuff you do with our software!
- * gruff
+The best way to get Selectricity is just to download it from our
+source repository. You'll need the Git version control system or
+source control manager to check it. You can get it here:
-Also, you will need install the other applications:
+ http://git-scm.com/
+
+Once you have it, getting the source code is pretty easy. You just need
+to check out a branch with a command like this:
+
+ git clone http://projects.mako.cc/source/selectricity/.git
+
+By default, this will create a working copy with the latest
+*development* version of our code. If you want the latest production
+version (i.e., what we're running on the site), you need to switch to
+the live version of the software which is kept in a branch called
+"live." Once you cloned the repository above, you can switch into the
+directory (i.e., run "cd selectricity") and then run the following
+command:
+
+ git checkout -b live origin/live
- * imagemagick (http://www.imagemagick.org/)
===============================================
-=== Contributors to Selectricity Include ======
+=== Getting Help and Contributing =============
===============================================
- * Benjamin Mako Hill <mako@atdot.cc>
- * John Dong <jdong@ubuntu.com>
- * Justin Sharps <jlsharps@mit.edu>
+If you have a question, you can always email the core team at:
+
+ team@selectricity.org
+
+If you want to get involved in development, want to discuss
+selectricity, or want to participate, please subscribe to our mailing
+list here:
+
+ http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/selectricity
+
===============================================
-=== Log =======================================
+=== Dependencies ==============================
===============================================
-07/31/07
-jlsharps: I've added a user authentication system known as
-"acts_as_authenticated" to the code. The plugin is the the vendor/plugins
-directory. The two most noticeable changes are the AccountController and a
-redone User model. I've left the UserController in place for now, but the
-AccountController works in a different manner, so am switching over to that
-gradually. I saved the 5 lines or so in the old User model, overwrote
-it with the authenticated generator and then recopied the old stuff back in:
-has_many :elections and the name() method. The generator also creates its own
-migration file, but since we are using a create.sql file I adopted the
-migration file into a new users table in the create.sql file. I have yet to
-delete the old table because I haven't fully combed through the code yet and
-determined how many of the old attributes (such as first_name, last_name) may
-need to be retained.
-http://technoweenie.stikipad.com/plugins/show/Acts+as+Authenticated is the
-best site for documentation regarding acts_as_authenticaed. Also, currently
-it only stores the user_id in the session, but i just found a guide to help
-me make it store the entire user object, so I'll do that while my battery
-charges.
-
-08/03/07
-Handy trick: use the command 'gem_server' from a shell to create a server at
-http://localhost:8008 that is an easy to navigate locally-hosted website with
-all the documentation on local gems you have in a easy to read format.
-
-jlsharps: I added the Gruff plug-in today, which is viewable under the folder
-vender/plugins/gruff. I installed it directly using the Gruff plug-in and
-included controller generate utility. The version 0.1.2, which doesn't seem to
-be the latest version. I've looked into it and it see and it seems that the
-latest version is 0.2.8. However, I wasn't sure how including a gem w/o a plugin
-would function in end-game rails so I just what I used for now. If you guys
-(mako of john) know how to do it, it'd probably be better to upgrade, but it
-didn't seem like the best use of my time right now. I got the plug-in here:
-http://topfunky.net/svn/plugins/gruff. You can get the gruff gem v 0.2.8 by
-typing "sudo gem install gruff", I believe it's also hosted on RubyForge.
-
-I created the GraphsController for Gruff methods to use. In Pollarize I put them
-in the ApplicationContorller file, so they would be accessible to all. While
-that it also an option here, it would also mean there wouldn't be much room for
-playing around because everything in the Application file has to be perfect or
-it seems to throw Error Code 500 (basically everything breaks). The show()
-is a sample sample provided with Gruff.
-
-Documentation is here:http://gruff.rubyforge.org/ Alternately, if you have the
-gem installed, you can use the ri command, or the above mentioned gem_server.
-
-If you guys want more helpful stuff here, let me know.
+To use Selectricity, you'll need to install the following gems in
+addition to Ruby on Rails (gem:rails), MySQL (gem:mysql), and its
+dependencies:
+
+ * rmagick
+ * gruff (http://nubyonrails.com/pages/gruff)
+ * sparklines (http://nubyonrails.com/pages/sparklines)
+
+To use Selectricity in development mode, you'll need to install the
+following gems:
+
+ * ruby-debug
+
+Also, you will need install the other applications installed first:
+
+ * imagemagick (http://www.imagemagick.org/)
+
+On Ubuntu, you can install install the dependencies with:
+ apt-get install imagemagick libmagick9-dev ruby1.8-dev libwmf-bin rdoc \
+ libopenssl-ruby1.8 libreadline-ruby1.8 libmysqlclient15-dev
+Our server configuration uses Mongrel (installed from gems) behind an
+Apache2 load balancing proxy using mod_proxy.
+You'll also need to have a MTA installed. We use Postfix and have not
+tried it with any other system. Presumably though, anything that
+provides '/usr/bin/sendmail' should work.
+===============================================
+=== Contributors to Selectricity Include ======
+===============================================
+
+ * Benjamin Mako Hill <mako@atdot.cc>
+ * John Dong <jdong@ubuntu.com>
+ * Justin Sharps <jlsharps@alum.mit.edu>
+