Brett Cannon wrote:
Can someone (Martin, Barry?) post this on python.org (I don't think
this necessarily needs to be put into svn and I don't have any access
but svn) so Fredrik can free up the space on his server?
Did I ever respond to that? I put the file on
http://svn.python.org/snapshots/
On 4/10/06, Martin v. Löwis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Brett Cannon wrote:
Can someone (Martin, Barry?) post this on python.org (I don't think
this necessarily needs to be put into svn and I don't have any access
but svn) so Fredrik can free up the space on his server?
Did I ever respond to
the source code is available via the above link; I'll post the ZIP file some-
where tomorrow (drop me a line if you want the URL).
I found some free space on the effbot.org server, so anyone inter-
ested can get the current ZIP file here:
http://effbot.org/tracker-20060403.zip
the zip
On 4/3/06, Fredrik Lundh [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
the source code is available via the above link; I'll post the ZIP file
some-
where tomorrow (drop me a line if you want the URL).
I found some free space on the effbot.org server, so anyone inter-
ested can get the current ZIP file here:
Brett Cannon wrote:
oh, I forgot that the Procrastination Stop energy Foundation was involved
in this.
Fredrik, if you would like to help move this all forward, great; I
would appreciate the help. You can write a page scraper to get the
data out of SF if you don't believe SF will
Hello,
On 3/29/06, Guido van Rossum [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 3/29/06, Wolfgang Langner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It is a Java system. Why promote Java solutions for python ?
I think there are good python solutions for a bug tracker and we
should prefer them.
...
Also, we're supposed
On Wed, 2006-03-29 at 23:33 -0800, Neal Norwitz wrote:
I'm in favor of having Atlassian setup a system to be used for 3k. It
would be completely experimental and could be completely thrown away
which should be made clear to Atlassian if we were to do this. I
would use the system for
Robert Kern wrote:
Apologies: for the other blank reply.
oh, I don't know about that -- the eco quote made perfect sense ;-)
/F
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Georg Brandl wrote:
Generally, I like Trac very much, especially for its interconnected
subsystems.
I've used it with smaller projects, and there it works perfectly.
Having said that, I don't know if the Trac ticket system (which would be the
most important subsystem for us) scales up well
On Wed, 2006-03-29 at 17:52 +0200, Fredrik Lundh wrote:
if this works well for Python 3000, the next step would be to ask them
if they're willing to host the 2.X tracker as well (and optionally the SVN
archive, as well). PSF might not be the Mozilla Foundation, but I'm sure
there's enough
On Wed, 29 Mar 2006 17:52:07 +0200, Fredrik Lundh [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Georg Brandl wrote:
Generally, I like Trac very much, especially for its interconnected
subsystems.
I've used it with smaller projects, and there it works perfectly.
Having said that, I don't know if the Trac ticket
Wolfgang Langner wrote:
It is a Java system. Why promote Java solutions for python ?
I think there are good python solutions for a bug tracker and we
should prefer them.
It is an application. Why worry about its implementation language? If
there are good Python solutions they should be
On 3/29/06, Wolfgang Langner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[Barry]
I'll just point out that Atlassian has offered us free hosting for a
Jira/Confluence solution (plus svn and other stuff we may or may not
want). I personally support this option, but I know (and accept!) that
there are
The language choice should only be used as an argument if all else is
equal. Of course, hackability of a particular solution may be a
criterion too, and there the language choice could matter. But the
above response sounded like a knee-jerk to me, and IMO needs to be
rebutted.
--
--Guido
On 3/29/06, Barry Warsaw [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'll just point out that Atlassian has offered us free hosting for a
Jira/Confluence solution (plus svn and other stuff we may or may not
want). I personally support this option, but I know (and accept!) that
there are differing opinions.
Just van Rossum [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://www.edgewall.com/trac/
It is based on python and has a very good svn integration.
We started using it recently and so far it's working really well. I love
the svn (and wiki!) integration. However, I have no idea how well it
scales to a
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