Not to steal Matt's fire but I can confirm 0.2.0 is released.

I have been running some tests against 2.1.1 rc1 this week and I can run 
all the windows integration tests in just over 15 mins on my test box 
(against Server 2012 R2).
I installed pywinrm 0.2.0 and the same test runs in just over 10 minutes.

So well worth testing out now.

Jon


On Thursday, June 23, 2016 at 9:10:41 AM UTC+1, Mike Fennemore wrote:
>
> Hi Matt,
>
> Am I right in saying 0.2.0 is now released?
>
> On Tuesday, May 10, 2016 at 12:33:33 AM UTC+2, Matt Davis wrote:
>>
>> A new pywinrm release that supports NTLM, kerberos delegation, and much 
>> improved performance is just around the corner! Version 0.2.0 is at release 
>> candidate, and a test build has been published to testpypi. Just waiting 
>> for any final testing/review from Alexey before the final publish of the 
>> release build to PyPI. 
>>
>>
>> Feel like giving it a whirl?
>>
>>
>> pip install pywinrm[kerberos]==0.2rc3 -i https://testpypi.python.org/pypi 
>> --extra-index-url https://pypi.python.org/pypi
>>
>>
>> will get you the RC3 test build from testpypi (along with the released 
>> dependencies from the real pypi), and the optional kerberos dependencies. 
>> If you don't want kerberos, just get rid of the [kerberos] extras part in 
>> the pkgspec above.
>>
>>
>> This pywinrm build has been tested with Ansible 1.9.5, 2.0.2 and 2.1RC1.
>>
>>
>> Once you have it installed, ansible_winrm_transport=ntlm in your 
>> inventory for Windows hosts (sorry, this one only works for Ansible 2.0+) 
>> lets you use domain users with both domain\username and 
>> [email protected] syntax. When using ansible_winrm_transport=kerberos, 
>> kerberos delegation support can be enabled just by adding 
>> ansible_winrm_kerberos_delegation=yes. 
>>
>>
>> We've added a few new niceties around arg parsing in Ansible 2.1, like 
>> warnings if you pass inventory args that your installed version of pywinrm 
>> doesn't understand (and not requiring things like username when not 
>> required) but otherwise, most of the goodies in here should work on older 
>> versions of Ansible too.
>>
>>
>> This release of pywinrm has switched the HTTP(S) client from urllib2 to 
>> requests, allowing us to take advantage of persistent connections, which 
>> give another significant performance boost to Windows on Ansible 
>> (especially over HTTPS, as we don't have to repeat the TLS handshake for 
>> each WinRM request). In my testing, local VMs experienced about a 20% speed 
>> boost on small tasks, while remote VMs (eg, AWS instances) got more like a 
>> 50% speed boost to small tasks (due to the higher latency cost during 
>> connection setup). File transfer performance (eg, win_copy) should also be 
>> noticeably improved again with this release, though I haven't benchmarked 
>> it.
>>
>>
>> Feel free to file issues at https://github.com/diyan/pywinrm/issues.
>>
>>
>> Enjoy!
>>
>>
>> Matt Davis
>>
>> Principal Software Engineer (Ansible Core Windows)
>>
>> Red Hat
>>
>

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