Hi team, Thanks for amazing job!
But an update about the release date would be really great :) Thanks Yann Beaud Le mardi 11 septembre 2012 16:22:20 UTC+2, Jacob Kaplan-Moss a écrit : > > Hi folks -- > > I wanted to fill everyone in on our plans for the Django 1.5 release. > The highlights are: > > * Feature freeze October 1st, final out before Christmas. > > * One marquee feature of Django 1.5 is experimental Python 3 support. > This is where we need your help the most: we need to be sure that our > support for Python 3 hasn't destabilized Django on Python 2. We need > lots of testing here! > > * Most features of 1.5 have already landed, but we're also hoping to > land the new pluggable User model work, add support for PostGIS 2.0, > start the process of deprecating django.contrib.localflavor, and a few > other small things. > > * This'll be our first "master never closes" release: work, including > new features, can continue to land on master while we ship the > release. > > Please read on for details. > > Timeline > -------- > > Oct 1: Feature freeze, Django 1.5 alpha. > Nov 1: Django 1.5 beta. > Nov 26: Django 1.5 RC 1 > Dec 10: Django 1.5 RC 2 > Dec 17: Django 1.5 RC 3, if needed > Dec 24 (or earlier): Django 1.5 final > > (All dates are "week of" - we'll do the releases that week, though not > neccisarily that exact day.) > > Notice the longer-than-usual timeline from beta to final. We're doing > this to provide some extra time stablizing the release after landing > the Python 3 work. Please see below for details and how you can help. > > Python 3 support > ---------------- > > Django 1.5 includes experimental support for Python 3 (it's already > landed on master). We're taking a "shared source" approach: Django's > code is written in a way that runs on both Python 2 and Python 3 > (without needing 2to3's translation). This means that we've touched > nearly the entire codebase, and so the surface area for possible bugs > is huge. > > WE REALLY NEED YOUR HELP testing out Django 1.5 *on Python 2*. Please > grab master, or one of the upcoming alpha/beta/RC releases, and test > it against your apps and sites. We need you to help us catch > regressions. > > We're not yet recommending that people target Python 3 for deployment, > so our main focus here is ensuring that we're still rock-solid on > Python 2. If you *want* to give Python 3 a whirl things should be > pretty solid, but we *especially* need real-world reports of success > or failure on Python 2. > > Features in 1.5 > --------------- > > Besides the stuff that's already landed (see > https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/releases/1.5/), there are a few > other features we're hoping to land: > > * The "pluggable User model" work (Russell Keith-Magee). > * Some early low-level schema alteration plumbing work (Andrew Godwin). > * Moving django.contrib.localflavor out into individual external > packages (Adrian Holovaty). > * Support for PostGIS 2.0 (Justin Bronn). > * Python 3 support in GeoDjango (Aymeric Augustin). > * App-loading (Preston Holmes) is "on the bubble" - there's some > debate among the core team over whether its ready, but it's close. > > Of course, as with our previous releases, the *real* list of what'll > go in 1.5 is "whatever's done by October 1st". If you want to help > with any of the above areas, contact the person doing the bulk of the > work (listed above) and ask to help. And if you have other features > you'd like to land, get 'em done! > > Master never closes > ------------------- > > This'll mark our first release where "master never closes". > > To recap: in previous releases, once we hit feature freeze we froze > the development trunk, forcing all feature work out to branches. In > practice, this meant months-long periods where new features couldn't > be merged, and led to some stuff withering on the vine. > > That's not going to happen this time. Instead, when we release 1.5 > alpha we'll make a 1.5 release branch right at that point. Work will > continue on master -- features, bugfixes, whatever -- and the > aplicable bugfixes will be cherry-picked out to the 1.5 release > branch. > > The upshot is a bit more work for us committers -- we'll have to be > sure to merge the aplicable commits over -- but no more "sorry you > have to wait three months to merge this work." I'm very happy about > this! > > [Committers: I'm happy to assist with this porting of bugfixes from > master to the release branch.] > > See you on the other side, folks! > > Jacob > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Django developers" group. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msg/django-developers/-/DYtNdlDX9kMJ. To post to this group, send email to django-developers@googlegroups.com. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to django-developers+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/django-developers?hl=en.