http://lwn.net/Articles/365806/ The Twisted project is building a Pythonic networking engine with many uses. >From the Twisted home page: "Twisted is an event-driven networking engine written in Python and licensed under the MIT license." Also: "Twisted projects variously support TCP, UDP, SSL/TLS, multicast, Unix sockets, a large number of protocols (including HTTP, NNTP, IMAP, SSH, IRC, FTP, and others), and much more." See the twisted advantage for an explanation of why one would want to use Twisted to develop network applications. LWN last looked at the Twisted project in January, 2007 when version 2.5.0 was released, the project has matured a lot since then. The current version of Twisted is organized into the following categories:
Christopher Armstrong recently announced Twisted 9.0.0: "I'm happy to announce Twisted 9, the first (and last) release of Twisted in 2009. The previous release was Twisted 8.2 in December of 2008. Given that, a lot has changed! This release supports Python 2.3 through Python 2.6, though it is the last one that will support Python 2.3. The next release will support only Python 2.4 and above. Twisted: the framework of the future!" Looking at the release notes for version 9.0.0, one can see that a large amount of work has gone into cleaning up the code and fixing bugs, with 285 bug tickets resolved. New capabilities are summed up in the release announcement: In the core: - The Windows IOCP reactor now supports SSL. - The memcache protocol implementation got some nice new features. In Twisted Web: - There's a new HTTP client API and protocol implementation, starting at twisted.web.client.Agent. It's still pretty low-level, but much more flexible than the old API. - There were many improvements to the WSGI support. In Twisted Conch: - PyASN1 is now used to parse SSH keys (which means you now need to install it to use Conch). - SFTP servers (especially on Windows) now behave a lot better. In Twisted Mail: - The IMAP server and client protocol implementations had many fixes. For example, SASL PLAIN credentials now work. In Twisted Words: - XMPP clients now support the ANONYMOUS SASL authentication type. - The IRC protocol implementations had many fixes. The Twisted project appears to be alive and thriving as it continues in its evolution. This is indicated by the numerous Success Stories and the growing list of projects that use Twisted. Congratulations to the Twisted developers for continuing to make progress on this useful framework. -- To unsubscribe, reply using "remove me" as the subject. |