On behalf of the PyPA and the pip team, I am pleased to announce that we have 
just released pip 20.3, a new version of pip. You can install it by running 
`python -m pip install --upgrade pip`.

This is an important and disruptive release -- we [explained why in a blog post 
last year](https://pyfound.blogspot.com/2019/12/moss-czi-support-pip.html). We
even made [a video about it](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B4GQCBBsuNU).

## Highlights

* **DISRUPTION**: Switch to the new dependency resolver by default. (#9019) 
Watch out for changes in handling editable
    installs, constraints files, and more:
    
https://pip.pypa.io/en/latest/user_guide/#changes-to-the-pip-dependency-resolver-in-20-3-2020

* **DEPRECATION**: Deprecate support for Python 3.5 (to be removed in pip 21.0) 
(#8181)

* **DEPRECATION**: pip freeze will stop filtering the pip, setuptools, 
distribute and wheel packages from pip freeze output in a future version. To 
keep the previous behavior, users should use the new `--exclude` option. (#4256)

* Substantial improvements in new resolver for performance, output and
  error messages, avoiding infinite loops, and support for constraints files.

* Support for PEP 600: Future ‘manylinux’ Platform Tags for Portable
  Linux Built Distributions. (#9077)

* Documentation improvements: Resolver migration guide, quickstart
  guide, and new documentation theme.

* Add support for MacOS Big Sur compatibility tags. (#9138)

The new resolver is now *on by default*. It is significantly stricter
and more consistent when it receives incompatible instructions, and
reduces support for certain kinds of constraints files, so some
workarounds and workflows may break. Please see [our guide on how to
test and migrate, and how to report 
issues](https://pip.pypa.io/en/latest/user_guide/#changes-to-the-pip-dependency-resolver-in-20-3-2020).
 You
can use the deprecated (old) resolver, using the flag
`--use-deprecated=legacy-resolver`, until we remove it in the pip 21.0
release in January 2021.

You can find more details (including deprecations and removals) [in the
changelog](https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/news/).

## User experience

Command-line output for this version of pip, and documentation to help
with errors, is significantly better, because you worked with our
experts to test and improve it. [Contribute to our user experience work: sign 
up to become a member of the UX Studies group](https://bit.ly/pip-ux-studies) 
(after you join, we'll notify you about future UX surveys and interviews).

## What to expect in 20.1

We aim to release pip 20.1 in January 2021, per our [usual release 
cadence](https://pip.pypa.io/en/latest/development/release-process/#release-cadence).
 You can expect:

* Removal of [Python 
2.7](https://pip.pypa.io/en/latest/development/release-process/#python-2-support)
 and 3.5 support
* Further improvements in the new resolver
* Removal of legacy resolver support


## Thanks

As with all pip releases, a significant amount of the work was
contributed by pip's user community. Huge thanks to all who have
contributed, whether through code, documentation, issue reports and/or
discussion. Your help keeps pip improving, and is hugely appreciated.

Specific thanks go to Mozilla (through its [Mozilla Open Source
Support](https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/moss/) Awards) and to the [Chan
Zuckerberg Initiative](https://chanzuckerberg.com/eoss/) DAF, an
advised fund of Silicon Valley Community Foundation, for their funding
that enabled substantial work on the new resolver.

That funding went to [Simply Secure](https://simplysecure.org/)
(specifically Georgia Bullen, Bernard Tyers, Nicole Harris, Ngọc
Triệu, and Karissa McKelvey), [Changeset
Consulting](https://changeset.nyc/) (Sumana Harihareswara),
[Atos](https://www.atos.net) (Paul F. Moore), [Tzu-ping
Chung](https://uranusjr.com), [Pradyun Gedam](https://pradyunsg.me/),
and Ilan Schnell. Thanks also to Ernest W. Durbin III at the Python
Software Foundation for liaising with the project.


-Sumana Harihareswara, pip project manager
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