Re: Testing (sorry)

2024-02-20 Thread Peter J. Holzer via Python-list
On 2024-02-19 11:38:54 -0500, Thomas Passin via Python-list wrote: > On 2/19/2024 9:17 AM, Grant Edwards via Python-list wrote: > > On 2024-02-19, Thomas Passin wrote: > > > > About 24 hours later, all of my posts (and the confirmation e-mails) > > > > all showed up in a burst at the same time on

Re: Testing (sorry)

2024-02-19 Thread Thomas Passin via Python-list
On 2/19/2024 11:55 AM, Skip Montanaro wrote: Here is a typical bounce message that I get: mailto:python-list@python.org>>: host mail.python.org [188.166.95.178] said: 450-4.3.2      Service currently unavailable 450 4.3.2 Some time after I get on

Re: Testing (sorry)

2024-02-19 Thread Skip Montanaro via Python-list
> > Here is a typical bounce message that I get: > > : host mail.python.org[188.166.95.178] said: > 450-4.3.2 > Service currently unavailable 450 4.3.2 > > Some time after I get one of these messages I re-send the post. Usually > it gets through then. > Looks kinda like greylisting to me. I'

Re: Testing (sorry)

2024-02-19 Thread Thomas Passin via Python-list
On 2/19/2024 9:17 AM, Grant Edwards via Python-list wrote: On 2024-02-19, Thomas Passin wrote: About 24 hours later, all of my posts (and the confirmation e-mails) all showed up in a burst at the same time on two different unrelated e-mail accounts. I still have no clue what was going on...

Re: Testing (sorry)

2024-02-19 Thread Grant Edwards via Python-list
On 2024-02-19, Thomas Passin wrote: >> About 24 hours later, all of my posts (and the confirmation e-mails) >> all showed up in a burst at the same time on two different unrelated >> e-mail accounts. >> >> I still have no clue what was going on... > > Sometimes a post of mine will not show up fo

Re: Testing (sorry)

2024-02-19 Thread Byunghee HWANG via Python-list
Hellow Grant, On Sat, 2024-02-17 at 18:54 -0600, Grant Edwards via Python-list wrote: > > Today I noticed that nothing I've posted to python-list in past 3 > weeks has shown up on the list. I don't know how to troubleshoot this > other than sending test messages.  Obviously, if this shows up on t

Re: Testing (sorry)

2024-02-18 Thread Thomas Passin via Python-list
On 2/18/2024 6:09 PM, Grant Edwards via Python-list wrote: On 2024-02-18, Peter J. Holzer via Python-list wrote: [Replying to the list *and* Grant] On 2024-02-17 19:38:04 -0500, Grant Edwards via Python-list wrote: Today I noticed that nothing I've posted to python-list in past 3 weeks has sh

Re: Testing (sorry)

2024-02-18 Thread Skip Montanaro via Python-list
I can't explain the delays, but will note that the gate-news program on the server runs every 5 minutes via cron. There are multiple moving parts in the overall system. You'll probably get a more useful answer from postmas...@python.org. Skip -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-lis

Re: Testing (sorry)

2024-02-18 Thread dn via Python-list
On 19/02/24 12:09, Grant Edwards via Python-list wrote: ... But posts to the list still seemed to vanish into the ether while emails from both accounts reached other destinations without delay, During this process a number of posts from other users did appear in the list archive and at at _one_

Re: Testing (sorry)

2024-02-18 Thread Grant Edwards via Python-list
On 2024-02-18, Peter J. Holzer via Python-list wrote: > [Replying to the list *and* Grant] > > On 2024-02-17 19:38:04 -0500, Grant Edwards via Python-list wrote: >> Today I noticed that nothing I've posted to python-list in past 3 >> weeks has shown up on the list. > > January 29th, AFAICS. And en

Re: Testing (sorry)

2024-02-18 Thread Alex Kaye via Python-list
We see you Peter AK On Sun, Feb 18, 2024 at 2:41 PM Peter J. Holzer via Python-list < python-list@python.org> wrote: > [Replying to the list *and* Grant] > > On 2024-02-17 19:38:04 -0500, Grant Edwards via Python-list wrote: > > Today I noticed that nothing I've posted to python-list in past 3 >

Re: Testing (sorry)

2024-02-18 Thread Peter J. Holzer via Python-list
[Replying to the list *and* Grant] On 2024-02-17 19:38:04 -0500, Grant Edwards via Python-list wrote: > Today I noticed that nothing I've posted to python-list in past 3 > weeks has shown up on the list. January 29th, AFAICS. And end of december before that. > I don't know how to troubleshoot th

Testing (sorry)

2024-02-18 Thread Grant Edwards via Python-list
Today I noticed that nothing I've posted to python-list in the past 3 weeks has shown up on the list. I don't know how to troubleshoot this other than by sending test messages. Obviously, if this shows up on the list, then I'm making progress... [message 3] -- Grant -- https://mail.python.org/ma

Testing (sorry)

2024-02-18 Thread Grant Edwards via Python-list
Today I noticed that nothing I've posted to python-list in past 3 weeks has shown up on the list. I don't know how to troubleshoot this other than sending test messages. Obviously, if this shows up on the list, then I'm making progress. [message 4] -- Grant -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/l

Testing - 2 (sorry)

2024-02-18 Thread Grant Edwards via Python-list
Today I noticed that nothing I've posted to python-list in past 3 weeks has shown up on the list. I don't know how to troubleshoot this other than sending test messages. Obviously, if this shows up on the list, then I've gotten it to work... -- Grant -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/

Testing (sorry)

2024-02-18 Thread Grant Edwards via Python-list
Today I noticed that nothing I've posted to python-list in past 3 weeks has shown up on the list. I don't know how to troubleshoot this other than sending test messages. Obviously, if this shows up on the list, then I've gotten it to work... -- Grant -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/

Re: Testing list sequence question -- thanks for the info

2023-03-05 Thread Grant Edwards
On 2023-03-05, Gabor Urban wrote: > Upgrading our Python to 3.7 seems to be out of question at the moment. Using an OrderedDict doesn't work for you? -- Grant -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Testing list sequence question -- thanks for the info

2023-03-05 Thread Gabor Urban
Hi guys, Thank you very much for the accurate answer. Upgrading our Python to 3.7 seems to be out of question at the moment. I will check the requirement specification if the order of the keys is important at all. It could be a wish only. -- Urbán Gábor Linux is like a wigwam: no Gates, no Win

Re: Testing list sequence question

2023-03-04 Thread Thomas Passin
On 3/4/2023 1:42 PM, Roel Schroeven wrote: Thomas Passin schreef op 4/03/2023 om 18:49: On 3/4/2023 11:38 AM, Gabor Urban wrote: >   Hi guys, > > I have a strange problem that I do not understand. I am testing function > which returns a dictionary. The code should ensure that the

Re: Testing list sequence question

2023-03-04 Thread Chris Angelico
On Sun, 5 Mar 2023 at 05:44, Roel Schroeven wrote: > > Thomas Passin schreef op 4/03/2023 om 18:49: > > On 3/4/2023 11:38 AM, Gabor Urban wrote: > > > Hi guys, > > > > > > I have a strange problem that I do not understand. I am testing function > >

Re: Testing list sequence question

2023-03-04 Thread Roel Schroeven
Thomas Passin schreef op 4/03/2023 om 18:49: On 3/4/2023 11:38 AM, Gabor Urban wrote: > Hi guys, > > I have a strange problem that I do not understand. I am testing function > which returns a dictionary. The code should ensure that the keys of the > dictionary are generated i

Re: Testing list sequence question

2023-03-04 Thread Thomas Passin
On 3/4/2023 11:38 AM, Gabor Urban wrote: Hi guys, I have a strange problem that I do not understand. I am testing function which returns a dictionary. The code should ensure that the keys of the dictionary are generated in a given order. I am testing the function with the standard unittest

Re: Testing list sequence question

2023-03-04 Thread Roel Schroeven
Gabor Urban schreef op 4/03/2023 om 17:38: Hi guys, I have a strange problem that I do not understand. I am testing function which returns a dictionary. The code should ensure that the keys of the dictionary are generated in a given order. I am testing the function with the standard unittest

Testing list sequence question

2023-03-04 Thread Gabor Urban
Hi guys, I have a strange problem that I do not understand. I am testing function which returns a dictionary. The code should ensure that the keys of the dictionary are generated in a given order. I am testing the function with the standard unittest module and use the assertListEqual statement

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-26 Thread Thomas Passin
On 1/26/2023 6:39 PM, Barry wrote: On 26 Jan 2023, at 17:32, Thomas Passin wrote: On 1/26/2023 11:41 AM, Chris Angelico wrote: On Fri, 27 Jan 2023 at 03:34, Thomas Passin wrote: A nice theory but nothing to do with the real world. I've had a number of laptops that overheat (or would, if

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-26 Thread Thomas Passin
On 1/26/2023 10:32 PM, Chris Angelico wrote: On Fri, 27 Jan 2023 at 14:21, Thomas Passin wrote: 2. "What is Tjunction max temperature?" Tjunction max is the maximum thermal junction temperature that a processor will allow prior to using internal thermal control mechanisms to reduce power and li

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-26 Thread Chris Angelico
On Fri, 27 Jan 2023 at 14:21, Thomas Passin wrote: > 2. "What is Tjunction max temperature?" > Tjunction max is the maximum thermal junction temperature that a > processor will allow prior to using internal thermal control mechanisms > to reduce power and limit temperature. Activation of the proce

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-26 Thread Thomas Passin
On 1/26/2023 5:00 PM, Chris Angelico wrote: On Fri, 27 Jan 2023 at 06:54, Thomas Passin wrote: Did you get a warning, or did you just decide to stop the test? (At least) one of the utilities, I forget which one, did show the temperature in a danger zone. I'm very curious as to which utility

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-26 Thread Barry
> On 26 Jan 2023, at 17:32, Thomas Passin wrote: > > On 1/26/2023 11:41 AM, Chris Angelico wrote: >>> On Fri, 27 Jan 2023 at 03:34, Thomas Passin wrote: >>> A nice theory but nothing to do with the real world. I've had a number >>> of laptops that overheat (or would, if I let test program co

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-26 Thread Chris Angelico
On Fri, 27 Jan 2023 at 06:54, Thomas Passin wrote: > > Did you get a warning, or did you just decide to stop the test? > > (At least) one of the utilities, I forget which one, did show the > temperature in a danger zone. I'm very curious as to which utility, and on what basis it called it "danger

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-26 Thread Thomas Passin
On 1/26/2023 12:57 PM, Chris Angelico wrote: On Fri, 27 Jan 2023 at 04:31, Thomas Passin wrote: On 1/26/2023 11:41 AM, Chris Angelico wrote: On Fri, 27 Jan 2023 at 03:34, Thomas Passin wrote: A nice theory but nothing to do with the real world. I've had a number of laptops that overheat (o

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-26 Thread Chris Angelico
On Fri, 27 Jan 2023 at 04:31, Thomas Passin wrote: > > On 1/26/2023 11:41 AM, Chris Angelico wrote: > > On Fri, 27 Jan 2023 at 03:34, Thomas Passin wrote: > >> A nice theory but nothing to do with the real world. I've had a number > >> of laptops that overheat (or would, if I let test program co

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-26 Thread Thomas Passin
On 1/26/2023 11:41 AM, Chris Angelico wrote: On Fri, 27 Jan 2023 at 03:34, Thomas Passin wrote: A nice theory but nothing to do with the real world. I've had a number of laptops that overheat (or would, if I let test program continue) running this test program. Define "overheat". If all you'

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-26 Thread Grant Edwards
On 2023-01-26, Thomas Passin wrote: > On 1/26/2023 11:02 AM, Grant Edwards wrote: > >[...] > >> A properly designed laptop with a non-broken OS will not overheat >> regardless of the computing load you throw at it. The fan might get >> annoying loud, but if it overheats either your hardware or OS

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-26 Thread Chris Angelico
On Fri, 27 Jan 2023 at 03:34, Thomas Passin wrote: > A nice theory but nothing to do with the real world. I've had a number > of laptops that overheat (or would, if I let test program continue) > running this test program. Define "overheat". If all you're saying is "the fan began to whine and I

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-26 Thread Thomas Passin
On 1/26/2023 11:02 AM, Grant Edwards wrote: On 2023-01-26, Thomas Passin wrote: On 1/25/2023 7:38 PM, Peter J. Holzer wrote: On 2023-01-25 16:30:56 -0500, Thomas Passin wrote: Great! Don't forget what I said about potential overheating if you hit the server with as many requests as it can ha

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-26 Thread Dino
On 1/25/2023 4:30 PM, Thomas Passin wrote: On 1/25/2023 3:29 PM, Dino wrote: Great!  Don't forget what I said about potential overheating if you hit the server with as many requests as it can handle. Noted. Thank you. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-26 Thread Benjamin Schollnick
> On Jan 26, 2023, at 11:02 AM, Grant Edwards wrote: > > On 2023-01-26, Thomas Passin wrote: >> On 1/25/2023 7:38 PM, Peter J. Holzer wrote: >>> On 2023-01-25 16:30:56 -0500, Thomas Passin wrote: Great! Don't forget what I said about potential overheating if you hit the server with

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-26 Thread Grant Edwards
On 2023-01-26, Thomas Passin wrote: > On 1/25/2023 7:38 PM, Peter J. Holzer wrote: >> On 2023-01-25 16:30:56 -0500, Thomas Passin wrote: >>> Great! Don't forget what I said about potential overheating if you >>> hit the server with as many requests as it can handle. >> >> Frankly, if you can ove

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-26 Thread Thomas Passin
On 1/25/2023 11:23 PM, Dino wrote: On 1/25/2023 3:27 PM, Dino wrote: On 1/25/2023 1:33 PM, orzodk wrote: I have used locust with success in the past. https://locust.io First impression, exactly what I need. Thank you Orzo! the more I learn about Locust and I tinker with it, the more I lov

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-25 Thread Dino
On 1/25/2023 3:27 PM, Dino wrote: On 1/25/2023 1:33 PM, orzodk wrote: I have used locust with success in the past. https://locust.io First impression, exactly what I need. Thank you Orzo! the more I learn about Locust and I tinker with it, the more I love it. Thanks again. -- https://mai

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-25 Thread Thomas Passin
he test. If you have to worry about thermals because of CPU load, then worry about thermals because of CPU load. The HTTP request testing is completely separate. Load testing means putting a system under load. I'm not sure why you'd be concerned about one specific possible consequence,

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-25 Thread Chris Angelico
equest. The > CPU is generally pegged at 100% for most or all of the test. If you have to worry about thermals because of CPU load, then worry about thermals because of CPU load. The HTTP request testing is completely separate. Load testing means putting a system under load. I'm not sure

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-25 Thread Thomas Passin
On 1/25/2023 7:38 PM, Peter J. Holzer wrote: On 2023-01-25 16:30:56 -0500, Thomas Passin wrote: Great! Don't forget what I said about potential overheating if you hit the server with as many requests as it can handle. Frankly, if you can overheat a server by hitting it with HTTP requests, get

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-25 Thread Peter J. Holzer
On 2023-01-25 16:30:56 -0500, Thomas Passin wrote: > Great! Don't forget what I said about potential overheating if you > hit the server with as many requests as it can handle. Frankly, if you can overheat a server by hitting it with HTTP requests, get better hardware and/or put it into a place w

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-25 Thread Thomas Passin
On 1/25/2023 3:29 PM, Dino wrote: On 1/25/2023 1:21 PM, Thomas Passin wrote: I actually have a Python program that does exactly this. Thank you, Thomas. I'll check out Locust, mentioned by Orzodk, as it looks like a mature library that appears to do exactly what I was hoping. Great! Don

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-25 Thread Dino
On 1/25/2023 1:21 PM, Thomas Passin wrote: I actually have a Python program that does exactly this. Thank you, Thomas. I'll check out Locust, mentioned by Orzodk, as it looks like a mature library that appears to do exactly what I was hoping. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-25 Thread Dino
On 1/25/2023 1:33 PM, orzodk wrote: I have used locust with success in the past. https://locust.io First impression, exactly what I need. Thank you Orzo! -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-25 Thread orzodk
Dino writes: > Hello, I could use something like Apache ab in Python ( > https://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.4/programs/ab.html ). > > The reason why ab doesn't quite cut it for me is that I need to define > a pool of HTTP requests and I want the tool to run those (as opposed > to running the same re

Re: HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-25 Thread Thomas Passin
On 1/25/2023 10:53 AM, Dino wrote: Hello, I could use something like Apache ab in Python ( https://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.4/programs/ab.html ). The reason why ab doesn't quite cut it for me is that I need to define a pool of HTTP requests and I want the tool to run those (as opposed to run

HTTP server benchmarking/load testing in Python

2023-01-25 Thread Dino
Hello, I could use something like Apache ab in Python ( https://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.4/programs/ab.html ). The reason why ab doesn't quite cut it for me is that I need to define a pool of HTTP requests and I want the tool to run those (as opposed to running the same request over and over

Testing an app protected by Okta authorization code with PKCE flow

2022-04-29 Thread George Fischhof
Hi Folks, has anyone of you a working solution for testing an app protected by Okta authorization code with PKCE flow? Meaning to get a bearer token? I saw / read several articles about it on the net, and several hacks (that is not problem now ;) ), but it seems that neither of them works with

Invitation to join AuckPUG's virtual meeting on Testing

2022-03-11 Thread dn
"The Alex to Zac of Testing" 0530~0730 UTC (1830~2030 NZDT), Wed 16Mar2022 Alex Znamensky (AuckPUG member) will introduce testing as a practice (what your training course didn't tell you about the real-world!). Zac Hatfield-Dodds will aim at more advanced users, talking about

Automated data testing, checking, validation, reporting for data assurance

2021-09-29 Thread Shaozhong SHI
There appear to be a few options for this. Has anyone tested and got experience with automated data testing, validation and reporting? Can anyone enlighten me? Regards, David -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

[RELEASE] Python 3.9.2rc1 and 3.8.8rc1 are now available for testing

2021-02-17 Thread Łukasz Langa
I’m happy to announce two release candidates today: Python 3.9.2rc1, and Python 3.8.8rc1. Get them from: https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-392rc1/ https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-388rc1/

Re: Debian testing and virtual environment error message

2020-12-27 Thread Christian Heimes
On 27/12/2020 04.05, songbird wrote: > songbird wrote: > ... >> The package mentioned is installed: >> >> >> = >> >> $ dpkg -l | grep python3-venv >> ii python3-venv 3.9.0-4 >> amd64pyvenv-3 binary for python3 (default python3 version)

Re: Debian testing and virtual environment error message

2020-12-27 Thread songbird
Chris Angelico wrote: > On Mon, Dec 28, 2020 at 2:56 AM songbird wrote: ...needed to pull a few more things from unstable... > Ah, yep, that makes sense. I was a tad concerned about the mismatch of > versions, but honestly, I don't think I've ever installed Python from &g

Re: Debian testing and virtual environment error message

2020-12-27 Thread Chris Angelico
en it upgraded and my creation of a new > virtual environment would work without errors. > Ah, yep, that makes sense. I was a tad concerned about the mismatch of versions, but honestly, I don't think I've ever installed Python from testing or unstable (unless I'm running the entire dis

Re: Debian testing and virtual environment error message

2020-12-27 Thread songbird
. so for some reason there are some python packages in unstable that had not get gotten to testing. thanks for replying. :) for the record this was what i did: apt-get install python3-distutils -t unstable Reading package lists... Done Building dependency tree Reading state information

Re: Debian testing and virtual environment error message

2020-12-26 Thread songbird
songbird wrote: ... > The package mentioned is installed: > > >= > > $ dpkg -l | grep python3-venv > ii python3-venv 3.9.0-4amd64 >pyvenv-3 binary for python3 (default python3 version) > here is something i missed including in my fi

Re: Debian testing and virtual environment error message

2020-12-26 Thread songbird
Chris Angelico wrote: ... > $ which python /usr/bin/python for both user and root looking at /usr/bin it looks like: lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 7 Nov 3 03:20 python -> python3 lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 9 Dec 6 05:36 python3 -> python3.9 -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 5479

Re: Debian testing and virtual environment error message

2020-12-26 Thread Chris Angelico
On Sun, Dec 27, 2020 at 11:31 AM songbird wrote: > > > Simlar to Rich's asking about how to deal with python3.9 > I'm not able to to get my virtual environment set up to work > now and I'm not sure how to go about fixing this. > > As it is testing I may

Debian testing and virtual environment error message

2020-12-26 Thread songbird
Simlar to Rich's asking about how to deal with python3.9 I'm not able to to get my virtual environment set up to work now and I'm not sure how to go about fixing this. As it is testing I may have broken it somehow but I do not know how to fix this. I asked on the Debian us

[RELEASE] Python 3.9.1rc1 is now ready for testing

2020-11-26 Thread Łukasz Langa
rently scheduled release date for 3.9.1, no code changes are planned between this release candidate and the final release. That being said, please keep in mind that this is a pre-release of 3.9.1 and as such its main purpose is testing. Maintenance releases for the 3.9 series will continue at regu

Fwd: [RELEASE] Python 3.10.0a2 available for testing

2020-11-03 Thread Pablo Galindo Salgado
The engines of the secret release manager machine have finished producing a new pre-release. Go get it here: https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-3100a2/ *Major new features of the 3.10 series, compared to 3.9* Python 3.10 is still in development. This releasee, 3.10.0a2 is the secon

[RELEASE] Python 3.9.0rc2 is now available for testing

2020-09-17 Thread Łukasz Langa
Python 3.9.0 is almost ready. This release, 3.9.0rc2, is the last planned preview before the final release of Python 3.9.0 on 2020-10-05. Get it here: https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-390rc2/ In the mean time, we strongly e

[RELEASE] Python 3.8.6rc1 is now ready for testing

2020-09-08 Thread Łukasz Langa
eduled release date for 3.8.6, no code changes are planned between this release candidate and the final release. That being said, please keep in mind that this is a pre-release and as such its main purpose is testing. Maintenance releases for the 3.8 series will continue at regular bi-m

[RELEASE] Python 3.9.0b4 is now ready for testing

2020-07-03 Thread Łukasz Langa
On behalf of the entire Python development community, and the currently serving Python release team in particular, I’m pleased to announce the release of Python 3.9.0b4. Get it here: https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-390b4/

[RELEASE] Python 3.8.4rc1 is now ready for testing

2020-06-30 Thread Łukasz Langa
eduled release date for 3.8.4, no code changes are planned between this release candidate and the final release. That being said, please keep in mind that this is a pre-release and as such its main purpose is testing. Maintenance releases for the 3.8 series will continue at regular bi-m

[RELEASE] Python 3.7.8rc1 and 3.6.11rc1 are now available for testing

2020-06-17 Thread Ned Deily
Details here: https://discuss.python.org/t/python-3-7-8rc1-and-3-6-11rc1-are-now-available-for-testing/4467 https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-378rc1/ https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-3611rc1/ -- Ned Deily n...@python.org -- [] -- https://mail.python.org

[RELEASE] Python 3.9.0b3 is now available for testing

2020-06-09 Thread Łukasz Langa
"https://www.python.org";).read() because it wouldn’t find root certificates due to a bug <https://bugs.python.org/issue40924>. Since this was a problem only apparent on an installed Python, it wasn’t identified by unit tests and was only found by Ned while he was testing his Mac inst

Re: [RELEASE] Python 3.9.0b1 is now available for testing

2020-06-01 Thread Joseph Jenne via Python-list
I used https://github.com/python/pyperformance pyperformance to compare Arch linux latest Python 3.8.3 (default, May 17 2020, 18:15:42) [GCC 10.1.0] on linux Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. against a vanilla build (configure make makeinstall) of pyth

Re: [RELEASE] Python 3.9.0b1 is now available for testing

2020-05-31 Thread Robin Becker
I used https://github.com/python/pyperformance pyperformance to compare Arch linux latest Python 3.8.3 (default, May 17 2020, 18:15:42) [GCC 10.1.0] on linux Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. against a vanilla build (configure make makeinstall) of pytho

Re: [RELEASE] Python 3.9.0b1 is now available for testing

2020-05-20 Thread Robin Becker
On 19/05/2020 23:41, Robin Becker wrote: .. robin@minikat:~/devel/reportlab $ $HOME/LOCAL/3.9b1/bin/python3.9 Python 3.9.0b1 (default, May 19 2020, 12:50:30) [GCC 10.1.0] on linux Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. import distutils /home/robin/LOCAL/3

Re: [RELEASE] Python 3.9.0b1 is now available for testing

2020-05-19 Thread Robin Becker
.. robin@minikat:~/devel/reportlab $ $HOME/LOCAL/3.9b1/bin/python3.9 Python 3.9.0b1 (default, May 19 2020, 12:50:30) [GCC 10.1.0] on linux Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. import distutils /home/robin/LOCAL/3.9b1/lib/python3.9/distutils/__init__.py:

Re: [RELEASE] Python 3.9.0b1 is now available for testing

2020-05-19 Thread Barry
> On 19 May 2020, at 21:36, Robin Becker wrote: > > On 19/05/2020 10:49, Łukasz Langa wrote: >> On behalf of the entire Python development community, and the currently >> serving Python release team in particular, I’m pleased to announce the >> release of Python 3.9.0b1. Get it here: >> http

Re: [RELEASE] Python 3.9.0b1 is now available for testing

2020-05-19 Thread Robin Becker
On 19/05/2020 10:49, Łukasz Langa wrote: On behalf of the entire Python development community, and the currently serving Python release team in particular, I’m pleased to announce the release of Python 3.9.0b1. Get it here: https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-390b1/

[RELEASE] Python 3.9.0b1 is now available for testing

2020-05-19 Thread Łukasz Langa
On behalf of the entire Python development community, and the currently serving Python release team in particular, I’m pleased to announce the release of Python 3.9.0b1. Get it here: https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-390b1/

[RELEASE] Python 3.8.3rc1 is now ready for testing

2020-04-29 Thread Łukasz Langa
eduled release date for 3.8.3, no code changes are planned between this release candidate and the final release. That being said, please keep in mind that this is a pre-release and as such its main purpose is testing. Maintenance releases for the 3.8 series will continue at regular bi-m

Re: [RELEASE] Python 3.9.0a6 is now available for testing

2020-04-29 Thread Paul Moore
m[-1]!= '\n'and'\n'or' ' This is '\n' if m[-1] != '\n' else ' ' ... just written in a way that was common before the if-expression was invented, using and and or. In itself, it's fine. The problem is that the space in "and '\n'" is omitted (presumably for brevity for some reason?) leav

Re: [RELEASE] Python 3.9.0a6 is now available for testing

2020-04-29 Thread Rhodri James
On 29/04/2020 20:23, Schachner, Joseph wrote: norm=lambda m: m+(m and(m[-1]!= '\n'and'\n'or' ')or'\n') Parentheses 1 2 1 0 quotes 1 0 1 0 1 0

RE: [RELEASE] Python 3.9.0a6 is now available for testing

2020-04-29 Thread Schachner, Joseph
hon.org; python-annou...@python.org Subject: Re: [RELEASE] Python 3.9.0a6 is now available for testing On 28/04/2020 16:52, Łukasz Langa wrote: > On behalf of the entire Python development community, and the currently > serving Python release team in particular, I’m pleased to announce the &g

Re: [RELEASE] Python 3.9.0a6 is now available for testing

2020-04-29 Thread Peter J. Holzer
On 2020-04-28 17:52:58 +0200, Łukasz Langa wrote: > Many new features for Python 3.9 are still being planned and written. Among > the new major new features and changes so far: [...] > PEP 617 , New PEG parser for > CPython [...] On 2020-04-29 15:51:37

Re: [RELEASE] Python 3.9.0a6 is now available for testing

2020-04-29 Thread Robin Becker
On 28/04/2020 16:52, Łukasz Langa wrote: On behalf of the entire Python development community, and the currently serving Python release team in particular, I’m pleased to announce the release of Python 3.9.0a6. Get it here: thanks for the release; I tried to reply in the dev list, but fa

[RELEASE] Python 3.9.0a6 is now available for testing

2020-04-28 Thread Łukasz Langa
On behalf of the entire Python development community, and the currently serving Python release team in particular, I’m pleased to announce the release of Python 3.9.0a6. Get it here: https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-390a6/

[RELEASE] Python 3.9.0a5 is now available for testing

2020-03-23 Thread Łukasz Langa
On behalf of the entire Python development community, and the currently serving Python release team in particular, I’m pleased to announce the release of Python 3.9.0a5. Get it here: https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-390a5/

Re: [Python-Dev] [RELEASE] Python 3.7.7rc1 is now available for testing

2020-03-04 Thread Ned Deily
org/t/python-3-7-7rc1-is-now-available-for-testing/3638 >> >> "Assuming no critical problems are found prior to 2020-02-10..." >> > I would like to know how you expect people to travel back in time to >> > report problems. :P >> >> python3.7 -m

Re: [Python-Dev] [RELEASE] Python 3.7.7rc1 is now available for testing

2020-03-04 Thread Jonathan Goble
On Wed, Mar 4, 2020 at 1:02 PM Ned Deily wrote: > Details here: > > > https://discuss.python.org/t/python-3-7-7rc1-is-now-available-for-testing/3638 "Assuming no critical problems are found prior to *2020-02-10*..." I would like to know how you expect people to travel

Re: [Python-Dev] [RELEASE] Python 3.7.7rc1 is now available for testing

2020-03-04 Thread Ned Deily
On Mar 4, 2020, at 17:17, Jonathan Goble wrote: > On Wed, Mar 4, 2020 at 1:02 PM Ned Deily wrote: > Details here: > >> https://discuss.python.org/t/python-3-7-7rc1-is-now-available-for-testing/3638 >> >> "Assuming no critical problems are found prior to 2020-0

[RELEASE] Python 3.7.7rc1 is now available for testing

2020-03-04 Thread Ned Deily
Details here: https://discuss.python.org/t/python-3-7-7rc1-is-now-available-for-testing/3638 https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-377rc1/ -- Ned Deily n...@python.org -- [] -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Errors in testing the SciPy installation

2020-02-22 Thread Markos
Hi, Following the guidelines of the book Learning SciPy for Numerical and Scientific Computing Second Edition I did the tests: >>> import scipy >>> scipy.test() and got some errors: Ran 23065 tests in 490.568s FAILED (KNOWNFAIL=60, SKIP=1795, errors=29) What should I do? Thank you, Mark

[RELEASE] Python 3.8.2rc2 is now available for testing

2020-02-18 Thread Łukasz Langa
as such its main purpose is testing. Maintenance releases for the 3.8 series will continue at regular bi-monthly intervals, with 3.8.3 planned for April 2020 (during sprints at PyCon US). What’s new? The Python 3.8 series is the newest feature release of the Python language, and it contains

[RELEASE] Python 3.8.2rc1 is now available for testing

2020-02-11 Thread Łukasz Langa
eduled release date for 3.8.2 (as well as 3.9.0 alpha 4!), no code changes are planned between this release candidate and the final release. That being said, please keep in mind that this is a pre-release of 3.8.2 and as such its main purpose is testing. Maintenance releases for the 3.8 serie

[RELEASE] Python 3.9.0a3 available for testing

2020-01-25 Thread Łukasz Langa
Go get it here: https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-390a3/ This is an early developer preview of Python 3.9 Python 3.9 is still in development. This releasee, 3.9.0a3 is the third of six planned alpha releases. Alpha releases a

[RELEASE] Python 3.7.6rc1 and 3.6.10rc1 are now available for testing

2019-12-11 Thread Ned Deily
Details here: https://discuss.python.org/t/python-3-7-6rc1-and-3-6-10rc1-are-now-available-for-testing/2835 https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-376rc1/ https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-3610rc1/ -- Ned Deily n...@python.org -- [] -- https://mail.python.org

[RELEASE] Python 3.8.1rc1 is now available for testing

2019-12-10 Thread Łukasz Langa
ease. That being said, please keep in mind that this is a pre-release of 3.8.1 and as such its main purpose is testing. See the “What’s New in Python 3.8 <https://docs.python.org/3.8/whatsnew/3.8.html>” document for more information about features included in the 3.8 series. Detailed info

Testing a TestPyPI package with dependencies

2019-12-09 Thread Akkana Peck
I'm a novice packager, trying to test a package I built and uploaded to TestPyPI. It has dependencies and I want to make sure my setup.py works before uploading to the real PyPI. https://packaging.python.org/guides/using-testpypi/ says that if a package has dependencies, to use this command to get

[RELEASE] Python 3.9.0a1 available for testing

2019-11-19 Thread Łukasz Langa
Go get it here: https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-390a1/ This is an early developer preview of Python 3.9 Python 3.9 is still in development. This releasee, 3.9.0a1 is the first of six planned alpha releases. Alpha releases a

[RELEASE] Python 3.7.5rc1 is now available for testing

2019-10-01 Thread Ned Deily
Python 3.7.5rc1 is now available for testing. 3.7.5rc1 is the release preview of the next maintenance release of Python 3.7, the latest feature release of Python. Assuming no critical problems are found prior to 2019-10-14, no code changes are planned between now and the final release. This

[RELEASE] ACTION REQUIRED: Python 3.8.0b4 now available for testing

2019-08-30 Thread Łukasz Langa
It's time for the last beta release of Python 3.8. Go find it at: https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-380b4/ This release is the last of four planned beta release previews. Beta release previews are intended to give the wider

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