296 lines
10 KiB
ReStructuredText
296 lines
10 KiB
ReStructuredText
PEP: 602
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Title: Annual Release Cycle for Python
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Version: $Revision$
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Last-Modified: $Date$
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Author: Łukasz Langa <lukasz@python.org>
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BDFL-Delegate: Brett Cannon (on behalf of the steering council)
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Discussions-To: https://discuss.python.org/t/pep-602-annual-release-cycle-for-python/2296/
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Status: Draft
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Type: Informational
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Content-Type: text/x-rst
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Created: 04-Jun-2019
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Python-Version: 3.9
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Abstract
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========
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This document describes a change in the release calendar for Python
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starting with Python 3.9. This change accelerates the release cadence
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such that major versions are released predictably every twelve months,
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in October every year.
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Implementation
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==============
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Seventeen months to develop a major version
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-------------------------------------------
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This PEP proposes that Python 3.X.0 will be developed for around
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17 months:
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- The first *five months* overlap with Python 3.(X-1).0's beta
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and release candidate stages and are thus unversioned.
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- The next *seven months* are spent on versioned alpha releases where
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both new features are incrementally added and bug fixes are included.
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- The following *four months* are spent on versioned beta releases where
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**no new features** can be added but bug fixes are still included.
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- The *final month* is spent on a release candidate (or more, if
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necessary) and concludes with the release of the final release of
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Python 3.X.0.
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One year of full support, four more years of security fixes
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-----------------------------------------------------------
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After the release of Python 3.X.0, the 3.X series is maintained for
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five years:
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- During the *first eighteen months* (1½ year) it receives bugfix
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updates and full releases (sources and installers for Windows and
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macOS) are made approximately every other month.
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- For the next *forty two months* (3½ years) it receives security
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updates and source-only releases are made on an as-needed basis
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(no fixed cadence).
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- The final source-only release is made *five years* after 3.X.0.
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Annual release cadence
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----------------------
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Feature development of Python 3.(X+1).0 starts as soon as
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Python 3.X.0 Beta 1 is released. This creates a twelve month delta
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between major Python versions.
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Example
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=======
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- 3.9 development begins: Tuesday, 2019-06-04
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- 3.9.0 alpha 1: Monday, 2019-10-14
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- 3.9.0 alpha 2: Monday, 2019-11-18
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- 3.9.0 alpha 3: Monday, 2019-12-16
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- 3.9.0 alpha 4: Monday, 2020-01-13
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- 3.9.0 alpha 5: Monday, 2020-02-17
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- 3.9.0 alpha 6: Monday, 2020-03-16
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- 3.9.0 alpha 7: Monday, 2020-04-13
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- 3.9.0 beta 1: Monday, 2020-05-18
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(No new features beyond this point.)
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- 3.9.0 beta 2: Monday, 2020-06-15
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- 3.9.0 beta 3: Monday, 2020-07-13
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- 3.9.0 beta 4: Monday, 2020-08-17
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- 3.9.0 candidate 1: Monday, 2020-09-14
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- 3.9.0 candidate 2: Monday, 2020-09-21 (if necessary)
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- 3.9.0 final: Monday, 2020-10-05
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.. figure:: pep-0602-example-release-calendar.png
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:align: center
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:width: 100%
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Figure 1. Consequences of the annual release cycle on the calendar.
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In comparison, if this PEP is rejected and Python keeps the current
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release schedule:
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- 3.9 development begins: Tuesday, 2019-06-04
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- 3.9.0 alpha 1: Monday, 2020-08-03 (10 months later)
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- 3.9.0 alpha 2: Monday, 2020-09-07
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- 3.9.0 alpha 3: Monday, 2020-10-05
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- 3.9.0 alpha 4: Monday, 2020-11-02
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- 3.9.0 beta 1: Monday, 2020-11-30 (6 months later)
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- 3.9.0 beta 2: Monday, 2021-01-04
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- 3.9.0 beta 3: Monday, 2021-02-01
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- 3.9.0 beta 4: Monday, 2021-03-01
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- 3.9.0 candidate 1: Monday, 2021-03-29
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- 3.9.0 candidate 2: Monday, 2021-04-05 (if necessary)
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- 3.9.0 final: Monday, 2021-04-19 (6 months later)
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Rationale and Goals
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===================
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This change provides the following advantages:
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- makes releases smaller: since doubling the cadence doesn't double our
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available development resources, consecutive releases are going to be
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smaller in terms of features;
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- puts features and bug fixes in hands of users sooner;
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- creates a more gradual upgrade path for users, by decreasing the
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surface of change in any single release;
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- creates a predictable calendar for releases where the final release is
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always in October (so after the annual core sprint), and the beta
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phase starts in late May (so after PyCon US sprints), which is
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especially important for core developers who need to plan to include
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Python involvement in their calendar;
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- decreases the urge to rush features shortly before "Beta 1" due to
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the risk of them "slipping for 18 months";
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- increases the explicit alpha release phase, which provides meaningful
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snapshots of progress on new features;
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- significantly cuts the implicit "alpha 0" release phase which provides
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limited use for new development anyway (it overlaps with the beta of
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the *currently developed*, still unreleased, version).
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Non-goals
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---------
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Adopting an annual release calendar allows for natural switching to
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calendar versioning, for example by calling Python 3.9 "Python 3.20"
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since it's released in October '20 and so on ("Python 3.23" would be the
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one released in October '23).
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While the ease of switching to calendar versioning can be treated as
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an advantage of an annual release cycle, this PEP does not advocate for
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or against a change in how Python is versioned. Should the annual
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release cycle be adopted, the versioning question will be dealt with in
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a separate PEP.
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Non-risks
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---------
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This change does not shorten the currently documented support calendar
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for a Python release, both in terms of bugfix releases and security
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fixes.
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This change does not accelerate the velocity of development. Python is
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not going to become incompatible faster or accrue new features faster.
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It's just that features are going to be released more gradually as they
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are developed.
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Consequently, while this change introduces the ability for users to
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upgrade much faster, it does not require them to do so. Say, if they
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upgrade every second release, their experience with Python is going to
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be similar to the current situation.
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Risks
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-----
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Python redistribution
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This requires changes to how integrators, like Linux distributions,
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release Python within their systems.
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The testing matrix
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This eventually increases the testing matrix for library and application
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maintainers that want to support all actively supported Python versions
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by one or two:
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.. figure:: pep-0602-overlapping-support-matrix.png
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:align: center
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:width: 50%
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Figure 2. Testing matrix in the 18-month cadence vs. the 12-month
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The "extended bugfix support at the discretion of the Release Manager"
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stage of the current release cycle is not codified. If fact, PEP 101
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currently states that after the release of Python 3.(X+1).0 only one
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last bugfix release is made for Python 3.X.0. However, in practice at
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least the last four versions of Python 3 overlapped with stable releases
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of the next version for around six months. Figure 2 is including
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this information to demonstrate that overlap between stable version
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releases with the 12-month release cadence will be nothing new.
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Some policies depend on the release cadence
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The following policies depend on the release cadence and will have to
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be updated:
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- the deprecation policy
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- the ``__future__`` import becoming the default
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- the term of the Steering Council
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- the term of the Release Manager
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Rejected Ideas
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--------------
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Keep the current 18 month release cadence
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This is undesirable both for core developers and end users. From the
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perspective of the core developer:
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- it makes contribution scheduling harder due to irregular release
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dates every year;
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- it creates a surge of rushed commits before (and even after!) Beta 1
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due to the stress involved with "missing a release";
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- ironically, after Beta 1 it creates a false sense of having "plenty of
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time" before the next release, time that passes quickly regardless;
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- it causes certain elements of the workflow to be executed so rarely
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that they are not explicitly documented, let alone automated.
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More importantly, from the perspective of the user:
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- it creates releases with many new features, some being explicitly
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incompatible and some being accidentally incompatible, which makes
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the upgrade cost relatively high every time;
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- it sits on features and incompatible bug fixes for over a year before
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becoming available to the user; and more specifically
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- it causes every "point zero" release to be extra risky for users.
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While we provide and recommend testing with alphas and betas,
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"point zero" is the first release of a given Python version for many
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users. The bigger a release is feature-wise, the more potential
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problems are hiding in "point zero releases".
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Double the release cadence to achieve 9 months between major versions
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This was originally proposed in PEP 596 and rejected as both too
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irregular and too short. One consequence of a 9 month release cadence
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was shortening of the beta phase and this was considered dangerous.
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Slow down releases but don't freeze feature development with Beta 1
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This is described in PEP 598. This proposal includes non-standard
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concepts like the "incremental feature release" which makes it hard
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to understand. The presented advantages are unclear while the
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unfamiliarity of the scheme poses a real risk of user and integrator
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confusion.
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Long-Term Support Releases
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Each version of Python is effectively long-term support: it's supported
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for five years, with the first eighteen months allowing regular bug
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fixes and security updates. For the remaining time security updates are
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accepted and promptly released.
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No extended support in the vein of Python 2.7 is planned going forward.
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Copyright
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=========
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This document is placed in the public domain or under the
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CC0-1.0-Universal license, whichever is more permissive.
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..
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Local Variables:
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mode: indented-text
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indent-tabs-mode: nil
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sentence-end-double-space: t
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fill-column: 72
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coding: utf-8
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End:
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