I'm also using "apache" for "apache/airflow". (but I use "upstream" for all
other projects...) Either way kinda works for me. like "apache" a bit more,
but I'm ok with "upstream".

Best,
Wei

Shahar Epstein <[email protected]> 於 2026年4月21日週二 下午2:52寫道:

> Personally I'm used to "apache" as the upstream name, but I could live with
> "upstream".
>
>
> Shahar
>
> On Tue, Apr 21, 2026 at 2:24 AM Jarek Potiuk <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Hello,
> >
> > While preparing release documentation, I noticed that we use quite
> > different approaches for remote naming in various examples and tutorials.
> >
> > Standardizing on those remotes would be easier for both new contributors
> > and agents; currently, we have some instruction on how to find the righ
> > remotes.
> >
> > I would like to propose very simple approach:
> >
> > * *upstream* -> apache/airflow
> > * *origin* -> your fork
> >
> > We could add instructions for checking out and adding airflow to follow
> the
> > convention. This would also make our documentation more consistent and
> > agent-followable, reducing back-and-forth.
> >
> > And renaming remotes is easy - so would be quite easy for people to
> switch
> > (other than muscle memory).
> >
> > WDYT?
> >
>

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