Chih-Hsuan Yen <yan12...@gmail.com> 於 2018年10月24日 週三 上午11:12寫道: > > > Fred Wright <f...@fwright.net> 於 2018年10月22日 週一 上午3:27寫道: > > > > > > On Sun, 21 Oct 2018, Chih-Hsuan Yen wrote: > > > > > I'd like to remove old Python version - python{24,25,31,32,33}. I see no > > > ports depend on python{31,32,33} and no one maintains them, but those > > > ports are still kept for while. Is there a reason for not deleting them? > > > > Some of us like to test Python code against as many versions as possible. > > It's bad enough to have to maintain locally patched versions of a few > > Python-related ports just to expand the version lists, without having the > > Python versions themselves disappear. > > > > Hi, > > Thanks for pointing out a valid reason for keeping old Python versions. I > know some projects still supporting as old as Python 3.2 or 2.6. Are there > examples for Python 2.5 and 3.1? > > > My own philosophy is never to drop anything without a sound technical > > reason, rather than just being "too old". If the same zeal for > > eliminating Python versions were applied to OS versions, MacPorts wouldn't > > run on anything older than 10.12. > > > > Well, upgrading from old Python versions is much easier than upgrading from > old OS X versions. Due to Apple policies, new OS X versions do not work on > old machines, and buying a new machine is apparently not an option for some > people. In contrast, upgrading from Python 2.5 to 2.7 or 3.1 to 3.4+ takes > almost no cost as CPython developers keep backward compatibility as best as > they can do. > > Regarding "technical reasons" - there's one: old Python version does not > build with OpenSSL 1.1, thus a blocker for upgrading the openssl port, and I > don't think backporting fixes for openssl 1.1 is feasible as hundreds of > lines should be patched. > > > Checking port dependents is inadequate, since it doesn't cover > > "dependents" based on user interest. If one were to remove all ports > > without dependents, and iterate, there would be no ports at all. :-) > > > > Of course I won't even consider ports with maintainers - there's at least one > user :) I wrote this letter as those old Python versions are marked as > nomaintainer (except python24, which the maintainer confirms he no longer > needs it), so I wonder if there are still users for them. > > Regards, > > Chih-Hsuan Yen > > > Fred Wright
I removed Python 2.5 and Python 3.1 in https://github.com/macports/macports-ports/commit/160f340665b9d97c1065fcb2aecb5b504a7b3cb4. Python 3.2 and 3.3 are kept for now until most Python libraries drop support for them. See https://hugovk.github.io/drop-python/ for statistical data. Cheers, Chih-Hsuan Yen