My project was temporarily disabled as well even though I had taken measures to block spam and had committed to svn and edited the trac wiki one day before. I was a bit concerned that maybe webfaction had lost my trac and svn during their house cleaning. But I emailed Remi and he had it going again promptly. They provide a great service for free and they give back to the Python community. They deserve our thanks and our patronage.
With regard to how they handled it, I think they chose an effective method. Why should they support projects (for free) that aren't active? So just disable the project to see if anyone cares enough to find out why it's gone. Ever so slightly draconian, but good for keeping a clean house. I'm glad they have done this cleaning work, the server seems much more responsive now; no more errors from trac. !!Dean [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Fredrik Lundh wrote: > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > > > > my svn repository and tickets again. I'm sure you can understand why I > > > was dismayed by this and why, unfortunately, I'll never be comfortable > > > trusting my data to them again. > > > > not really, but maybe I've just worked with computers and human beings > > long enough not to treat every little hiccup as if it were the end of > > the world as we know it. > > You're misreading me very badly, or I'm expressing myself very poorly. > Either way, you've inferred some kind of spittle-flecked freakout where > I did not mean to imply one. > > JP -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list