python3-defaults in unstable now adds Python 3.13 as a supported Python
3.13 version. You might see some additional build failures, until the
binNMUs for this addition are done [1]. This might take some days for
some architectures. We will most likely also see some more issues once
the lower
Hello Jonathan,
thank you for the reply.
Am 13.11.2024 12:15 schrieb Jonathan Carter:
This was discussed at the Python BoF at DebConf in ROK earlier this
year.
OK, nice to know that there was a discussion before. Did I missed the
announcement of the results of this discussion in this mailing
do we know how long we will have to fix all the FTBFS and autopkgtest before
the freeze ?
I am a bit worrying for the scientific stack , will we have enough time to work
with our upstream in order to fix all these FTBFS. In the scientific stack,
things are going slowly
We are not 100% of o
On 13.11.24 11:04, PICCA Frederic-Emmanuel wrote:
do we know how long we will have to fix all the FTBFS and autopkgtest before
the freeze ?
no. the freeze date is not yet announced.
I am a bit worrying for the scientific stack , will we have enough time to work
with our upstream in order to
Hello,
I am an upstream maintainer and ask just because I want to learn.
It was a similar case before the Debian 12 release introducing Python
3.12 near to the freeze. Why are fresh Python releases introduced so
early and near to the next Debian release?
This is not how I do experience Debia
> this is the same as we did for the Python 3.12 transition. Please note
> that we don't enable any of the experimental features in Python 3.12 (no
> GIL, JIT compilation), so assuming there are currently no other RC
> issues in your packages, there should plenty of time to fix any 3.13
> related
On Wed, Nov 13, 2024 at 11:46:21AM +0100, PICCA Frederic-Emmanuel wrote:
> > this is the same as we did for the Python 3.12 transition. Please note
> > that we don't enable any of the experimental features in Python 3.12 (no
> > GIL, JIT compilation), so assuming there are currently no other RC
>
Hi
On 2024/11/13 12:43, c.bu...@posteo.jp wrote:
This is not how I do experience Debian at all. This is not "rock solid".
Python 3.13 is very fresh, no one needs it yet. I see no problem
introducing it with Debian 14 in 2027.
For my project it does not matter directly. I do support 3.13. But
Hi buhtz (2024.11.13_12:06:33_+)
> > This was discussed at the Python BoF at DebConf in ROK earlier this
> > year.
>
> OK, nice to know that there was a discussion before. Did I missed the
> announcement of the results of this discussion in this mailing list?
The BoF was mentioned on the list
Hi PICCA (2024.11.13_10:04:26_+)
> I am a bit worrying for the scientific stack , will we have enough
> time to work with our upstream in order to fix all these FTBFS. In the
> scientific stack, things are going slowly
The reality here is that Python has a 6-month release cycle, these days
Hi debian-python (2024.11.13_15:01:31_+)
> Hi PICCA (2024.11.13_10:04:26_+)
> > I am a bit worrying for the scientific stack , will we have enough
> > time to work with our upstream in order to fix all these FTBFS. In the
> > scientific stack, things are going slowly
>
> The reality he
11 matches
Mail list logo