Re: [ANNOUNCE] Apache Iceberg Go Release v0.2.0

2025-04-04 Thread Renjie Liu
Hi, Matt: Congratulations on the release. Just one reminder to update the the status page , and here is the doc file. On Thu, Mar 27, 2025 at 9:17 PM Craig Russell wrote: > Hi Matt, > > On Mar

Re: [ANNOUNCE] Apache Iceberg Go Release v0.2.0

2025-04-04 Thread Craig Russell
Hi Matt, Congratulations on the release, and thanks for following announcement protocols. Your announcement email must have a link to the downloads page so folks can directly access the new release. https://iceberg.apache.org/releases/ Warm regards, Craig > On Mar 26, 2025, at 12:26, Matt Topo

Re: [ANNOUNCE] Apache Iceberg Go Release v0.2.0

2025-03-27 Thread Craig Russell
Hi Matt, > On Mar 26, 2025, at 17:46, Matt Topol wrote: > > Hey Craig, > > The downloads page on the main iceberg site only seems to track the Java > releases. So that wouldn't have been relevant on this announcement. > I'd say that the downloads page needs to be improved to include all of th

Re: [ANNOUNCE] Apache Iceberg Go Release v0.2.0

2025-03-26 Thread Matt Topol
Hey Craig, The downloads page on the main iceberg site only seems to track the Java releases. So that wouldn't have been relevant on this announcement. Golang also doesn't use any binary artifacts for releases (the git tag is sufficient). The announcement email included the link [1] to the GitHub

Re: [ANNOUNCE] Apache Iceberg Go Release v0.2.0

2025-03-26 Thread Kevin Liu
Woot! Can't wait to see this in action at the Iceberg Summit. Thanks for working on the release. BTW here's the apache distribution for iceberg-go 0.2.0 https://dist.apache.org/repos/dist/release/iceberg/apache-iceberg-go-0.2.0/ Best, Kevin Liu On Wed, Mar 26, 2025 at 12:26 PM Matt Topol wrote:

[ANNOUNCE] Apache Iceberg Go Release v0.2.0

2025-03-26 Thread Matt Topol
Hello everyone, I'm pleased to announce the release of Apache Iceberg Go v0.2.0! Apache Iceberg is an open table format for huge analytic datasets, Iceberg delivers high query performance for tables with tens of petabytes of data, along with atomic commits, concurrent writes, and SQL-compatible t