+1 on pushing the branch cut for increased dev time to match previous
releases.
Regards,
Mridul
On Sat, Oct 3, 2020 at 10:22 PM Xiao Li wrote:
> Thank you for your updates.
>
> Spark 3.0 got released on Jun 18, 2020. If Nov 1st is the target date of
> the 3.1 branch cut, the feature development
Thank you all.
BTW, Xiao and Mridul, I'm wondering what date you have in your mind
specifically.
Usually, `Christmas and New Year season` doesn't give us much additional
time.
If you think so, could you make a PR for Apache Spark website according to
your expectation?
https://spark.apache.org/v
Sure, German.
Please add your comment on that issue. If possible, please provide a
reproducible example which you did.
On Sat, Oct 3, 2020 at 10:31 PM German Schiavon
wrote:
> Hi!
> I just run to this same issue while testing k8s in local mode
>
> https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SPARK-3
For Xiao's comment, I want to point out that Apache Spark 3.1.0 is
different from 2.3 or 2.4.
Apache Spark 3.1.0 should be compared with Apache Spark 2.1.0.
- Apache Spark 2.0.0 was released on July 26, 2016.
- Apache Spark 2.1.0 was released on December 28, 2016.
Bests,
Dongjoon.
On Sun, Oct
>
> Apache Spark 3.1.0 should be compared with Apache Spark 2.1.0.
I think we made a change in release cadence since Spark 2.3. See the
commit:
https://github.com/apache/spark-website/commit/88990968962e5cc47db8bc2c11a50742d2438daa
Thus, Spark 3.1 might just follow the release cadence of Spark 2.
Hi Folks,
It seems like there are new guidelines for incubator projects that might
make it easier for us to publish Spark docker images. While we are not an
incubator project, I think this is probably a sign we should revisit
publishing docker images.
Cheers,
Holden
-- Forwarded message
As pointed out by Dongjoon, the 2nd half of December is the holiday season
in most countries. If we do the code freeze in mid November and release the
first RC in mid December. I am afraid the community will not be active to
verify the release candidates during the holiday season. Normally, the RC