Am 03.10.2012 13:54, schrieb Larry Hastings: > As for the rest of it, my understanding was that there is no longer any > great plan written in the stars for Python releases. Python releases > are comprised of whatever features people propose, implement, and are > willing to support, that they can get done in time for the beta cutoff. > From that perspective, the schedule drives the features more than the > other-way around. I have some crypto and security related features planed for Python 3.4. I'm planing a PEP on password hashing algorithms (password based key derivation functions) like pbkdf2, bcrypt and scrypt. The topic was discussed on python-ideas about half a year ago. We agree that it's worth to have accelerated C implementations in the core. Two days ago NIST announced the SHA-3 contest winner. My wrapper of keccak https://bitbucket.org/tiran/pykeccak/ is almost ready and just needs some cleanup and more tests. Once it's done I'll remove the Python 3.2 and 2.x compatibility code and integrate it into 3.4. Christian
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