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Showing content from https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2014-May/134575.html below:

[Python-Dev] Where is our official policy of what platforms we do support?

[Python-Dev] Where is our official policy of what platforms we do support? [Python-Dev] Where is our official policy of what platforms we do support?R. David Murray rdmurray at bitdance.com
Wed May 14 16:56:36 CEST 2014
On Wed, 14 May 2014 11:31:15 -0300, "Joao S. O. Bueno" <jsbueno at python.org.br> wrote:
> +1 for an official policy that comes with a "permanent maintainer for
> this platform required"  as part of the list
> of requisites.
> 
>   js
>  -><-
> 
> On 14 May 2014 11:20, Brett Cannon <bcannon at gmail.com> wrote:
> > Over the past week or so there have been 2 patches to add support for
> > various UNIX OSs. Now I thought we had stopped trying to add new esoteric
> > OSs (e.g. I had never heard of MirOS until the patch for it came in), but I
> > can't find a PEP that spells out what it takes to get a platform supported
> > (http://legacy.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0011/ is about removing platforms,
> > not keeping them or adding them unless you are re-adding one which
> > apparently just takes a volunteer).
> >
> > Do we want an official policy written down in a PEP (yes, I can write it)?
> > Should I keep closing these patches and saying that we are not adding
> > support for new operating systems and be hand-wavy about it?

In addition to a maintainer (who I think doesn't have to be a committer,
though that would be ideal), I think a maintained buildbot should be a
requirement for formal support.

--David
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