On August 31, 2015 at 10:31:35 AM, Donald Stufft (donald@stufft.io) wrote:
I can redo them now again.
So, I went ahead and ran all of the numbers using the data from 2015-08-18 (chosen because when I looked at the last couple weeks of log files, it was the largest log file). I think the difference in just ~10 months supports the idea that use of this feature is declining and the model in the PEP will be a cleaner and easier to understand model. On this day, there were 20,398,771 total requests to /simple/<X>/ which resulted in either a 200 or a 304 response code, out of these ~20 million requests 80,622 went to projects which do not have any files hosted on PyPI but do have files hosted off of PyPI. This represents ~0.4% of the total traffic for that particular day. The top packages look a bit different than it did 10 months ago, surprisingly to me PIL has severely dropped off from where it had ~63k 10 months ago and it now has 5.5k, however pygame has risen from 2.6k 10 months ago to ~32k. The total number of requests has doubled between now and 10 months ago and it appears that numbers of the top packages have more or less done the same, with the exception of the very top package which has been cut in half. Similar to 10 months ago we see the numbers rapidly drop by orders of magnitude. Overall, the top 10 in this list togther represented 70,691 requests 10 months ago, and now they represent 41,703. That's roughly 60% of what they were 10 months ago while the total number of requests increased by 100%, so it's really more like 30% of what they were previously when adjusted for the traffic increase. ============================== ======== Project Requests ============================== ======== Pygame 32238 PIL 5548 mysql-connector-python 5152 RBTools 3723 python-apt 3028 meliae 1679 elementtree 1576 which 457 salesforce-python-toolkit 454 pywbem 400 wxPython 359 pyDes 301 PyXML 300 robotframework-seleniumlibrary 282 basemap 255 Is any of this information useful for the PEP? I removed it because I though it was too much, but I'm happy to add it back in if it'd be useful. ----------------- Donald Stufft PGP: 0x6E3CBCE93372DCFA // 7C6B 7C5D 5E2B 6356 A926 F04F 6E3C BCE9 3372 DCFA