New PyPI launched, legacy PyPI shutting down April 30
New PyPI launched, legacy PyPI shutting down April 30[1] Starting today, the canonical Python Package Index is at https://pypi.org and uses the new Warehouse codebase. We announced the https://pypi.org beta on March 26 and your feedback and test usage have helped us get it production-ready. Monday April 16 (2018-04-16): We launched the new PyPI, redirecting browser traffic and API calls (including "pip install") from pypi.python.org to the new site. The old codebase is still available at https://legacy.pypi.org for now. Monday April 30 (2018-04-30): We plan to shut down legacy PyPI https://legacy.pypi.org . The address pypi.python.org will continue to redirect to Warehouse. For more details, see our roadmap: https://wiki.python.org/psf/WarehouseRoadmap If your site/service links to or uses pypi.python.org, you should start using pypi.org instead: https://warehouse.readthedocs.io/api-reference/integration-guide/#migrating-... Thank you. [1] https://blog.python.org/2018/04/new-pypi-launched-legacy-pypi-shutting.html Laura Hampton laura at laura-hampton dot com
On Mon, Apr 16, 2018 at 7:27 PM, Laura Hampton <laura@laura-hampton.com> wrote:
Monday April 30 (2018-04-30): We plan to shut down legacy PyPI https://legacy.pypi.org . The address pypi.python.org will continue to redirect to Warehouse.
Is there a timeline planned for sunsetting this redirect? -- Joni Orponen
On Apr 16, 2018, at 2:14 PM, Joni Orponen <j.orponen@4teamwork.ch> wrote:
On Mon, Apr 16, 2018 at 7:27 PM, Laura Hampton <laura@laura-hampton.com <mailto:laura@laura-hampton.com>> wrote: Monday April 30 (2018-04-30): We plan to shut down legacy PyPI https://legacy.pypi.org <https://legacy.pypi.org/> . The address pypi.python.org <http://pypi.python.org/> will continue to redirect to Warehouse.
Is there a timeline planned for sunsetting this redirect?
The redirect from pypi.python.org <http://pypi.python.org/> to pypi.org <http://pypi.org/>? No defined date, order of magnitude is years, maybe a decade. It’s low cost to keep around (biggest downside is forgetting it exists and accidentally breaking it) and removing it would be highly visible.
participants (3)
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Donald Stufft
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Joni Orponen
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Laura Hampton