Sounds good to me (from my phone on my way to WWW2010).

On Apr 27, 2010 10:49 AM, "Barry Warsaw" <barry@python.org> wrote:

I have two somewhat unrelated thoughts about PEPs.

* Accepted: header

When PEP 3147 was accepted, I had a few folks ask that this be recorded in the
PEP by including a link to the BDFL pronouncement email.  I realized that
there's no formal way to express this in a PEP, and many PEPs in fact don't
record more than the fact that it was accepted.  I'd like to propose
officially adding an Accepted: header which should include a URL to the email
or other web resource where the PEP is accepted.  I've come as close as
possible to this (without modifying the supporting scripts or PEP 1) in PEP
3147:

   http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3147/

I'd be willing to update things if there are no objections.

* EOL schedule for older releases.

We have semi-formal policies for the lifetimes of Python releases, though I'm
not sure this policy is written down in any of the existing informational
PEPs.  However, we have release schedule PEPs going back to Python 1.6.  It
seems reasonable to me that we include end-of-life information in those PEPs.
For example, we could state that Python 2.4 is no longer even being maintained
for security, and we could state the projected date that Python 2.6 will go
into security-only maintenance mode.

I would not mandate that we go back and update all previous PEPs for either of
these ideas.  We'd adopt them moving forward and allow anyone who's motivated
to backfill information opportunistically.

Thoughts?
-Barry

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