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Can someone relinquish django-q and allow the django-q2 community to fold in? #735
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How do you propose we do this? I'll gladly add a maintainer or something similar. As far as I can tell I have not been contacted to do something with the q2 community. If you can come up with a good plan, I'll help. |
Hi @Koed00, hope you're doing well. |
I am only a very recent observer looking at decent options like Django-Q - it looks like what I am after but I don't want to get stuck down the line and I don't know what I don't know at this stage. The readme solution sounds reasonable as a starting point - incoming traffic until then has likely seen the last commit date and run for celery. |
I am the maintainer of django-q2. The README change sounds good. Might want to put this repo in public archive than to avoid further issues/pull requests. I am also open to merge django-q2 into django-q and then keep both packages up to date on PyPI and perhaps add a deprecation message to django-q2. There are still a lot more downloads for Downside of this would be that nearly all PRs would be broken, since I have changed the structure of django-q (moved all processes from cluster.py to separate files). |
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…On Mon, Nov 27, 2023, 1:12 PM Stan Triepels ***@***.***> wrote:
I am the maintainer of django-q2.
The README change sounds good. Might want to put this repo in public
archive than to avoid further issues/pull requests.
I am also open to merge django-q2 into django-q and then keep both
packages up to date on PyPI and perhaps add a deprecation message to
django-q2. There are still a lot more downloads for django-q than
django-q2. The people maintaining those projects are likely not aware
that there is a newer version.
Downside of this would be that nearly all PRs would be broken, since I
have changed the structure of django-q (moved all processes from cluster.py
to separate files).
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Stan, I've added you as a collaborator. That should give you enough access to do what you want. |
@Koed00 Thanks a lot. Really appreciate that. I think the best way forward would be to shut the django-q2 repo down, merge it here and then continue, as I suggested here:
However, collaborator access doesn't give me enough to do that. What I would need to be able to do:
For 1, I could also push updates manually, or run the release workflow on my own repo. I think the best way to move forward is to move this package from a personal account to an organization, since we would have more fine-grained permissions. That could also allow me to add other maintainers later, in case I don't have time to maintain it anymore (and not repeat the "unmaintained hell" again). If you don't want to do that, then that's fine. I can also just replace the README file with a link to the django-q2 repo and continue there. Either option is fine by me. |
I don't think I can give you access to the secrets. But you can add repos to PyPi that can automatically trigger a release. I've added you as a maintainer on PyPi. And in case we want to use that at a later date; I've secured https://github.com/django-q and invited you there as well. |
Hello! I'm happy to see conversation on here about a future. Has there been any progress since November? |
I have gotten extremely busy with work since then and I am trying to catch up. I will be back at this in a week or two (hopefully sooner). |
Hi @GDay, I've been really happy to see you engaged in djangoq maintenance. Do you have any update regarding the process of merging your django-q2 into this repository, or if it makes more sense to switch to your fork? |
@targetblank I have made a PR into this repo. I need to update the docs to make them both reference |
This is amazing @GDay, looking to try out django q2 in the coming days |
Really good news, @GDay. Thanks you for your efforts on the project! |
Great Work, looking forward for the merge |
I am a prospective user of this great sounding package but it horrifies me that this has:
Can someone relinquish and allow updating of this please?
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