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git-site-role pushed a commit to branch asf-site
in repository https://gitbox.apache.org/repos/asf/drill-site.git
The following commit(s) were added to refs/heads/asf-site by this push:
new 721dd54 Automatic Site Publish by Buildbot
721dd54 is described below
commit 721dd54354d266901d02c7f8d365ecc937649374
Author: buildbot <[email protected]>
AuthorDate: Mon Nov 1 04:53:50 2021 +0000
Automatic Site Publish by Buildbot
---
output/blog/2021/10/30/reports-of-my-death/index.html | 2 +-
output/feed.xml | 6 +++---
output/zh/blog/2021/10/30/reports-of-my-death/index.html | 2 +-
output/zh/feed.xml | 6 +++---
4 files changed, 8 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-)
diff --git a/output/blog/2021/10/30/reports-of-my-death/index.html
b/output/blog/2021/10/30/reports-of-my-death/index.html
index 5d8f19d..ba151ea 100644
--- a/output/blog/2021/10/30/reports-of-my-death/index.html
+++ b/output/blog/2021/10/30/reports-of-my-death/index.html
@@ -156,7 +156,7 @@
<article class="post-content">
<p>There’s a somewhat breathless post entitled “The Death of Apache Drill”
in a blog that has as a theme the imminent demise of technologies previously or
currently associated with Hadoop, with the exception of Trino (formerly known
as PrestoSQL). It’s ultimately a promotional piece for the website’s owner,
which is entirely normal and usually it wouldn’t warrant further mention. But
it’s done whatever it is that it takes to climb up to the first page of the
search results for “Apa [...]
-<p>Firstly, the title proclaims a little too much. Drill did suffer the loss
of its primary corporate backer, and of course its pulse has been faint as a
result, but we invite the author to visit the project and reconsider his
declaration of death. We don’t have hundreds of active contributors making
thousands of commits a year but there are enough of us to get bugs fixed, new
data sources supported, performance and reliability improved. In the near
future I’ll blog about our work on [...]
+<p>Firstly, the title proclaims a little too much. Drill did suffer the loss
of its primary corporate backer, and of course its pulse has been faint as a
result, but we invite the author to visit the project and reconsider his
declaration of death. We don’t have hundreds of active contributors making
thousands of commits a year but there are enough of us to get bugs fixed, new
data sources supported, and performance and reliability improved. In the near
future I’ll blog about our rec [...]
<p>We’ve started talking about speeding up our release cadence to better
reflect our recent activity. We’re rekindling the project’s communication
channels, and improving and translating our documentation. Metrics like <a
href="https://pepy.tech/project/sqlalchemy-drill">downloads of Drill-related
software</a> suggest to us that interest has stopped trending down and started
trending up. If this is death, in short, then the phenomenon is a lot less
about resting in peace than we’ve al [...]
diff --git a/output/feed.xml b/output/feed.xml
index 1c0e3f1..a65990a 100644
--- a/output/feed.xml
+++ b/output/feed.xml
@@ -6,15 +6,15 @@
</description>
<link>/</link>
<atom:link href="/feed.xml" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/>
- <pubDate>Mon, 01 Nov 2021 04:45:03 +0000</pubDate>
- <lastBuildDate>Mon, 01 Nov 2021 04:45:03 +0000</lastBuildDate>
+ <pubDate>Mon, 01 Nov 2021 04:51:20 +0000</pubDate>
+ <lastBuildDate>Mon, 01 Nov 2021 04:51:20 +0000</lastBuildDate>
<generator>Jekyll v3.9.1</generator>
<item>
<title>The reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated</title>
<description><p>There’s a somewhat breathless post entitled “The
Death of Apache Drill” in a blog that has as a theme the imminent demise of
technologies previously or currently associated with Hadoop, with the exception
of Trino (formerly known as PrestoSQL). It’s ultimately a promotional piece
for the website’s owner, which is entirely normal and usually it wouldn’t
warrant further mention. But it’s done whatever it is that it takes to climb
up to the first page of the [...]
-<p>Firstly, the title proclaims a little too much. Drill did suffer the
loss of its primary corporate backer, and of course its pulse has been faint as
a result, but we invite the author to visit the project and reconsider his
declaration of death. We don’t have hundreds of active contributors making
thousands of commits a year but there are enough of us to get bugs fixed, new
data sources supported, performance and reliability improved. In the near
future I’ll blog about our w [...]
+<p>Firstly, the title proclaims a little too much. Drill did suffer the
loss of its primary corporate backer, and of course its pulse has been faint as
a result, but we invite the author to visit the project and reconsider his
declaration of death. We don’t have hundreds of active contributors making
thousands of commits a year but there are enough of us to get bugs fixed, new
data sources supported, and performance and reliability improved. In the near
future I’ll blog about o [...]
<p>We’ve started talking about speeding up our release cadence to better
reflect our recent activity. We’re rekindling the project’s communication
channels, and improving and translating our documentation. Metrics like <a
href="https://pepy.tech/project/sqlalchemy-drill">downloads of
Drill-related software</a> suggest to us that interest has stopped
trending down and started trending up. If this is death, in short, then the
phenomenon is a lot less about re [...]
diff --git a/output/zh/blog/2021/10/30/reports-of-my-death/index.html
b/output/zh/blog/2021/10/30/reports-of-my-death/index.html
index 1a1cd24..961dee0 100644
--- a/output/zh/blog/2021/10/30/reports-of-my-death/index.html
+++ b/output/zh/blog/2021/10/30/reports-of-my-death/index.html
@@ -156,7 +156,7 @@
<article class="post-content">
<p>There’s a somewhat breathless post entitled “The Death of Apache Drill”
in a blog that has as a theme the imminent demise of technologies previously or
currently associated with Hadoop, with the exception of Trino (formerly known
as PrestoSQL). It’s ultimately a promotional piece for the website’s owner,
which is entirely normal and usually it wouldn’t warrant further mention. But
it’s done whatever it is that it takes to climb up to the first page of the
search results for “Apa [...]
-<p>Firstly, the title proclaims a little too much. Drill did suffer the loss
of its primary corporate backer, and of course its pulse has been faint as a
result, but we invite the author to visit the project and reconsider his
declaration of death. We don’t have hundreds of active contributors making
thousands of commits a year but there are enough of us to get bugs fixed, new
data sources supported, performance and reliability improved. In the near
future I’ll blog about our work on [...]
+<p>Firstly, the title proclaims a little too much. Drill did suffer the loss
of its primary corporate backer, and of course its pulse has been faint as a
result, but we invite the author to visit the project and reconsider his
declaration of death. We don’t have hundreds of active contributors making
thousands of commits a year but there are enough of us to get bugs fixed, new
data sources supported, and performance and reliability improved. In the near
future I’ll blog about our rec [...]
<p>We’ve started talking about speeding up our release cadence to better
reflect our recent activity. We’re rekindling the project’s communication
channels, and improving and translating our documentation. Metrics like <a
href="https://pepy.tech/project/sqlalchemy-drill">downloads of Drill-related
software</a> suggest to us that interest has stopped trending down and started
trending up. If this is death, in short, then the phenomenon is a lot less
about resting in peace than we’ve al [...]
diff --git a/output/zh/feed.xml b/output/zh/feed.xml
index f5fdd7a..9174aa9 100644
--- a/output/zh/feed.xml
+++ b/output/zh/feed.xml
@@ -6,15 +6,15 @@
</description>
<link>/</link>
<atom:link href="/zh/feed.xml" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/>
- <pubDate>Mon, 01 Nov 2021 04:45:03 +0000</pubDate>
- <lastBuildDate>Mon, 01 Nov 2021 04:45:03 +0000</lastBuildDate>
+ <pubDate>Mon, 01 Nov 2021 04:51:20 +0000</pubDate>
+ <lastBuildDate>Mon, 01 Nov 2021 04:51:20 +0000</lastBuildDate>
<generator>Jekyll v3.9.1</generator>
<item>
<title>The reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated</title>
<description><p>There’s a somewhat breathless post entitled “The
Death of Apache Drill” in a blog that has as a theme the imminent demise of
technologies previously or currently associated with Hadoop, with the exception
of Trino (formerly known as PrestoSQL). It’s ultimately a promotional piece
for the website’s owner, which is entirely normal and usually it wouldn’t
warrant further mention. But it’s done whatever it is that it takes to climb
up to the first page of the [...]
-<p>Firstly, the title proclaims a little too much. Drill did suffer the
loss of its primary corporate backer, and of course its pulse has been faint as
a result, but we invite the author to visit the project and reconsider his
declaration of death. We don’t have hundreds of active contributors making
thousands of commits a year but there are enough of us to get bugs fixed, new
data sources supported, performance and reliability improved. In the near
future I’ll blog about our w [...]
+<p>Firstly, the title proclaims a little too much. Drill did suffer the
loss of its primary corporate backer, and of course its pulse has been faint as
a result, but we invite the author to visit the project and reconsider his
declaration of death. We don’t have hundreds of active contributors making
thousands of commits a year but there are enough of us to get bugs fixed, new
data sources supported, and performance and reliability improved. In the near
future I’ll blog about o [...]
<p>We’ve started talking about speeding up our release cadence to better
reflect our recent activity. We’re rekindling the project’s communication
channels, and improving and translating our documentation. Metrics like <a
href="https://pepy.tech/project/sqlalchemy-drill">downloads of
Drill-related software</a> suggest to us that interest has stopped
trending down and started trending up. If this is death, in short, then the
phenomenon is a lot less about re [...]