+1 From me
1. Checked binary packages, c module and examples on windows 10 amd64 for
pythons 3.6, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9
2. Checked binary packages, c module and examples on ubuntu 20.04 amd64 for
pythons 3.6, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9
3. Checked source installation and building binary packages on ubuntu 20.04
amd 64 for pythons 3.6, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9
4. Checked documentation on
https://apache-ignite-binary-protocol-client.readthedocs.io/en/0.5.1.rc0
5. Checked sha512 checksums and gpg signatures (signed by Igor Sapego (CODE
SIGNING KEY) <isap...@apache.org> 5C10 A072 2D94 7727 923C  98B5 AF35 DBD9
58FE 8DC5)
key is inside https://downloads.apache.org/ignite/KEYS)

пт, 23 июл. 2021 г. в 13:52, Ivan Daschinsky <ivanda...@gmail.com>:

> The voting finishes at 07/27/2021 12:00 UTC
>
> пт, 23 июл. 2021 г. в 13:49, Ivan Daschinsky <ivanda...@apache.org>:
>
>> Dear Igniters!
>>
>> Release candidate binaries for subj are uploaded and ready for vote
>> You can find them here:
>> https://dist.apache.org/repos/dist/dev/ignite/pyignite/0.5.1-rc0
>>
>> If you follow the link above, you will find source packages (*.tar.gz and
>> *.zip)
>> and binary packages (wheels) for windows (amd64) and linux (x86_64)
>> for pythons 36, 37, 38, 39. Also, there are sha512 and gpg signatures.
>> Code signing keys can be found here --
>> https://downloads.apache.org/ignite/KEYS
>> Here you can find instructions how to verify packages
>> https://www.apache.org/info/verification.html
>>
>> You can install binary package for specific version of python using pip
>> For example do this on linux for python 3.8
>> >> pip install pyignite-0.5.1-cp38-cp38-manylinux1_x86_64.whl
>>
>> You can build and install package from source using this command:
>> >> pip install pyignite-0.5.1.tar.gz
>> You can build wheel on your platform using this command:
>> >> pip wheel --no-deps pyignite-0.5.1.tar.gz
>>
>> For building C module, you should have python headers and C compiler
>> installed.
>> (i.e. for ubuntu sudo apt install build-essential python3-dev)
>> In Mac OS X xcode-tools and python from homebrew are the best option.
>>
>> In order to check whether C module works, use following:
>> >> from pyignite import _cutils
>> >> print(_cutils.hashcode('test'))
>> >> 3556498
>>
>> You can find documentation here:
>> https://apache-ignite-binary-protocol-client.readthedocs.io/en/0.5.1.rc0
>>
>> You can find examples here (to check them, you should start ignite
>> locally):
>>
>> https://apache-ignite-binary-protocol-client.readthedocs.io/en/0.5.1.rc0/examples.html
>> Also, examples can be found in source archive in examples subfolder.
>> docker-compose.yml is supplied in order to start ignite quickly. (Use
>> `docker-compose up -d` to start 3 nodes cluster and `docker-compose
>> down` to shut down it)
>>
>> Release notes:
>>
>> https://gitbox.apache.org/repos/asf?p=ignite-python-thin-client.git;a=blob;f=RELEASE_NOTES.txt;h=c6cbd419684cd4a97485707471bac84957b42891;hb=b48dd5dec37064b458031358c394789d15a756fc
>>
>> Git release tag was created:
>>
>> https://gitbox.apache.org/repos/asf?p=ignite-python-thin-client.git;a=tag;h=refs/tags/0.5.1.rc0
>>
>> The vote is formal, see voting guidelines
>> https://www.apache.org/foundation/voting.html
>>
>> +1 - to accept pyignite-0.5.1-rc0
>> 0 - don't care either way
>> -1 - DO NOT accept pyignite-0.5.1-rc0
>>
>>
>
> --
> Sincerely yours, Ivan Daschinskiy
>

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