> On Jan 17, 2017, at 12:25 PM, Chris Rose <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> PyPi might not be an archaeological site, but like it or not it *is* a key 
> part of deployment processes, including those that run headless. I'm 
> referencing vendoring processes, but the same idea applies when your code is 
> deployed by any process that includes `pip install` in its steps. While in an 
> ideal world every user of these packages would host an internal mirror of the 
> packages they need and rigorously vet them, that's not the world we live in.
> 
> I raise the issue because I believe the bar for taking over an abandoned name 
> should be nigh-insurmountably high; the risks are in my view severe, given 
> the way software is built today.
> 


If ~nobody is downloading it from PyPI today and ~nobody is releasing new 
versions to PyPI then re-using the name should have very little effect, even if 
in the past people had been using it. The only real use case I can think of 
where this might not be true is it could break someone’s ability to reproduce a 
deployment from many years ago but if you need to reproduce your build from 
years ago, depending on PyPI for that is not really the smartest bet. Otherwise 
it feels a lot like we’re in a “if a tree falls in the woods, but nobody is 
around to hear it does it make a sound?” territory.

One thing we could possibly do is provide the ability for, as part of the 
relqunishing process, “lock” the old versions that were uploaded so that the 
new owner can neither delete them or upload new files for them AND set a 
“minimum version” for new uploads for that project. This could mean that one 
could say that foobar < 4.0 is the old project and foobar >= 4.0 is the new 
project and existing == continue to work. I’m not sure I feel about that though.

Ultimately, consumers need to either live with these sorts of problems or they 
need to develop their own solutions for counteracting them (like vendoring) 
because while this proposed policy *could* cause them these issues, it’s not 
the only way for them to occur. Specifically, this only deals with cases that 
the original author is no longer responsive in some way, but fit hey are it’s 
typically not very hard in my experience to convince someone to give up a name 
they once used and are no longer interested in maintaining. I’ve acted as the 
middleman for this very arrangement on a number of occasions.

—
Donald Stufft



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