Version 4 (modified by Matt Deacalion Stevens, 11 years ago) ( diff )

Update the ‘Django Development Dashboard’ link

Django's contribution data

Inspired by David Eaves, here's some information on accessing Django's contribution data.

Please take it, mash it up, and show us the results!

If there's other data you'd like to see, please get in touch (jacob -at- jacobian.org) and let me know what you'd like to see. I'll do my best!

Trac's database

Data dumps out of Trac, our ticket tracking software. You could use this to get information about our ticket workflow, patches, etc.

There's two ways to access the data: Trac's RPC interface and the daily data dumps.

Daily data dumps

These are direct data dumps of the Trac database, collected nightly, in various formats. They're sanitized to remove some tables with sensitive info (session data, etc.) but are otherwise complete.

Dumps are currently available in the following formats:

  • CSV (tar'd & bzipped directory; one CSV file per table; ~35MB).

The database schema is documented at http://trac.edgewall.org/wiki/TracDev/DatabaseSchema. The most interesting tables are probabably the ticket and ticket_change tables. ticket_change, in particular, contains each change ever made to a ticket and so probably has some of the most itnersting data available.

Trac's RPC interface

Trac has a XML-RPC and JSON-RPC interface. You view some documentation of these APIs at:

https://code.djangoproject.com/xmlrpc

Note

You'll need to be logged in to access this page and to access the data. If you need to create an account, the sign-up page is at https://www.djangoproject.com/accounts/register/.

The base URLs you'll use for for the XML-RPC and JSON-RPC APIs is:

https://{username}:{password}@code.djangoproject.com/login/rpc

The easiest way to access these APIs is with Python's xmlrpclib library. Here's a quick example:

>>> import xmlrpclib
>>> rpc_url = "https://USERNAME:PASSWORD@code.djangoproject.com/login/rpc"
>>> trac = xmlrpclib.ServerProxy(rpc_url)

# Get a single ticket's info.
>>> ticket, time_created, time_changed, attributes = trac.ticket.get(1337)
>>> attributes['resolution']
'wontfix'

# Perform a search. - counts the open (i.e. not-closed) tickets.
# Query syntax is documented at http://trac.edgewall.org/wiki/TracQuery#QueryLanguage
>>> not_closed = trac.ticket.query('status=!closed&max=5000')
>>> len(not_closed)
1850

Please be careful here. There are APIs that write data and using them could look like spam, so please ask me (jacob -at- jacobian.org) for permission first!

Repository data/dumps

Data and dumps from our source control repository. You could use this to mine information about who's committing code, when, etc.

There are a few ways of accessing this data: Querying the SVN repo, the GitHub API, and SVN data dumps in a variety of formats.

Querying the SVN repo

Django's SVN repository is at http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/; you can use the svn client binary to interact with this as a sort of "API". In particular, most svn commands take a --xml argument to return data in XML. For example, to get information about a particular commit you might do something like:

$ svn log http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk -r1234 --xml
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<log>
<logentry
   revision="1234">
<author>jacob</author>
<date>2005-11-14T18:50:13.298556Z</date>
<msg>Added NOINDEX tag to debug 500 page (for robots)</msg>
</logentry>
</log>

There are also a number of libraries in Python (and other languages) that can access SVN directly. pysvn seems to be a popular choice.

The GitHub API

Django's repository is mirrored onto GitHub (http://github.com/django/django), which means you can use GitHub's API to to pull commit data. For example:

$ curl -i https://api.github.com/repos/django/django/git/commits/a0d59b49019d65b38c5612eb0b4fab0bb37271ae
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Server: nginx/1.0.4
Date: Wed, 07 Sep 2011 16:38:12 GMT
Content-Type: application/json
Connection: keep-alive
Status: 200 OK
X-RateLimit-Limit: 5000
X-RateLimit-Remaining: 4994
Content-Length: 995

{
  "parents": [
    {
      "url": "https://api.github.com/repos/django/django/git/commits/6465e005fd564bd75ba64f2f09d5824ed2455c9c",
      "sha": "6465e005fd564bd75ba64f2f09d5824ed2455c9c"
    }
  ],
  "committer": {
    "date": "2005-11-14T10:50:13-08:00",
    "name": "jacob",
    "email": "jacob@bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37"
  },
  "author": {
    "date": "2005-11-14T10:50:13-08:00",
    "name": "jacob",
    "email": "jacob@bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37"
  },
  "message": "Added NOINDEX tag to debug 500 page (for robots)\n\ngit-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@1234 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37\n",
  "url": "https://api.github.com/repos/django/django/git/commits/a0d59b49019d65b38c5612eb0b4fab0bb37271ae",
  "sha": "a0d59b49019d65b38c5612eb0b4fab0bb37271ae",
  "tree": {
    "url": "https://api.github.com/repos/django/django/git/trees/a5d296a396f5bbf70d074ce09fa947f95cd91523",
    "sha": "a5d296a396f5bbf70d074ce09fa947f95cd91523"
  }
}

SVN data dumps

Finally, for convenience, we provide a couple of full dumps of repository data for off-line processing:

  • Complete SVN log (bzipped XML; ~1 MB). This is the complete output of svn log --xml.
  • Full SVN dump (bziiped SVN dump; ~200 MB, expands to ~ 1.8 GB). This is the result of a svnadmin dump.

Each dump is updated nightly.

Mashups

If you create a mashup, please add it here!

Questions?

If you've got questions, please contact Jacob Kaplan-Moss (jacob -at- jacobian.org).

Note: See TracWiki for help on using the wiki.
Back to Top