"Warn about PyPy being unmaintained"

(github.com)

155 points | by networked 7 hours ago

12 comments

  • mattip 2 hours ago
    PyPy core dev here. If anyone is interested in helping out, either financially or with coding, we can be reached various ways. See https://pypy.org/contact.html
  • pansa2 2 hours ago
    PyPy is a fantastic achievement and deserves far more support than it gets. Microsoft’s “Faster CPython” team tried to make Python 5x faster but only achieved ~1.5x in four years - meanwhile PyPy has been running at over 5x faster for decades.

    On the other hand, I always got the impression that the main goal of PyPy is to be a research project (on meta-tracing, STM etc) rather than a replacement for CPython in production.

    Maybe that, plus the core Python team’s indifference towards non-CPython implementations, is why it doesn’t get the recognition it deserves.

    • mattip 1 hour ago
      Third party libraries like SciPy scikit-learn, pandas, tensorflow and pytorch have been critical to python’s success. Since CPython is written in C and exposes a nice C API, those libraries can leverage it to quickly move from (slow) python to (fast) C/C++, hitting an optimum between speed of development and speed of runtime.

      PyPy’s alternative, CFFI, was not attractive enough for the big players to adopt. And HPy, another alternative that would have played better with Cython and friends came too late in the game, by that time PyPy development had lost momentum.

      • toxik 52 minutes ago
        PyPy on numpy heavy code is often a lot slower than CPython
  • the_jeremy 4 hours ago
    If anyone else is also barely aware and confused by the similar names, PyPI is the Python Package Index, which is up and maintained. PyPy is "A fast, compliant alternative implementation of Python." which doesn't have enough devs to release a version for 3.12[0].

    [0]: https://github.com/orgs/pypy/discussions/5145

    • darkwater 1 hour ago
      Thanks for the clarification. On top of that, being an issue in the 'uv' GitHub repo (uv installs packages from PyPi) made my brain easily cross the letters.
    • cjfd 11 minutes ago
      The short summary of it being that these people are beyond terrible at giving names to things.
    • tpoacher 16 minutes ago
      and mypy is "an optional static type checker for Python" [0]

      Given that both pypy (through RPython) and mypy deal with static type checks in some sense, I kept confusing the two projects until recently.

      Also, I just learnt (from another comment in this post) about mypyc [1], which seems to complete the circle somehow in my mind.

        [0] https://www.mypy-lang.org/
        [1] https://github.com/mypyc/mypyc
    • blahgeek 2 hours ago
      Reminds me of Cython vs CPython
    • Muhammad523 3 hours ago
      Thanks. I knew this already but keep forgetting and getting confused
    • with 3 hours ago
      Thanks, I also saw this as PyPI and was confused, lol
      • chii 2 hours ago
        now somebody just needs to make a PiPy for the raspberry pi
        • f1shy 58 minutes ago
          Please don’t give ideas
        • zugi 2 hours ago
          Is that PiPyPy or PiPyPI?
  • cfbolztereick 45 minutes ago
    PyPy isn't unmaintained. We are certainly fixing bugs and are occasionally improving the jit. However, the remaining core devs (me among them) don't have the capacity to keep up with cpython. So for supporting new cpython versions we'll need new people to step up. For 3.12 this has started, we have a new contributor who is pushing this along.
  • aragilar 4 hours ago
    Somewhat interesting that "volunteer project no longer under active development" got changed to "unmaintained".
    • maxloh 4 hours ago
      For context, they have 2 to 4 commits per month since October [1]. The last release was July 2025 [2].

      [1]: https://github.com/pypy/pypy/commits/main/

      [2]: https://github.com/pypy/pypy/tags

    • electroglyph 1 hour ago
      much respect to the PyPy contributors, but it seems like a pretty fair assessment
      • swiftcoder 1 hour ago
        9 months since the last major release definitely feels like a short time in which to declare time-of-death on an open source project
        • tempay 55 minutes ago
          It’s been a lot longer than that. There was a reasonable sized effort to provide binaries via conda-forge but the users never came. That said, the PyPy devs were always a pleasure to work with.
    • killingtime74 4 hours ago
      What euphemism do you prefer then...
      • aragilar 2 hours ago
        There's a difference between dead (i.e. "unmaintained") and low activity ("not under active development"). From what I can see PyPy is in the latter category (and being in that category does not mean it's going to die soon), so choosing to claim it is unmaintained is notable.
        • Hamuko 2 hours ago
          Being three major versions behind CPython is definitely not a great sign for the long-term viability of it.
          • saghm 1 hour ago
            I'm not sure "major versions" is the most correct term here, but I think your point is spot on
            • Hamuko 1 hour ago
              For Python, 0.1 increases are major versions and 1.0 increases are cataclysmic shifts.
      • kev009 4 hours ago
        Undermaintained might be more suited since it does have life but doesn't appear commercially healthy nor apparently relevant to other communities.
  • didip 4 hours ago
    wow, that would be a big shame. I hope many of the useful learnings are already ported to CPython.
    • mkl 4 hours ago
      Almost none of it will have been ported to CPython, as it's a completely different approach.
      • skissane 3 hours ago
        I really like PyPy’s approach of using a Python dialect (RPython) as the implementation language, instead of C. From a conceptual perspective, it is much more elegant. And there are other C-like Python dialects now too - Cython, mypy’s mypyc. It would be a shame if PyPy dies.
  • moktonar 40 minutes ago
    Thank you for all the work guys, I’ll see how I can help.
  • scosman 2 hours ago
    Read as PyPi and almost had heart attack
  • doctorpangloss 3 hours ago
    knowing pypy has good implementations of a lot of behavior it helped me fix multiprocessing in Maya's python interpreter, fixing stuff like torch running inside of Maya.

    it's too bad. it is a great project for a million little use cases.

  • anonnon 2 hours ago
    Odd how you still see announcements of this nature if Anthropic's marketing is be believed.
    • jorvi 53 minutes ago
      Yup.

      For me the biggest signifier is Spotify. They claim their (best) devs don't even code anymore, they use an internal AI tool that they just send prompts to which then checks out a personal test build that they can download off of Slack. "A new feature in 10 minutes!"

      Okay, if that is the case, why have we only seen like 3-4 minor new QoL improvements in Spotify the last ~12 months, with no new grand features? And why haven't they fired 95% of their devs and let the remaining elite go buckwild with Claude?

      The Emperor really has no clothes.

    • QQ00 1 hour ago
      Anthropic released vibe coded C compiler that doesn't work, how their LLM can help in maintaining PyPy?
    • Hamuko 2 hours ago
      Most maintainers don't have a stack of cash to throw at tokens.
      • croddin 1 hour ago
        They don’t need to throw a stack of cash at them, Anthropic and OpenAI have programs for open source maintainers.

        https://claude.com/contact-sales/claude-for-oss https://openai.com/form/codex-for-oss/

        • Hamuko 1 hour ago
          I'd say they're less of "programs" as they are "six-month trials". What's the plan after six months?

          And for what's it worth, PyPy isn't even eligible for the Claude trial because they have a meager 1700 stars on GitHub.

          • blitzar 28 minutes ago
            > What's the plan after six months?

            An unmaintainable mass of Ai slop code and the decision to either pay the ai tax or abandon the project.

    • dapperdrake 2 hours ago
      "You're completely right. That mushroom is poisonous."
  • Imustaskforhelp 3 hours ago
    @kvinogradov (Open source endowment), I am (Pinging?) you because I think that you may be of help as I remember you stating that within the Open source endowment and the approach of how & which open source projects are better funded[0]

    And I think that PyPy might be of interest to the Fund for sponsoring given its close to unmaintained. PyPy is really great in general speeding up Python[1] by magnitudes of order.

    Maybe the fund could be of help in order to help paying the maintainer who are underfunded which lead to the situation being unmaintained in the first place. Pinging you because I am interested to hear your response and hopefully, see PyPy having better funding model for its underfunded maintainers.

    [0]: https://endowment.dev/about/#model

    [1]: https://benjdd.com/languages2/ (Refer to PyPY and Python difference being ~15x)

    • skissane 3 hours ago
      > @kvinogradov (Open source endowment), I am (Pinging?) you

      unfortunately, @-pinging does not work on this site, it does nothing to notify anyone. If you want to get a specific person’s attention, use off-site communication mechanisms

    • pinkmuffinere 2 hours ago
      HN doesn’t have this sort of pinging behavior :/
  • shevy-java 1 hour ago
    What annoys me is the name. Early morning it took me a moment to realise that PyPy is not PyPi, so at first I thought they referred to PyPi. Really, just for the name confusion alone, one of those two should have to go.

    Edit: I understand the underlying issue and the PyPy developer's opinion. I don't disagree on that part; I only refer to the name similarity as a problem.