Mar 27, 2010: TurboGears 2.1b2
This release is a result of the overwhelming response from TurboGears Developers at Pycon 2010. Over 20 bugfixes were applied, with minor API changes. This will be our last beta before releasing a final candidate for 2.1. Please see the changelog.
Mar 21, 2010: TurboGears 1.1.1
The first bugfix release of the 1.1 branch is now available. Please see the changelog.
Jan 25, 2010: TurboGears 2.1b1
2.1 has reached reasonable enough stability to release a our first beta! This means that we are locking down the api, nothing will be added or removed, only bugfixes and critical changes will be made as we march towards a 2.1 final. Please see the changelog.
Nov 29, 2009: TurboGears 2.1a3
2.1a3 is primarily a bugfix release. Keeping with our month-long release cycle, there are very few changes. 2.1 is becoming more stable and therefore this will be the last alpha release before 2.1 moves into beta. Please see the changelog.
Oct 27, 2009: TurboGears 2.1a2
2.1a2 is primarily a bugfix release. The goals for this release were to provide fixes for many long-standing issues. We were also able to provide a 15-20% performance increase after reviewing some of the i18n code. Please see the changelog.
0ct 16, 2009: TurboGears 1.0.9 released
The TurboGears 1 team is pleased to announce the release of TurboGears 1.0.9, a maintenance version for the 1.0 branch. This has almost a year's worth of minor improvements and bug-fixes and also includes many fixes already available in the 1.1 release.
While you update your old TG 1.0.x applications, why don't you take the time to fill out our current TurboGears user survey? The survey will close on Sunday Oct, 18!
Oct 7, 2009: Take part in the TurboGears user survey!
Now that TurboGears 1.1 final is out, and with 2.1alpha just released, it is the perfect time to get some feedback from our users. We heartly invite you to take part in the online survey which we have prepared! It will only take you a few minutes and your input will be most valuable to us. We have questions about how you use TurboGears currently and about your expectations for TG 2.1 and further development in the TG 1 branch.
So why don't you head over to the survey right now?
Oct 4, 2009: TurboGears 1.1 final released!
The TurboGears 1 team is pleased to announce the release of TurboGears 1.1 final, the first stable version of the 1.1 branch. We made a few more important changes after the 1.1rc1 release candidate.
Turbogears 1.1 has been rather long in the making but this means that the current code has been running stable in production environments for several months now. 1.1 brings many, many small improvements and fixes and uses most of the same defaults as TG2 while being 100 percent compatible with TG1 applications. For more information on what's new, please see the changelog.
With TurboGears 1.1 out the door, the TurboGears 1 team will take some time to evaluate, where its efforts are best spent in the future. We are commmited to supporting the TurboGears 1 branch in the future (to prove it, we will isue a TurboGears 1.0.x maintenance release in the next few weeks) but we are interested to know, how you want Turbogears to evolve!. We will conduct a survey amongst TurboGears users and followers, which we are going to announce very soon, and we hope that many, many of you will participate! Stay tuned...
Oct 02, 2009: TurboGears 2.1 alpha
The TurboGears2 team has been hard at work making refinements to the TG 2.x codebase. These refinements are ready for a public alpha offering, with new docs, less dependencies, and better support for the Mako templating engine. Please help us test our new code against your applications. Our goal is to release 2.1 final by February 2010. changelog.
Sep 20, 2009: TurboGears 1.1 release candidate
The TurboGears 1 team is pleased to issue a release candidate for the first stable version of the 1.1 branch. This has been rather long in the making but this means that the current code has been running stable in production environments for several months now. 1.1 brings many, many small improvements and fixes and uses most of the same defaults as TG2 while being 100 percent compatible with TG1 applications. For more information, see the changelog.
May 27, 2009: TurboGears 2.0 available.
TurboGears 2 is the next stage in TurboGears development, and provides a solid base on which the future of TurboGears will be built. The 2.0 release does not spell the end of 1.0 support, and while it's new, there are already people using it in production. So, if you're interested in working with the latest turbogears, check out the new TG2 release, or just read up on it in the new docs. TurboGears 2 is designed to get you going with sane defaults and gets out of your way when you know what you want. We want to make easy things easy and still leave you in charge for since you know the needs of your application better than we do.
Dec 29, 2008: TurboGears 2.0 beta 1 released.
Thanks to the hard work of Florent, Chris, Jon, Christopher, Lee, Gustavo, Sanjiv,and many, many others we have been able to jump directly from 1.9.7 beta 2 to 2.0 beta 1.
TurboGears 2 is the next stage in TurboGears development, and provides an extraordinarybase on which the future of TurboGears will be built. We are rapidly aproaching a 2.0 final release very early in 2007. So, if you're the type that wants to live in the future today, check out the new TG2 release, or just read up on it in the new docs. But remember it's still a work in progress, so feel free to help us dust the cobwebs out of the corners and get ready for a full public release over the few weeks.
Dec 17, 2008: TurboGears 1.0.8 stable released.
Even during the TG2 sprint we think about our user base and do maintenance releases of TurboGears 1.0. Here is a bugfix only release for TurboGears 1.0 serie which fixes a few glitches with IE7. Some more improvements have been made that I'll let you discover in the changelog.
Dec 3, 2008: TurboGears 1.1b3 Plissken, released.
A new beta release for the 1.1 serie. A small typo slipped into the last beta version and has been fixed. Please enjoy this new beta version and give us as much feed back as possible in the next days.
Dec 2, 2008: TurboGears 1.1b2 Plissken, released.
A new beta release for the 1.1 serie. This brings even more features like a bootstrap commmand, i18n support for Genshi templates, an absolute url generation function, the possibility to choose the inclusion order of your widgets (think JS)... and many more enhancements and fixes.
Sep 15, 2008: TurboGears 1.0.7 stable released.
This version brings some more bug fixes that could not but included in the last 1.0.6 release, and also fixes a bug which was introduced in the previous release when backporting some identity stuff from the 1.1 branch. All 1.0 users who want to stay in 1.0 before trying out our new 1.1 beta should upgrade to this 1.0.7 release directly without using 1.0.6.
Sep 10, 2008: TurboGears 1.1 Plissken beta1 released.
To install this beta version you'll need to use easy_install and make sure you have an ORM installed (as easy as running "easy_install SQLAlchemy")
In 1.1 Plissken, the defaults have been changed and you now get Genshi as a rendering engine, and SQLAlchemy as an ORM when quickstarting a new project.
Please test, report bugs and glitches in the mailing list...
Aug 26, 2008: TurboGears 1.0.6 stable released.
The TurboGears team is proud to announce the 1.0.6 release of our web framework. This version adds some more stability and offers some new functionalities.
This release is a maintenance release to backport some enhancements and fixes that were found while working on the 1.1 upcoming release.
TurboGears 1.1 is nearing a beta release and will be available real soon for testing
TurboGears joins Google Summer of Code 2008!
TurboGears is excited to be a Google Summer of Code (GSoC) 2008 mentoring organisation!
We are looking for students who want to work on a TurboGears GSoC 2008 project during the Summer and to be part of the fascinating world of Python web frameworks and Open Source! Please help to spread the word and visit our central TurboGears GSoC page for project ideas, application rules, flyers and many other resources.
Jul 1, 2008: TurboGears 1.0.5 stable released.
This release was a maintenance release to prepare our teams to work mainly on the 1.1 branch.
Mar 7, 2008: TurboGears 1.0.4.4 stable released.
The TurboGears team is proud to announce the 1.0.4.4 release of the megaframework. This version adds some more stability and offers even more functionality.
This release marks a turning point in the TurboGears evolution because starting at this date the 1.1 branch becomes our main development branch and will see the new defaults (Genshi, SQLAlchemy) proposed to the public.
We still support SQLObject and Kid, and will continue to do so in the 1.0 & 1.1 branches for security fixes and important bugfixes.
Jan 21, 2008: TurboGears 1.0.4 stable released.
This version includes the security fix mentioned below and fixes many bugs. It follows a long beta cycle that helped us eliminate a lot of problems and polish this release with love to give you an even better TurboGears framework.
Enjoy!
Important Security Notice
CherryPy 2.3.0 has been released and contains an important security fix.
We just released two versions of TurboGears to make sure all new
installs are using the safe version of CherryPy.
If you are using our stable version please upgrade to TurboGears
>= 1.0.3.3. If you are using our beta version please upgrade to
TurboGears >= 1.0.4b5.
If you do not want to change the version you are using for any reason, but are using file based sessions with CherryPy please upgrade your CherryPy server immediately using the following command:
easy_install -UZ "Cherrypy==2.3.0"
Update: There is a stable release for TurboGears 1.0.4 available now. We suggest that you upgrade to the latest stable version 1.0.4.3.




