The package with most versions still listed on PyPI is spanishconjugator [2], which consistently published ~240 releases per month between 2020 and 2024.
Regarding spanishconjugator, commit ec4cb98 has description "Remove automatic bumping of version".
Prior to that commit, a cronjob would run the 'bumpVersion.yml' workflow four times a day, which in turn executes the bump2version python module to increase the patch level. [0]
Tangential, but I've only heard about BigQuery from people being surprised with gargantuan bills for running one query on a public dataset. Is there a "safe" way to use it with a cost limit, for example?
Yes you can set price caps. The cost of a query is understandable ahead of time with the default pricing model ($6 per TB of data processed in a query). People usually get caught out by running expensive queries recursively. BigQuery is very cost effective and can be used safely.
> spanishconjugator [2], which consistently published ~240 releases per month between 2020 and 2024
They also stopped updating major and minor versions after hitting 2.3 in Sept 2020. Would be interesting to hear the rationale behind the versioning strategy. Feels like you might as well use a datetimestamp for the version.
I hate to deride the entire community, but many of the collective community decisions are smells. I think that the low barrier to entry means that the community has many inexperienced influential people.
A lot of these decisions were made after Javascript went "enterprise" to make it seem more like a "serious" programming language to SV entrepreneurs by a small number of corporations, not necessarily the community.
The bar for entry was always low with javascript, but it also used to be a lot more sane when it was a publicly-driven language.
The Julia General registry is locally stored as a tar.gz and has version info for all registered packages, so I tried this out for Julia packages. The top 5 are:
So, no crazy numbers or random unknown packages, all are major packages that have just had a lot of work and history to them. Out of the top 10, pretty much half were from the SciML ecosystem.
Caveats/constraints: Like the post, this ignores non-SemVer packages (which mostly used date-based versions) and also jll (binary wrapper) packages which just use their underlying C libraries' versions. Among jlls, the largest that isn't a date afaict is NEO_jll with 25.31.34666+0 as its version.
Incidentally I once ran into a mature package that had lived in the 0.0.x lane forever and treated every release as a patch, racking up a huge version number, and I had to remind the maintainer that users depending with caret ranges won't get those updates automatically. (In semver caret ranges never change the leftmost non-zero digit; in 0.0.x that digit is the patch version, so ^0.0.123 is just a hard pin to 0.0.123). There may occasionally be valid reasons to stay on 0.0.x though (e.g. @types/web).
It's the type definitions for developing chrome extensions. They'd been incrementing in the 0.0.x lane for almost a decade and bumped it to 0.1.0 after I raised the issue, so I doubt it was intentional:
This is part of the DefinitelyTyped project. DT tends to get a lot of one-off contributions just for fixing the one error a dev is experiencing. So maybe they all just copied the version incrementing that previous commits had done, and no one in particular ever took the responsibility to say "this is ready now".
Anthony Fu’s epoch versioning scheme (to differentiate breaking change majors from "marketing" majors) could yield easy winners here, at least on the raw version number alone (not the number of sequential versions released):
I don't know if this is the origin, but the semver spec says 0.x.y is unstable. Sure, not everybody uses semver, but it is popular enough for people to make incorrect assumptions.
If it's baked into the tool (can run offline) then it would be unavoidable, need a new version to get a new release on the package manager.
1.2.3 -> 1.2.3+1 (or +anything, date, whatever) could arguably be idiomatic semver though - that's what you do for packaging changes, like updating the description or categories to file it under etc. without actually changing the program.
Well, we are looking at npm packages, where every package is supposed to follow semantic versioning. The fact that we don't have date as version number means everyone is a good citizen.
The "winner" just had its 3000th release on GitHub, already a few patch versions past the version referenced in this article (which was published today): https://github.com/wppconnect-team/wa-version
I made a fairly significant (dumb) mistake in the logic for extracting valid semver versions. I was doing a falsy check, so if any of major/minor/patch in the version was a 0, the whole package was ignored.
Hmm yeah, I decided that one counts because the new packages have (slightly) different content, although it might be the case that the changes are junk/pointless anyway.
Brief reminder/clarification that these tools are used to circumvent WhatsApp ToS, and that they are used to:
1- Spam
2- Scam
3- Avoid paying for Whatsapp API (which is the only form of monetization)
And that the reason this thing gets so many updates is probably because of a mouse and cat game where Meta updates their software continuously to avoid these types of hacks and the maintainers do so as well, whether in automated or manual fashion.
Considering the 18 billions price tag and the current mixing of user data between meta and WhatsApp I believe that meta has now revenue streams in mind than just the API pricing
> Time to fetch version data for each one of those packages: ~12 hours (yikes)
The author could improve the batching in fetchAllPackageData by not waiting for all 50 (BATCH_SIZE) promises to resolve at once. I just published a package for proper promise batching last week: https://www.npmjs.com/package/promises-batched
Just spin up a loop of 50 call chains. When one completes you just do the next on next tick. It's like 3 lines of code. No libraries needed. Then you're always doing 50 at a time. You can still use await.
async work() { await thing(); nextTick(work); }
for(to 50) { work(); }
then maybe a separate timer to check how many tasks are active I guess.
Promise.all waits for all 50 promises to resolve, so if one of these promises takes 3s, while the other 49 are taking 0.5s, you're waisting 2.5s awaiting each batch.
Why not write all of our applications on one file? Why bother using (language specific) modules? To take your argument to the logical extreme, DRY is a fanatical doomsday computer science cult.
> I was recently working on a project that uses the AWS SDK for JavaScript. When updating the dependencies in said project, I noticed that the version of that dependency was v3.888.0. Eight hundred eighty eight. That’s a big number as far as versions go.
It also isn’t the first AWS SDK. A few of us in… 2012 IIRC… wrote the first one because AWS didn’t think node was worth an SDK.
Haha, good luck finding a real project that holds that title. It's always some squatted name, a dependency confusion experiment, or a troll publishing a package with version 99999.99999.99999 just to see what breaks. The "king" of that hill changes all the time. Just another day in the NPM circus.
For Python (or PyPI) this is easier, since their data is available on Google BigQuery [1], so you can just run
The winner is: https://pypi.org/project/elvisgogo/#historyThe package with most versions still listed on PyPI is spanishconjugator [2], which consistently published ~240 releases per month between 2020 and 2024.
[1] https://console.cloud.google.com/bigquery?p=bigquery-public-...
[2] https://pypi.org/project/spanishconjugator/#history
Regarding spanishconjugator, commit ec4cb98 has description "Remove automatic bumping of version".
Prior to that commit, a cronjob would run the 'bumpVersion.yml' workflow four times a day, which in turn executes the bump2version python module to increase the patch level. [0]
Edit: discussed here: https://github.com/Benedict-Carling/spanish-conjugator/issue...
[0] https://github.com/Benedict-Carling/spanish-conjugator/commi...
i love the package owner’s response in that issue xD
You can also query for free at clickpy.clickhouse.com. If you click on any of the links on the visuals you can see the query used.
The underlying dataset is hosted at sql.clickhouse.com e.g. https://sql.clickhouse.com/?query=U0VMRUNUIGNvdW50KCkgICBGUk...
disclaimer: built this a a while ago but we maintain this at clickhouse
oh and rubygems data is also there.
Here [0] is the partial query on the ClickHouse dataset, with different results due to a quota error [1].
[0] https://sql.clickhouse.com?query=U0VMRUNUIHByb2plY3QsIE1BWCh...
[1] Quota read limit exceeded. Results may be incomplete.
Tangential, but I've only heard about BigQuery from people being surprised with gargantuan bills for running one query on a public dataset. Is there a "safe" way to use it with a cost limit, for example?
Yes you can set price caps. The cost of a query is understandable ahead of time with the default pricing model ($6 per TB of data processed in a query). People usually get caught out by running expensive queries recursively. BigQuery is very cost effective and can be used safely.
> spanishconjugator [2], which consistently published ~240 releases per month between 2020 and 2024
They also stopped updating major and minor versions after hitting 2.3 in Sept 2020. Would be interesting to hear the rationale behind the versioning strategy. Feels like you might as well use a datetimestamp for the version.
> there are over 2800 legacy mixed-case packages, many of which have the same spelling as other existing lowercase packages
This is insane
I hate to deride the entire community, but many of the collective community decisions are smells. I think that the low barrier to entry means that the community has many inexperienced influential people.
A lot of these decisions were made after Javascript went "enterprise" to make it seem more like a "serious" programming language to SV entrepreneurs by a small number of corporations, not necessarily the community.
The bar for entry was always low with javascript, but it also used to be a lot more sane when it was a publicly-driven language.
The Julia General registry is locally stored as a tar.gz and has version info for all registered packages, so I tried this out for Julia packages. The top 5 are:
So, no crazy numbers or random unknown packages, all are major packages that have just had a lot of work and history to them. Out of the top 10, pretty much half were from the SciML ecosystem.Caveats/constraints: Like the post, this ignores non-SemVer packages (which mostly used date-based versions) and also jll (binary wrapper) packages which just use their underlying C libraries' versions. Among jlls, the largest that isn't a date afaict is NEO_jll with 25.31.34666+0 as its version.
You might want to try a different storing strategy. 0.25 is above 0.4. These are, I believe, what are called in Unix flags "human numbers".
I understood the list is ordered by biggest number, aka 189 > 172 > 161 > 159 > 120
Incidentally I once ran into a mature package that had lived in the 0.0.x lane forever and treated every release as a patch, racking up a huge version number, and I had to remind the maintainer that users depending with caret ranges won't get those updates automatically. (In semver caret ranges never change the leftmost non-zero digit; in 0.0.x that digit is the patch version, so ^0.0.123 is just a hard pin to 0.0.123). There may occasionally be valid reasons to stay on 0.0.x though (e.g. @types/web).
Presumably they’re following https://0ver.org/
Maybe that is intentional? Which package is it?
It's the type definitions for developing chrome extensions. They'd been incrementing in the 0.0.x lane for almost a decade and bumped it to 0.1.0 after I raised the issue, so I doubt it was intentional:
https://www.npmjs.com/package/@types/chrome?activeTab=versio...
This is part of the DefinitelyTyped project. DT tends to get a lot of one-off contributions just for fixing the one error a dev is experiencing. So maybe they all just copied the version incrementing that previous commits had done, and no one in particular ever took the responsibility to say "this is ready now".
threejs ?
Anthony Fu’s epoch versioning scheme (to differentiate breaking change majors from "marketing" majors) could yield easy winners here, at least on the raw version number alone (not the number of sequential versions released):
https://antfu.me/posts/epoch-semver
> People often assume that a zero-major version indicates that the software is not ready for production
I wonder why. Conventions that are being broken, maybe.
I don't know if this is the origin, but the semver spec says 0.x.y is unstable. Sure, not everybody uses semver, but it is popular enough for people to make incorrect assumptions.
https://semver.org/#spec-item-4
I agree with that sentiment.
If the guy writing and maintaining the software is stating "this software is not stable yet" then who am I to disagree?
One of the 'winners' I randomly googled.
> carrot-scan -> 27708 total versions
> Command-line tool for detecting vulnerabilities in files and directories.
I can't help but feel there is something absurd about this.
Each version is likely a new vulnerability that got submitted, doesn't seem that weird.
Shouldn't vulnerabilities be "data" in this context? You bump the vulns database but keep the code at the same version if the logic is the same.
If it's baked into the tool (can run offline) then it would be unavoidable, need a new version to get a new release on the package manager.
1.2.3 -> 1.2.3+1 (or +anything, date, whatever) could arguably be idiomatic semver though - that's what you do for packaging changes, like updating the description or categories to file it under etc. without actually changing the program.
So 19494 is the largest? That's far lower than I expected. There's nobody out there that has put a date in a version number (e.g., 20250915)?
Well, we are looking at npm packages, where every package is supposed to follow semantic versioning. The fact that we don't have date as version number means everyone is a good citizen.
https://docs.npmjs.com/about-semantic-versioning
The "winner" just had its 3000th release on GitHub, already a few patch versions past the version referenced in this article (which was published today): https://github.com/wppconnect-team/wa-version
After double-checking some things, the real winner is actually: https://github.com/nice-registry/all-the-package-names
I made a fairly significant (dumb) mistake in the logic for extracting valid semver versions. I was doing a falsy check, so if any of major/minor/patch in the version was a 0, the whole package was ignored.
The post has been updated to reflect this.
This package also seems to just have a misbehaving github action that is in a loop.
Hmm yeah, I decided that one counts because the new packages have (slightly) different content, although it might be the case that the changes are junk/pointless anyway.
Brief reminder/clarification that these tools are used to circumvent WhatsApp ToS, and that they are used to:
1- Spam 2- Scam 3- Avoid paying for Whatsapp API (which is the only form of monetization)
And that the reason this thing gets so many updates is probably because of a mouse and cat game where Meta updates their software continuously to avoid these types of hacks and the maintainers do so as well, whether in automated or manual fashion.
Considering the 18 billions price tag and the current mixing of user data between meta and WhatsApp I believe that meta has now revenue streams in mind than just the API pricing
> Time to fetch version data for each one of those packages: ~12 hours (yikes)
The author could improve the batching in fetchAllPackageData by not waiting for all 50 (BATCH_SIZE) promises to resolve at once. I just published a package for proper promise batching last week: https://www.npmjs.com/package/promises-batched
What's the benefit of promises like this here?
Just spin up a loop of 50 call chains. When one completes you just do the next on next tick. It's like 3 lines of code. No libraries needed. Then you're always doing 50 at a time. You can still use await.
async work() { await thing(); nextTick(work); }
for(to 50) { work(); }
then maybe a separate timer to check how many tasks are active I guess.
Promise.all waits for all 50 promises to resolve, so if one of these promises takes 3s, while the other 49 are taking 0.5s, you're waisting 2.5s awaiting each batch.
The implementation is rather simple, but more than 3 LoC: https://github.com/whilenot-dev/promises-batched/blob/main/s...
I know. My point is you can do better without a library.
Why not write all of our applications on one file? Why bother using (language specific) modules? To take your argument to the logical extreme, DRY is a fanatical doomsday computer science cult.
Worried about being rate limited or DoSing the server.
Sure, the need for backpressure occurs anyway, regardless of batching optimization.
Couldn't find any specific rate limit numbers besides the one mentioned here[0] from 2019:
> Up to five million requests to the registry per month are considered acceptable at this time
[0]: https://blog.npmjs.org/post/187698412060/acceptible-use.html
Ah this is cool, thanks!
Large number of released packages due to renovatebot / dependabot patching + release automation!
If this was an actual measurement of productivity that bot deserves a raise!
I wonder if the author could have replicated the couchdb database locally to make their life easier.
> I was recently working on a project that uses the AWS SDK for JavaScript. When updating the dependencies in said project, I noticed that the version of that dependency was v3.888.0. Eight hundred eighty eight. That’s a big number as far as versions go.
It also isn’t the first AWS SDK. A few of us in… 2012 IIRC… wrote the first one because AWS didn’t think node was worth an SDK.
Haha, good luck finding a real project that holds that title. It's always some squatted name, a dependency confusion experiment, or a troll publishing a package with version 99999.99999.99999 just to see what breaks. The "king" of that hill changes all the time. Just another day in the NPM circus.
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