I see there's open pull requests on
https://github.com/tornadoweb/tornado/pulls going back years. There's of course merged ones in between and there is discussion and there's been a release in the end of August. My own PR has been left uncommented for a couple of weeks now. Have the Web frameworks moved on and left Tornado behind?
In any case -- and I am curious -- is Tornado a bit on the back-burner and/or development is delegated to contributors? I assume the reigns -- permissions to merge into `master` and all the CI/CD needed to actually release new version(s) -- are then not just in Ben Darnell's hands? Or are they?
Again, my asking isn't necessarily a concern, it's just that looking at the codebase, there's all manner of code well predating e.g. `asyncio` and it might suggest either strong desire for backwards-compatibility (a commendable goal if you ask me) _or_ it may suggest -- when taking into account the observations above -- stagnation?
There's per se nothing wrong with PRs being left unattended for weeks -- as long as there is indication the project is very much alive. The mailing list has had 6 new discussions this year, so I am not sure what to conclude, really.
Anyway, our organisation has been using Tornado as part of our open-source Python services end of things, with good success, I guess I am making an effort trying to plan ahead. Yes I know we can fork it or abandon it in favour of something else (there's certainly _choice_), but would be "last resort" in my opinion.
Best regards,