Django's bug tracker and wiki
Django is an open source project, run by volunteers - people just like you! We need your help to make Django as good as it can possibly be.
Django is available under theBSD license. The source code repository is stored onGitHub.
Getting involved
Much of Django's infrastructure is hosted on GitHub, or uses a GitHub login. To log a ticket, or add content to this wiki,log in with a GitHub account. (You may alsocreate a DjangoProject account andlog in with that account.)
Once you've logged in with your GitHub account, please readour contribution guide. This document describes how the Django community works, and the various ways you can contribute. If this document doesn't answer your questions, pleasefile a bug!
For a visual summary, Sarah Boyce, one of our Django Fellows hasa video providing an overview of the contribution process. It doesn't replace the contribution document, but may be a helpful first step.
If you've read that document, and are looking for a way to contribute, why not try one of the following:
- Tickets: View active tickets, make bug reports and contribute feature requests.If your bug report is a security issue, DO NOT report it with a ticket. Please read ourguide to reporting security issues.
- "Easy Pickings" Tickets: Work on simple tickets to get familiar with Django's code base and the contribution process.
- DjangoDesign: Are you a designer rather than a coder? We still want your input. Let us know how we can improve on Django's visual/UX design.
Django release process
The current branch under active development is Django 6.1. There is aroadmap document describing the process and timeline for this release.
The current stable branch isDjango 6.0.
See thesupported versions table for the current state of other versions.