Date: March 1, 2023
Introduction
The Deprecation Working Group focuses primarily on managing deprecation processes. Our primary goal is to get duplicate/unsupported/useless code removed from the platform.
Consider this report as a compilation of what we’ve done over the past year, what we’re looking at doing in the next 6 months, and a wider vision of the group’s future beyond that.
Accomplishments
Over the past year, our major accomplishments were:
EdxRestApiClient replacement happened, so we are no longer dependent on the Slumber library, which has not been supported for a few years now.
Removed old UI pages that have been replaced by MFEs from edx-platform. These UIs were not very well supported and were difficult to continue to maintain.
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Further, we’ve made significant progress on the following initiatives:
Removal of Old (Draft) Mongo Modulestore. We have too many modulestores for course content on our system. We are closer to getting rid of one of them.
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We continue to engage in a set of ongoing tasks; these tasks are work we need to be sure we’re doing on a regular basis, but we don’t want to lose sight of their importance. Those tasks are:
We review the Deprecation Board and work to move things all the way to ‘fully removed’.
We review the deprecation processes and OEP to ensure that the process is as smooth and as easy as it possibly can be.
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Concrete Plans - Next 6 Months
Over the next six months, the deprecation working group has some really exciting work queued up. We hope to drive {key metrics, description of impact, etc}. Our primary goals are to {work on / complete / another word} the following tasks and projects:
Task/project 1; 1-2 sentences of importance/impact
Task/project 2; 1-2 sentences of importance/impact
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If applicable: Links to roadmaps/GitHub projects/important wiki pages/etc
Optional: We’ll provide a deeper dive into (name project(s) you’ll deep dive into) later in this report.
Deep Dive: Accomplishment/In-progress Initiative/Ongoing Task/Concrete Plan (Optional)
Use this section to write or link to deep dives into any of your accomplishments or initiatives that would benefit the community to know more about. You can assume readers at this point will have the background knowledge to understand this being written in industry jargon. You may have as few or many “Deep Dive” links as you’d like. If you don’t have a place to post deep-dive content at the moment, consider posting them as blog posts on the Open edX site.