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 the ​BSD license. The source code repository is stored on ​GitHub.

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 also ​create a DjangoProject account and log in with that account.)

Once you've logged in with your GitHub account, please read ​our 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, please file a bug!

For a visual summary, Sarah Boyce, one of our Django Fellows has ​a 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 our ​guide 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 6.0. There is a roadmap document describing the process and timeline for this release.

The current stable branch is ​Django 5.2.

See the ​supported versions table for the current state of other versions.

Last modified 5 months ago Last modified on Apr 21, 2025, 8:04:05 AM
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