/***************************************************************** * Release Notes: SquirrelMail 1.4.0 Release Candidate 2a * * 24 January 2002 * *****************************************************************/ In this edition of SquirrelMail Release Notes: * All about this Release!!! * A note on PHP 4.3.x * Major updates * A note on plugins * Reporting my favorite SquirrelMail 1.4 bug All about this Release!!! ========================= This is the second and hopefully last Release Candidate (RC) for the 1.4.x stable series. Please note that this release is not yet labeled STABLE officially. It is labeled RC 2a because RC 2 was released but pulled back soon after because a serious bug was found that needed to be fixed. Thanks to Jason Munro for discovering this bug. However, we've been running this on a number of systems and a variety of configs and we think it's worthy of the "stable"-title. Before we can call it stable we want to test it on as many systems as possible to iron out the last issues. In response to RC1, quite some issues were reported AND fixed! We now hope that SquirrelMail is really ready to be called STABLE. We need you to verify that this is true! So download it! Install it, and try to break it! We are hungry for any bug report you send. Even the smallest issue deserves to be fixed. A note on PHP 4.3.x =================== While the developers realize that PHP 4.3.x is the "latest and greatest" version of PHP to be available, SquirrelMail has not been extensively tested with it. There may be potential session issues with PHP 4.3.x, and PHP by default has a session warning which will need to be disabled if you wish to use it with SquirrelMail. Put simply: The SquirrelMail team does not recommend the use of PHP 4.3.x with SquirrelMail at this time. SquirrelMail will put a large ugly warning about the use of PHP 4.3.x on the login screen unless you add "$shootMyFootOff = true;" to config/config_local.php, or downgrade PHP. Major updates ============== The 1.4.0 series (as a result of 1.3 devel series) brings: * A complete rewrite of the way we send mail (Deliver-class), and of the way we parse mail (MIME-bodystructure parsing). This makes SquirrelMail more reliable and more efficient at the same time! * Support for IMAP UID which makes SquirrelMail more reliable. * Optimizations to code and the number of IMAP calls. * Support for a wider range of authentication mechanisms. * Lots of bugfixes and a couple of UI-tweaks. A note on plugins ================= There have been major plugin architecture improvements. Lots of plugins have not yet been adapted to this. Plugins which are distributed with this release (eg. in the same .tar.gz file) should work. Plugins not distributed with this plugin most probably WILL NOT WORK. So if you have ANY problem at all, first try turning off all plugins. A note on your configuration ============================ For a whole bunch of reasons, it is MANDATORY that you run conf.pl (and then save your configuration) from the config/ directory before using this release. If you have problems with UID support, please do these 2 things: 1) For our comfort and the prosperity of SquirrelMail, send a bug report with this information: * IMAP server type + version * Whether you use server-side sorting * Whether you use thread sorting * The value of "sort" (as in conf.pl) Bugs can be submitted at: http://www.squirrelmail.org/bugs 2) For your own pleasure and comfort: Turn off UID support in conf.pl, so you can continue to use 1.4.0 while the developers look at your report. Reporting my favorite SquirrelMail 1.4 bug ========================================== This RC is meant to catch the last bugs. So we need you to submit any bug you come across! Also, please mention that the bug is in this 1.4.0 RC2 release. http://www.squirrelmail.org/bugs Thanks for your cooperation with this. That helps us to make sure nothing slips through the cracks. Also, it would help if people would check existing tracker items for a bug before reporting it again. This would help to eliminate duplicate reports, and increase the time we can spend CODING by DECREASING the time we spend sorting through bug reports. And remember, check not only OPEN bug reports, but also closed ones as a bug that you report MAY have been fixed in CVS already. If you want to join us in coding SquirrelMail, or have other things to share with the developers, join the development mailinglist: squirrelmail-devel@lists.sourceforge.net Happy SquirrelMailing! - The SquirrelMail Project Team