Module: ngircd.git Branch: master Commit: 37e950a40ceef1e28fde92dd3b2c3bcd03800295 URL: http://ngircd.barton.de/cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi?p=ngircd.git&a=commit;h=37e95...
Author: Alexander Barton alex@barton.de Date: Sat Oct 3 16:45:09 2009 +0200
Updated NEWS and ChangeLog files
---
ChangeLog | 13 ++++++++++++- NEWS | 11 +++++++++-- 2 files changed, 21 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
diff --git a/ChangeLog b/ChangeLog index 2300d1a..ab0d330 100644 --- a/ChangeLog +++ b/ChangeLog @@ -10,8 +10,19 @@ -- ChangeLog --
-ngIRCd Release 14.2 - +ngIRCd Release 15 + + - Do not add default listening port (6667) if SSL ports were specified, so + ngIRCd can be configured to only accept SSL-encrypted connections now. + - Enable IRC operators to use the IRC command SQUIT (insted of the already + implemented but non-standard DISCONNECT command). + - New configuration option "AllowRemoteOper" (disabled by default) that + enables remote IRC operators to use the IRC commands SQUIT and CONNECT + on the local server. + - Mac OS X: fix test for packagemaker(1) tool in Makefile and use gcc 4.0 + for Mac OS X 10.4 compatibility in the Xcode project file. + - Fix --with-{openssl|gnutls} to accept path names. + - Fix LSB header of Debian init script. - Updated doc/Platforms.txt and include new script contrib/platformtest.sh to ease generating platform reports. - Fix connection information for already registered connections. diff --git a/NEWS b/NEWS index d386de2..247afb1 100644 --- a/NEWS +++ b/NEWS @@ -10,8 +10,15 @@ -- NEWS --
-ngIRCd Release 14.2 - +ngIRCd Release 15 + + - Do not add default listening port (6667) if SSL ports were specified, so + ngIRCd can be configured to only accept SSL-encrypted connections now. + - Enable IRC operators to use the IRC command SQUIT (insted of the already + implemented but non-standard DISCONNECT command). + - New configuration option "AllowRemoteOper" (disabled by default) that + enables remote IRC operators to use the IRC commands SQUIT and CONNECT + on the local server. - Enforce upper limit on maximum number of handled commands. This implements a throttling scheme: an IRC client can send up to 3 commands or 256 bytes per second before a one second pause is enforced.