X-Git-Url: https://arthur.barton.de/cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi?p=ngircd-alex.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=ChangeLog;h=3ee3db61b05f45653f15634503a49d2da7f45942;hp=026987d5faf07345c53c13cabe6145a85f4157b0;hb=c8162a80beba80f3b1d04fdba8e74bf5366c47f7;hpb=3559940e4affa674048ebebef32e6325504befcc diff --git a/ChangeLog b/ChangeLog index 026987d5..3ee3db61 100644 --- a/ChangeLog +++ b/ChangeLog @@ -11,7 +11,31 @@ ngIRCd 25 + ngIRCd 25~rc1 (2018-08-11) + - Update config.guess (2018-03-08) and config.sub (2018-03-08) files. + - Correctly retry to establish an outgoing connections when forking of the + resolver sub-process failed (for example because of lack of free memory). + Until now, such a connection was never retried once this error was hit. + Thanks to Robert Obermeier for reporting this bug! + Closes #243. + - Fix a "use after free" bug which can be triggered on a newly established + connection when the daemon handles an ERROR command received from the peer + during client login. Thanks a lot to Joseph Bisch + for discovering and reporting this issue! + - Only send TOPIC updates to a channel when the topic actually changed: + This prevents the channel from becoming flooded by unnecessary TOPIC update + messages, that can happen when IRC services try to enforce a certain topic + but which is already set (at least on the local server), for example. + Therefore still forward it to all servers, but don't inform local clients + (still update setter and timestamp information, though). + - Update Xcode project for latest Xcode version (9.2). This includes adding + missing and deleting obsolete file references. + - Handle user mode "C" ("Only users that share a channel are allowed to send + messages") like user mode "b" ("block private messages and notices"): allow + messages from servers, services, and IRC Operators, too. Change proposed by + "wowaname" back in 2015 in #ngircd, thanks! - Fix some compiler warnings. + - Add contrib/ngircd.logcheck: Some sample logcheck(8) rules. - Allow IRC Ops and remote servers to KILL service clients: such clients behave like regular users, therefore IRC operators and servers should be able to KILL them: for example to resolve nick collisions.