=============================================================================== This is the sixth release candidate for the 0.1.0.x series. This is an actual release candidate--it's going to be the final release if there are no bugs--we promise. :) We fixed the last known major problems: we don't use threading on netbsd now, and the new libevent 1.1 detects and disables the broken kqueue that ships with OS X 10.4.0. Libevent 1.1 also has __significant__ performance improvements if you're using poll or select. Try it, you'll like it. Please report any bugs, either in the installers or in Tor operation, so we can get it perfect for an actual release: http://bugs.noreply.org/tor http://tor.eff.org/download.html o Bugfixes: - Implement --disable-threads configure option. Disable threads on netbsd by default, because it appears to have no reentrant resolver functions. - Apple's OS X 10.4.0 ships with a broken kqueue. The new libevent release (1.1) detects and disables kqueue if it's broken. - Append default exit policy before checking for implicit internal addresses. Now we don't log a bunch of complaints on startup when using the default exit policy. - Some people were putting "Address " in their torrc, and they had a buggy resolver that resolved " " to 0.0.0.0. Oops. - If DataDir is ~/.tor, and that expands to /.tor, then default to LOCALSTATEDIR/tor instead. - Fix fragmented-message bug in TorControl.py. - Resolve a minor bug which would prevent unreachable dirports from getting suppressed in the published descriptor. - When the controller gave us a new descriptor, we weren't resolving it immediately, so Tor would think its address was 0.0.0.0 until we fetched a new directory. - Fix an uppercase/lowercase case error in suppressing a bogus libevent warning on some Linuxes. o Features: - Begin scrubbing sensitive strings from logs by default. Turn off the config option SafeLogging if you need to do debugging. - Switch to a new buffer management algorithm, which tries to avoid reallocing and copying quite as much. In first tests it looks like it uses *more* memory on average, but less cpu. - First cut at support for "create-fast" cells. Clients can use these when extending to their first hop, since the TLS already provides forward secrecy and authentication. Not enabled on clients yet. - When dirservers refuse a router descriptor, we now log its contactinfo, platform, and the poster's IP address. - Call tor_free_all instead of connections_free_all after forking, to save memory on systems that need to fork. - Whine at you if you're a server and you don't set your contactinfo. - Implement --verify-config command-line option to check if your torrc is valid without actually launching Tor. - Rewrite address "serifos.exit" to "localhost.serifos.exit" rather than just rejecting it. ===============================================================================
This is the sixth release candidate for the 0.1.0.x series. This is an
Did I miss some development or why exactly does cypherpunks care about a release candidate of libevent (or Wolfram's New Kind of Science for that matter)? Was I frozen for that long? Note that I am not trying to be a bitch or troll, but I am on this mailing list to follow the hacker culture and developments in privacy issues and Internet technology, not to learn about all kinds of tangential announcements. Could someone bring me up to speed, please? This is not flamebait. Really not. -- martin; (greetings from the heart of the sun.) \____ echo mailto: !#^."<*>"|tr "<*> mailto:" net@madduck invalid/expired pgp subkeys? use subkeys.pgp.net as keyserver! spamtraps: madduck.bogus@madduck.net "he gave me his card he said, 'call me if they die' i shook his hand and said goodbye ran out to the street when a bowling ball came down the road and knocked me off my feet" -- bob dylan [demime 1.01d removed an attachment of type application/pgp-signature which had a name of signature.asc]
On Mon, 16 May 2005, martin f krafft wrote:
Did I miss some development or why exactly does cypherpunks care about a release candidate of libevent (or Wolfram's New Kind of Science for that matter)? Was I frozen for that long?
Well, lets see. I suppose I could answer either way: Yes, we care, and no we don't. They are both true.
Note that I am not trying to be a bitch or troll, but I am on this mailing list to follow the hacker culture
Then what the fuck are you doing *here*?
and developments in privacy issues and Internet technology, not to learn about all kinds of tangential announcements.
Then you are in the wrong fucking place buddy. This is cpunks: Information wants to be free and all that. Anything is postable, nothing turned away, even trolls like you are welcome additions.
Could someone bring me up to speed, please?
Done.
This is not flamebait. Really not.
Then maybe you should reconsider where you hang your virtual hat a little more carefully in the future. -- Yours, J.A. Terranson sysadmin@mfn.org 0xBD4A95BF "That bitch needs to learn proper Road Rage Etiquitte. Never give up." Me on 14 April 05, on I270, doing about 90mph and realizing the girl I had been toying with for the last 20 miles had decided safer was better than.
also sprach J.A. Terranson <measl@mfn.org> [2005.05.16.1627 +0200]:
and developments in privacy issues and Internet technology, not to learn about all kinds of tangential announcements.
Then you are in the wrong fucking place buddy. This is cpunks: Information wants to be free and all that. Anything is postable, nothing turned away, even trolls like you are welcome additions.
Interesting... this is not how I remembered it. Anyway, I apologise, and I apologise to Stephen Wolfram for the private message sent along those lines. -- martin; (greetings from the heart of the sun.) \____ echo mailto: !#^."<*>"|tr "<*> mailto:" net@madduck invalid/expired pgp subkeys? use subkeys.pgp.net as keyserver! spamtraps: madduck.bogus@madduck.net "friendships last when each friend thinks he has a slight superiority over the other." -- honori de balzac [demime 1.01d removed an attachment of type application/pgp-signature which had a name of signature.asc]
also sprach martin f krafft <madduck@madduck.net> [2005.05.16.1924 +0200]:
Interesting... this is not how I remembered it.
... I had been subscribed to the moderated minder.net list in the past... this explains :) Again, sorry, also for the noise. -- martin; (greetings from the heart of the sun.) \____ echo mailto: !#^."<*>"|tr "<*> mailto:" net@madduck invalid/expired pgp subkeys? use subkeys.pgp.net as keyserver! spamtraps: madduck.bogus@madduck.net "if i am occasionally a little overdressed, i make up for it by being always immensely over-educated." -- oscar wilde [demime 1.01d removed an attachment of type application/pgp-signature which had a name of signature.asc]
On Mon, 2005-05-16 at 15:07 +0200, martin f krafft wrote:
This is the sixth release candidate for the 0.1.0.x series. This is an
Did I miss some development or why exactly does cypherpunks care about a release candidate of libevent (or Wolfram's New Kind of Science for that matter)? Was I frozen for that long?
This is actually a release announcement for Tor 0.1.0.0-rc6 that was not labeled as such, posted through the randseed Mixmaster remailer. To the schmuck that posted the original: make it clearer next time, with a clear subject line. -- Shawn K. Quinn <skquinn@speakeasy.net>
participants (4)
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A.Melon
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J.A. Terranson
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martin f krafft
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Shawn K. Quinn