[Bese-announce] UCW 0.3.3 - learning to climb up bookshelves (for real)
------------------------------------------------------------------------ UnCommon Web version 0.3.3 - learning to climb up bookshelves (for real) Released 2004-11-10 [nb: This release exists simply to fix a number of minor (but fatal) bugs in the 0.3.2 release] [nb: this release breaks backwards compatibility] * Home page http://common-lisp.net/project/ucw/ * Download ftp://ftp.common-lisp.net/pub/project/ucw/ucw_0.3.3.tar.gz * Prerequisites ** Prerequisites included in the distribution - arnesi - yaclml - cl-icu - iterate - mod_lisp ** Prerequisites you must download and install manually - a recent CVS version of SLIME. You must have the new inspector for the ucw-inspector to work. - portableaserve 1.2.35 should you want the aserve backend. * Changes (since 0.3.2) ** "The API has changed" fixes - Fix various uses of <ucw:a which didn't use the :action attribute. - Fix wrong environment name in admin repl template ** Components - New component simple-container - root-component renamed to window-component - Remove GOTO and REPLACE macros (and the underlying goto-component and replace-component methods). Use (setf context.window-component) instead (passing it a component instance). ** YACLML - Support :href attribute an <ucw:a tags with URL rewriting to add the session id. ** RERL - Move *debug-on-error* logic out of the handle-request-error's :around method and into the standard-server's handle-request method. - Improved the handling of errors during actions, callbacks and rerl internal functions. * Known Issues - The transaction example does not work. * Supported Platforms SBCL and OpenMCL are known to work on PPC with the mod_lisp backend. CMUCL is known to work on x86 with mod_lisp backend (apache2). The aserve backend is not known to work (it might, it just hasn't been tested). ------------------------------------------------------------------------ have fun (i know i do), -- -Marco Ring the bells that still can ring. Forget your perfect offering. There is a crack in everything. That's how the light gets in. -Leonard Cohen
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Marco Baringer