From: Eric Wong To: meta@public-inbox.org Subject: [ANNOUNCE] public-inbox 1.9.0 Date: Sun, 21 Aug 2022 02:36:59 +0000 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 Content-Disposition: inline Message-ID: <2022-08-21T023659Z-public-inbox-1.9.0-rele@sed> Upgrading: lei users need to "lei daemon-kill" after installation to load new code. Normal daemons (read-only, and public-inbox-watch) will also need restarts, of course, but there's no backwards-incompatible data format changes so rolling back to older versions is harmless. Major bugfixes: * lei no longer freezes from inotify/EVFILT_VNODE handling, user interrupts (Ctrl-C), nor excessive errors/warnings * IMAP server fairness improved to avoid excessive blob prefetch New features: * POP3 server support added, use either public-inbox-pop3d or the new public-inbox-netd superserver * public-inbox-netd superserver supporting any combination of HTTP, IMAP, POP3, and NNTP services; simplifying management and allowing more sharing of memory used for various data structures. * public-inbox-httpd and -netd support per-listener .psgi files * SIGHUP reloads TLS certs and keys in addition to config and .psgi files * "lei reindex" command for lei users to update personal index in ~/.local/share/lei/store for search improvements below: Search improvements: These will require --reindex with public-inbox-index and/or public-inbox-extindex for public inboxes. * patchid: prefix search support added to WWW and lei for "git patch-id --stable" support * text inside base-85 binary patches is no longer indexed to avoid false positives * for lei users, "lei reindex" now exists and is required to take advantage of aforementioned indexing changes Performance improvements: * IMAP server startup is faster with many mailboxes when using "public-inbox-extindex --all" * NNTP group listings are also faster with many inboxes when using "public-inbox-extindex --all" * various small opcode and memory usage reductions Please report bugs via plain-text mail to: meta@public-inbox.org See archives at https://public-inbox.org/meta/ for all history. See https://public-inbox.org/TODO for what the future holds.