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fa7641cd88b16ee7a6a71ce4c5d64b6ec7824e09
- Update from version 0.21 to 0.22
- Update of rootfile
- Changelog
0.22 - June 2023
* PO file format:
- When a #: line contains references to file names that contain spaces,
these file names are surrounded by Unicode characters U+2068 and U+2069.
This makes it possible to parse such references correctly.
* Improvements for maintainers:
- The AM_GNU_GETTEXT macro now defines two variables localedir_c and
localedir_c_make, that can be used in C code or in Makefiles,
respectively, for representing the value of the --localedir configure
option.
* Programming languages support:
- C, C++:
o xgettext now supports gettext-like functions that take wide strings
(of type 'const wchar_t *', 'const char16_t *', or 'const char32_t *')
as arguments.
o xgettext now recognizes numbers with digit separators, as defined by
ISO C 23, as tokens.
o xgettext and msgfmt now recognize the format string directive %b
(for binary integer output, as defined by ISO C 23) in format strings.
o xgettext and msgfmt now recognize the argument size specifiers
w8, w16, w32, w64, wf8, wf16, wf32, wf64 (as defined by ISO C 23)
in format strings.
o xgettext and msgfmt now recognize C++ format strings, as defined by
ISO C++ 20. They are marked as 'c++-format' in POT and PO files.
A new example has been added, 'hello-c++20', that illustrates how
to use these format strings with gettext.
- Java:
o The build system and tools now also support Java versions newer than
Java 11. This is known to work up to Java 20, at least. On the other
hand, support for old versions of Java (Java 1.5 and GCJ) has been
dropped.
- Tcl: xgettext now supports the \x, \u, and \U escapes as defined in
Tcl 8.6.
* Portability:
- On systems with musl libc, the *gettext() functions in libc now work
with MO files generated from PO files with an encoding other than UTF-8.
To this effect, the msgfmt program now converts the messages to UTF-8
encoding before storing them in a MO file. You can prevent this by
using the msgfmt --no-convert option.
- On systems with musl libc, the *gettext() functions in libc now work
with MO files generated from PO files with ISO C 99 <inttypes.h> format
string directive macros. To this effect, the msgfmt program pre-expands
strings with such macros. You can prevent this by using the msgfmt
--no-redundancy option.
* xgettext:
- The xgettext option '--sorted-output' is now deprecated.
- xgettext input files of type PO that are not all ASCII and not UTF-8
encoded are now handled correctly.
* The base Unicode standard is now updated to 15.0.0.
* Emacs PO mode:
Fix an incompatibility with Emacs version 29 or newer.
0.21.1 - October 2022
* Runtime behaviour:
- On AIX, locale names with a script or with an uppercase language are now
supported.
For example, sr_Cyrl_RS.UTF-8 is treated like sr_RS.UTF-8@cyrillic, and
EN_US.UTF-8 is treated like en_US.UTF-8.
* The base Unicode standard is now updated to 14.0.0.
* Portability:
- Building on macOS 11/arm64 is now supported.
- Building on Linux/powerpc64le with glibc ≥ 2.35 is now supported.
Signed-off-by: Adolf Belka <adolf.belka@ipfire.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Tremer <michael.tremer@ipfire.org>
IPFire 2.x - The Open Source Firewall
What is IPFire?
IPFire is a hardened, versatile, state-of-the-art Open Source firewall based on Linux. Its ease of use, high performance in any scenario and extensibility make it usable for everyone. For a full list of features have a look here.
This repository contains the source code of IPFire 2.x which is used to build the whole distribution from scratch, since IPFire is not based on any other distribution.
Where can I get IPFire?
Just head over to https://www.ipfire.org/download
How do I use this software?
We have a long and detailed wiki located here which should answers most of your questions.
But I have some questions left. Where can I get support?
You can ask your question at our community located here. A complete list of our support channels can be found here.
How can I contribute?
We have another document for this. Please look here.
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