In Rbuy 1.8, ?c returns an integer.
In Ruby 1.9, it returns a 1-character
string. This was causing one of our
LaTeX conversion functional tests to
fail.
Fixed.
Completely removed the html5lib sanitizer.
Fixed the string-handling to work in both
Ruby 1.8.x and 1.9.2. There are still,
inexplicably, two functional tests that
fail. But the rest seems to work quite well.
itex2MML 1.3.16 add a \tooltip{}{} command which,
like \statusline{}{}, produces an <maction> element.
Neither of these is natively supported by Mozilla/Firefox.
Add some Javascript to work around that weakness.
Touch the tmp/restart.txt file, when
rotatingthe log files. Otherwise, multiple
workers may try to rotate the log files
at the same time, with sub-optimal results.
Also, an aesthetic tweak to the url_generator.
% rake upgrade_instiki
fixes some potential problems in the database column types.
Revision content can now be up to 16MB.
Under MySQL, the previous limit was 64KB.
Page names can now be up to 255 bytes.
Under MySQL, the previous limit was 60 bytes.
Additional CSS styles can now be up to 64KB.
Under MySQL, the previous limit was 255 bytes.
Thanks to Andrew Stacey for reporting these.
When redirected to another page, flash
messages will not display if the query
string is longer than 10192 bytes. In
Instiki, certain rescue operations
involve redirection, with the updated
content of the page passed as a query
parameter. Fall back to using the stored
content (ie, don't pass a query parameter)
if the content is too long.
Implements \mathrlap{}, \mathllap{}, and \mathclap{}.
Deprecates the use of \rlap{} (use \mathrlap{}, instead:
the latter works in math-mode in the LaTeX export, whereas
TeX's \rlap{} did not).
Apply the same methodology, as in Revision 432,
to the category chunk-handler. This completes
the replacement of all the code that looks like
if string.is_utf8?
do something
else
complain
end
with code that looks like
string.purify
do something
Previously, if the user tried to submit content which was
malformed utf-8, Instiki would complain loudly to him.
A slightly more user-friendly approach was suggested by
the latest Rails 2.3.4, and a conversation with Sam Ruby
(who suggested some improvements).
Now, instead of complaining, we remove the offending bytes,
leaving a well-formed utf-8 string, which we pretend is what
the user meant to submit.
This release upgrades Instiki to Rails 2.3.4, which
patches two security holes in Rails. See
http://weblog.rubyonrails.org/2009/9/4/ruby-on-rails-2-3-4
There are also some new features, and the usual boatload
of bugfixes. See the CHANGELOG for details.