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mirror of https://github.com/moparisthebest/wget synced 2024-07-03 16:38:41 -04:00

NEWS adjustments.

This commit is contained in:
Micah Cowan 2009-09-03 23:50:30 -07:00
parent b0b6b22347
commit 02e5f41670
2 changed files with 12 additions and 7 deletions

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@ -1,5 +1,9 @@
2009-09-03 Micah Cowan <micah@cowan.name>
* NEWS: Give credit to jff for SSL security fix, call attention to
IRI support's dependence on libidn and libiconv, and note that
--html-extension is still accepted, though deprecated.
* lib/*, m4/*: Updated gnulib.
* lib/getpagesize.c, lib/memchr.c, lib/memchr.valgrind,
lib/stddef.in.h, lib/str-two-way.h, lib/strcasecmp.c,

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NEWS
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@ -12,7 +12,8 @@ Please send GNU Wget bug reports to <bug-wget@gnu.org>.
** SECURITY FIX: It had been possible to trick Wget into accepting
SSL certificates that don't match the host name, through the trick of
embedding NUL characters into the certs' common name.
embedding NUL characters into the certs' common name. Fixed by Joao
Ferreira <joao@joaoff.com>.
** Added support for CSS. This includes:
- Parsing links from CSS files, and from CSS content found in HTML
@ -26,11 +27,10 @@ embedding NUL characters into the certs' common name.
<ted.mielczarek@gmail.com>.
** Added support for Internationalized Resource Identifiers (IRIs, RFC
3987). When support is enabled (default), links with non-ASCII bytes
are translated from their source encoding to UTF-8 before percent-encoding.
IRI support was added by Saint Xavier <wget@sxav.eu>, as his
project for the Google Summer of Code.
3987). When support is enabled (requires libidn and libiconv), links
with non-ASCII bytes are translated from their source encoding to UTF-8
before percent-encoding. IRI support was added by Saint Xavier
<wget@sxav.eu>, as his project for the Google Summer of Code.
** Wget now provides more sensible exit status codes when downloads
don't proceed as expected (see the manual).
@ -49,7 +49,8 @@ information on how it was built, and the set of configure-time options
that were selected.
** --html-extension has been renamed to --adjust-extension, to reflect
the fact that it now also applies to CSS content..
the fact that it now also applies to CSS content. --html-extension is
still acceptable, but is now deprecated.
** An "ascii" specifier is now accepted by --restrict-file-names, which
forces the percent-encoding of all non-ASCII bytes