--- AnyEvent/Changes 2010/10/12 06:51:40 1.411 +++ AnyEvent/Changes 2010/12/03 18:38:31 1.422 @@ -1,10 +1,26 @@ Revision history for Perl extension AnyEvent. -TODO: check for -w? somehow? -TODO: _start might call on_error with ETIMEDOUT?? TODO: document TCP_*** constants -AnyEvent::Handle uncaught error: Connection timed out at - /usr/local/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.8.8/AnyEvent/HTTP.pm line 473 +TODO: catch AE::xxx for anyevent struct and anyevent debug +TODO: anyevent::trace? or debug tracing all watchers? +TODO: anyevent strict etc. for AE:: +TODO: anyevent strict checking for $_ changes? + +TODO: handle example for "loops" +5.29 + - convert EV backend to EV 4.00 API. + - AE::Handle: implement dynamic read_size adjustment, add + max_read_size parameter, reduce default read_size to 2048. + - work around OS bugs (cygwin again) when lingering in AE::Handle. + - reduce memory usage slightly when connect was used in AE::Handle. + - document tls_ctx => undef as valid. + - include some probably linux-only support for building AnyEvent + as part of the perl core. + - improve compatibility of t/08_idna.t to perl 5.8. + - make AnyEvent::Strict truly optional (in case somebody builds a + minimal perl...). + +5.28 Wed Oct 13 04:14:23 CEST 2010 - due to a glitch, AnyEvent's internal getprotobyname wasn't actually used in tcp_server. - implement AnyEvent::CondVar->new method, which was documented but @@ -14,10 +30,14 @@ resulting in more informative error messages. - new AnyEvent::FAQ manpage. - clarify that you can actually call push_read etc. in on_read. + - put keys and certs in /tmp, not into the current directory, + and document this in the SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS sections + of AnyEvent::TLS. - support ";" as resolv.conf comment character in AnyEvent::DNS, as requested by Ron Isaacson. - document $AnyEvent::DNS::RESOLVER variable. - incorporated major typo patches by Abhijit Menon-Sen. + - AnyEvent::Handle now croaks when negative timeouts are passed. - add a shitload of TCP_xxx sockopt name constants to AnyEvent::Util, undocumented, but who knows when they might come in handy.