Gemfile: - Upgrade to Jekyll 3.x (3.0.1 tested). This brings several new features I want to use, most notably *collections* which allows us to add blog-like collections. I've converted the `_releases` and `_alerts` pages into collections, although their plugins are maintained to handle the Download and Active Alert features. - Upgrade to latest Kramdown. - Lock Less at 2.4.0. This prevents breaking our Less plugin. Jekyll 3.x provides native support for SCSS, so we may want to switch to that in time. - Lock HTML Proofer at 2.1.0. The most recent version was taking forever to check our pages (I never actually got it to complete). I'll look into it when I get more time. Makefile: - New `make clean` command. Jekyll 3.x by default attempts to do incremental rebuilds. The new `jekyll clean` command cleans up the metadata necessary for than so that a full build is performed, and this new `make clean` command is a wrapper around it so that we automatically do full rebuilds in the relevant cases. Note: our plugins aren't fully compatible with the incremental rebuilds, but I'd like to fix that in the future. - Remove WEBrick hack to enable previewing with default URL paths (/ instead of /index.html). - Filter out compliants from Rouge README.md: - Now that Alerts (_alerts) are part of a collection, the file names are no longer parsed for dates, so instructions on adding the date to the YAML metadata have been added. _alerts/*: - Now that alerts are part of a collection, the file names are no longer parsed to provide dates, so a `date:` field has been added to the YAML metadata. _config.yml: - Some variables renamed per upgrade instructions. - Switched from old default syntax highlighter Pygments to new default Rouge. I tried to use Rouge options to keep new output as similar to old output as possible to making diffing easy, but Rouge adds extra CSS class info. - Move `_alerts` and `_releases` into Jekyll 3.x "collections", which provide the organizational features we were using plugins to manange. I haven't removed the old plugins because we still use some of their features (alerts.rb provides active issue and banner features; releases.rb provides info to Download page) - _layouts/* can no longer provide default global metadata; that is now provided in the new `defaults:` section in _config.yml. _layouts/*: - Default metadata can no longer be provided in the layout files for collections, so I've removed it and left a message to see _config.yml. _plugins/*: - Remove filter_for.rb. It's completely broken on Jekyll 3.x because of changes to Liquid which prevent adding new arguments to the inherited Liquid::For class. Existing uses of filter_for have been migrated to built-in for loops prefaced by sorts. - Remove remove-html-extension.rb: at it said in the comments, this was a temporary hack to get us to Jekyll 3.0. _releases/*: - Rename all the files: prefix a v to the file name so the output html (e.g. v10.0.0.html) is the same as the source filename (e.g. v10.0.0.md). This is necessary to migrate them to a Jekyll collection. - Remove %v from titles: we have to explicitly set the title, like we used to. Again required for migration to collections. _templates/events.html & en/rss/events.rss: - Sort events by date and then loop with regular for loop rather than filter_for en/alerts.html & en/rss/alerts.rss: - Sort alerts by date and then loop with regular for loop rather than filter_for en/bitcoin-core/index.md & en/version-history.html & en/rss/releases.rss: - Sort alerts by date and then loop with regular for loop rather than filter_for
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required_version | optional_date | title |
---|---|---|
0.4.0 | 2011-09-23 | Bitcoin version 0.4.0 released |
Full announcement (including signatures)
Bitcoin version 0.4.0 is now available for download at: http://sourceforge.net/projects/bitcoin/files/Bitcoin/bitcoin-0.4.0/
The main feature in this release is wallet private key encryption; you can set a passphrase that must be entered before sending coins. See below for more information; if you decide to encrypt your wallet, WRITE DOWN YOUR PASSPHRASE AND PUT IT IN A SECURE LOCATION. If you forget or lose your wallet passphrase, you lose your bitcoins. Previous versions of bitcoin are unable to read encrypted wallets, and will crash on startup if the wallet is encrypted.
Also note: bitcoin version 0.4 uses a newer version of Berkeley DB (bdb version 4.8) than previous versions (bdb 4.7). If you upgrade to version 0.4 and then revert back to an earlier version of bitcoin the it may be unable to start because bdb 4.7 cannot read bdb 4.8 "log" files.
Notable bug fixes from version 0.3.24
-
Fix several bitcoin-becomes-unresponsive bugs due to multithreading deadlocks.
-
Optimize database writes for large (lots of inputs) transactions (fixes a potential denial-of-service attack)
Wallet Encryption
Bitcoin supports native wallet encryption so that people who steal your wallet file don't automatically get access to all of your Bitcoins. In order to enable this feature, chose "Encrypt Wallet" from the Options menu. You will be prompted to enter a passphrase, which will be used as the key to encrypt your wallet and will be needed every time you wish to send Bitcoins. If you lose this passphrase, you will lose access to spend all of the bitcoins in your wallet, no one, not even the Bitcoin developers can recover your Bitcoins. This means you are responsible for your own security, store your passphrase in a secure location and do not forget it.
Remember that the encryption built into bitcoin only encrypts the actual keys which are required to send your bitcoins, not the full wallet. This means that someone who steals your wallet file will be able to see all the addresses which belong to you, as well as the relevant transactions, you are only protected from someone spending your coins.
It is recommended that you backup your wallet file before you
encrypt your wallet. To do this, close the Bitcoin client and
copy the wallet.dat file from ~/.bitcoin/
on Linux, /Users/(user name)/Library/Application Support/Bitcoin/
on Mac OSX, and %APPDATA%/Bitcoin/
on Windows (that is /Users/(user name)/AppData/Roaming/Bitcoin
on
Windows Vista and 7 and /Documents and Settings/(user name)/Application Data/Bitcoin
on Windows XP). Once you have copied that file to a
safe location, reopen the Bitcoin client and Encrypt your wallet.
If everything goes fine, delete the backup and enjoy your encrypted
wallet. Note that once you encrypt your wallet, you will never be
able to go back to a version of the Bitcoin client older than 0.4.
Keep in mind that you are always responsible for your own security. All it takes is a slightly more advanced wallet-stealing trojan which installs a keylogger to steal your wallet passphrase as you enter it in addition to your wallet file and you have lost all your Bitcoins. Wallet encryption cannot keep you safe if you do not practice good security, such as running up-to-date antivirus software, only entering your wallet passphrase in the Bitcoin client and using the same passphrase only as your wallet passphrase.
See the doc/README
file in the bitcoin source for technical details
of wallet encryption.