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NEWS
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Hello everyone!
We are releasing a new version of Mono, Mono 0.22. A new release
is made today because of the few recent bug-fixes that were committed
to CVS.
Source code and binaries for this release can be found on the
web page,
http://www.go-mono.com/download.html
The URLs for the sources are:
* MCS package (the Class Libraries, C# and VB.NET compiler
and other assorted tools written in Managed code):
http://www.go-mono.com/archive/mcs-0.22.tar.gz
* Mono package (the Runtime engine and JIT compiler):
http://www.go-mono.com/archive/mono-0.22.tar.gz
RPM packages for this release can be downloaded from the web-page
as well as from the 'Mono' channel on Red Carpet. Debian packages will
appear on the download page later, as well as an installer for our
Windows users.
Since last Thursday, 320 commits have been made to our CVS
repository. These following hackers contributed to Mono since version
0.21:
Aleksey Demakov, Alexandre Pigolkine, Atsushi Enomoto, Elan
Feingeld, Dick Porter, Dietmar Maurer, Duncan Mak, Gonzalo
Paniagua, Ian MacLean, Jackson Harper, Jean-Marc Andre, Jerome
Laban, Lluis Sanchez, Martin Baulig, Miguel de Icaza, Nick
Drochak, Paolo Molaro, Pedro Martinez, Per Ameng, Peter Williams,
Rafael Teixeira, Reggie Burnett, Sebastien Pouliot, Tim Coleman
and Zoltan Varga.
Highlights:
* The "MemoryStream" bug.
This bug affected a lot of classes, and made them crashy,
database code, XML parsing and a few others were
crashing. Thanks to Gonzalo for fixing this bug.
* System.Data:
More bug fixes from Aleksey and Tim.
* Reflection:
Zoltan continues to provide fixes to our Reflection.Emit code
to host IKVM.
* Remoting:
Lluis added support for activation using activation
attributes.
* PEToolkit:
Jackson imported the PEAPI package from the Queensland
University of Technology in Australia. This will replace the
existing Mono.PEToolkit for our ILasm back-end.
* Windows Forms:
More fixes from Reggie and Alexandre.
* System.Web.Mail:
Per has been working on this namespace. He announces recently
that all major parts of System.Web.Mail has now been implemented.
* System.Web.Mobile:
Gaurav continues to make progress here.
* Misc:
Ian MacLean contributed a /compile flag to monoresgen and
assorted bug-fixes and improvements from the rest of the team.
My name is Duncan Mak, and I just made my first Mono release.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hello everyone!
The Mono Team introduces the best Mono release so far we have
done. Thanks to everyone who contributed fixes, code, ideas, and bug
reports.
Mono 0.20 has been released, it is available at the usual location:
http://www.go-mono.com/download.html
This is a truly heroic release of Mono. Major architectural
chunks that were missing, or were miss-implemented have been fixed in
this release, and we are very proud of it. Please see the list of
features, because there is no short way of introducing just how good
this release is. A big thanks goes to Piers for setting up a
Tinderbox that monitors problems with the Mono CVS repository.
We released packages for SuSE 8.0, Mandrake 8.2, and various
Red Hat releases. It is also available from Red Carpet on the Mono
channel.
Source code for Mono, MCS, the Mono Debugger, XSP is available as
well from that web page. The sources are:
MCS package (Class Libraries, C# and VB.NET compiler and managed tools):
http://www.go-mono.com/archive/mcs-0.20.tar.gz
Mono package (Runtime engine, JIT compiler):
http://www.go-mono.com/archive/mono-0.20.tar.gz
XSP package (XSP test web server for ASP.NET webforms):
http://www.go-mono.com/archive/xsp-0.3.tar.gz
This release is brought to you by: Alvaro del Castillo, Alan Tam,
Alp Toker, Alejandro Sánchez, Alexandre Pigolkin, Atsushi Enomoto,
Brian Ritchie, Christopher Bockner, Daniel Lopez, Daniel Morgan,
Dennis Hayes, Dick Porter, Dietmar Maurer, Duncan Mak, Gaurav Vaish,
Gonzalo Paniagua, Jackson Harper, Jaime Anguiano, Jeff Stedfast,
Johannes Roith, John Sohn, Jonathan Pryor, "Lee Mallabone, "Lluis
Sanchez, "Marco Ridoni, Mark Crichton, Martin Baulig, Martin Willemoes
Hansen, Miguel de Icaza, Mike Kestner, Nick Drochak, Paolo Molaro,
Patrik Torstensson, Pedro Martinez, Per Arneng, Peter Williams, Petr
Danecek, Piers Haken, Radek Doulik, Rafael Teixeira, Rodrigo Moya,
Sebastien Pouliot, Tim Coleman, Ville Palo, and Zoltan Varga.
They commited 1810 changes to CVS patches in the past 33 days.
* New in this release
* Zoltan and IKVM
Zoltan's patches to run Jeroen's IKVM (the Java VM that
translates JVM bytecodes into .NET bytecodes) are in.
* Remoting.
The remoting team's patches that were held off on the previous
release are here. Lluis and Patrik have done a fantastic job
in getting remoting to work. Many low-level runtime engine
changes, and plenty of work on the class-library stuff.
Lluis has posted a couple of sample applications to the
mailing list, you can try those out.
The new release includes a working BinaryFormatter and
BinaryFormatterSink. It means that together with TcpChannel
it is possible to make remote calls with any type of
parameters and return values, including value types,
MarshalByRefObject types (that are properly
marshalled/unmarshalled), delegates, enums, etc.
RemotingConfiguration is partially implemented. It cannot read
from config files, but manual configuration using the api is
fully working.
Implemented full support for client activated types and for
well known objects (both singleton and single call).
Lease manager fully working (it manages the lifetime of server
objects).
Implemented interception of the new operator, so it is
possible to create a remote object using "new", if the type is
properly registered in RemotingConfiguration.
In Lluis' words: `Basically, 0.20 will have almost all needed
for a distributed application with Remoting'
* New threading semantics, IO-layer
Dick Porter in a couple of weeks has heroically redone much of
the threading support to match the .NET behavior (details are
on the .NET threading book as posted on the Mono site).
He also did a lot of bug fixes in the IO/threading space. The
threading implementation now contains a new and faster Monitor
implementation, as well as a correct Pulse()/Wait()
implementation.
GC thread finalization has been re-enabled. This means that
finalizers will be ran on a separate thread, as done in the
Microsoft.NET Framework. This might expose some bugs on
existing finalizer code.
* Moved to NUnit2
Nick and Gonzalo helped us move to the new NUnit2 platform for
all of our tests. A big applause goes to them.
* Cross Appdomain invocations work now.
ASP.NET and NUnit2 both used cross appdomain invocations, we
have fixed a number of problems, and they are now functional.
The AppDomain fixes and the Remoting fixes have allowed us to
remove a number of hacks in the ASP.NET implementation that
were previously there.
Implemented CrossAppDomainChannel, for calls between domains.
* C# Compiler and Debugging.
When generating debugging information in the compiler (with
-debug, -g or -debug+) the compiler will embed the debugging
information into the resulting executable instead of
generating a separate file. Very nice.
Generating debugging information has also improved vastly
performance-wise, and now it is possible to always use
debugging builds for software development.
A number of bugs were fixed on the compiler as well and
by using the Mono profiler we have reduced the memory
consumption and accelerated the compiler.
Thanks to Jackson, Martin, Paolo and for helping here.
* VB.NET Compiler.
Plenty of new features are included in the compiler in our
path to conformance. See <FIXME:get-url-for-posting> for
details on the status of the compiler, and the pieces missing.
* ILasm and Mono.PEToolkit.
Work on the IL assembler has resumed, but it is not yet ready
for production use. The Mono IL Assembler uses the
Mono.PEToolkit library done by Sergey and Jackson to
manipulate CIL image files.
* Cryptographic work.
Sebastien has provided a cert2spc and secutil tools for
certificate management. This is the first release that ships
an assembly for System.Security
Also a new internal assembly used only on Windows allows Mono
users to use the unmanaged crypto providers.
* System.XML
Atsushi has continued to improve the work on our XML
implementation: fixing bugs and more closely matching the
Microsoft implementation.
* More PowerPC/Alpha support.
Taylor Christopher has contributed more code generation macros
for PPC and Laramie Leavitt for Alpha.
* System.XML.Xsl
Gonzalo continued the implementation of our XSLT transformation
API (custom .NET functions are still missing though). It no
longer uses temporary files to apply transformations. Thanks
to an idea from Zdravko Tashev. Xslt Web controls work as
part of this fix.
* ASP.NET
Gonzalo has cleaned up a lot the code base, and now our test
server supports a --root and --virtual command line options
for better control.
Also, now we generate a much nicer error page on errors. We
are looking for volunteers to improve the default look of this
page.
Authentication is now supported
* Mobile Controls.
Gaurav Vaish continues on his quest to complete the
implementation of the Mobile controls. These controls are
required to run a stock IBuySpy application.
* Class Libraries:
New Mono.Posix class library that contains classes for working
on a Posix systems. Things like Unix domain sockets are here.
* System.Windows.Forms
Alexandre Pigolkine continues to contribute more code to our
Windows.Forms implementation. Currently it only runs on
Windows (or in Linux without GC enabled, due to the
pthread/Wine threading library mismatch. This is being
actively addressed as part of the Wine work due to the
movement to the new thread implementation available in RH 8.1).
* Database providers
Christopher Bockner has updated his DB2 database provider (now
with prepared statement functionality) and Tim Coleman has
continued work on the Oracle database provider (welcome back
Tim!)
* Database code.
Dan Morgan continues to develop core components in System.Data
(and now we welcome Alan Tam to the System.Data core hackers)
The SQL# tool now supports MySQLNet, Npgsql, DB2Client, and
Oracle clients.
* Runtime
mono --profile now performs memory allocation profiling too.
* Runtime fixes.
We now support multi-module with external file reference
assemblies.
The above in English means that we can now run Eiffel.NET code
in Mono.
* Monograph:
More statistics supported now.
* System.Web.Mail
Per has contributed the code for this namespace.
* Bugs
Plenty of bugs were closed.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hello everyone!
We have made a new release of Mono available. Despite the fact
that we just did Mono 0.18, this release is packed with new features.
* Availability.
Mono 0.19 is available in package format from:
http://www.go-mono.com/download.html
We released packages for SuSE 8.0, Mandrake 8.2, Debian and various
Red Hat releases. It is also available from Red Carpet on the Mono
channel.
Source code for Mono, MCS, the Mono Debugger, XSP is available as
well from that web page.
* New in this release
* Remoting news:
Lluis has implemented and documented the Binary formatter
Woohoo! He has done a lot of work as well to support
remoting.
Patrik has also been working heavily on fixing a
number of remoting related bugs and missing features.
Ajay also implemented 1-d array serialization in System.Xml
* New database provider: IBM DB2
Christopher Bockner has contributed a DB2 data
provider for System.Data. We have a very complete
range of data providers.
* System.Web.Mobile
Gaurav has started work on this assembly, this will
allow us to run the unmodified reference ASP.NET
applications that were designed to support Mobile
browsing.
* System.Data and System.XML:
More implementation work on XmlDataDocument from Ville
and plenty of fixes from Atsushi.
* MacOS patches:
Paolo integrated John Duncan's and Benjamin Reed
patches to make Mono run on MacOS X out of the box.
* IsolatedStorage
The initial implementation of it was done by Jonathan
Pryor and included in this release.
* Compilers:
More work on the Mono Visual Basic compiler (it is now
included in the packages).
Plenty of bug fixes from Jackson, Miguel to the C#
compiler.
Patches from Francesco and Daniel to the VB.NET
support runtime.
* Debugger support
Plenty of updates to run the new Mono Debugger from Martin.
* Main missing bits:
Some of everyone's favorite patches or code chunks have not yet
been integrated, hopefully Mono 0.20 will have them:
* Zoltan's patch to run IKVM is not yet on this release
* Some parts of Patrik's remoting code did not make it to the
release either.
* Reggie's MySQL native provider is also missing.
Enjoy!
Miguel.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hello everyone!
We have made a new release of Mono available. Despite the fact
that we just did Mono 0.18, this release is packed with new features.
* Availability.
Mono 0.19 is available in package format from:
http://www.go-mono.com/download.html
We released packages for SuSE 8.0, Mandrake 8.2, Debian and various
Red Hat releases. It is also available from Red Carpet on the Mono
channel.
Source code for Mono, MCS, the Mono Debugger, XSP is available as
well from that web page.
* New in this release
* Remoting news:
Lluis has implemented and documented the Binary formatter
Woohoo! He has done a lot of work as well to support
remoting.
Patrik has also been working heavily on fixing a
number of remoting related bugs and missing features.
Ajay also implemented 1-d array serialization in System.Xml
* New database provider: IBM DB2
Christopher Bockner has contributed a DB2 data
provider for System.Data. We have a very complete
range of data providers.
* System.Web.Mobile
Gaurav has started work on this assembly, this will
allow us to run the unmodified reference ASP.NET
applications that were designed to support Mobile
browsing.
* System.Data and System.XML:
More implementation work on XmlDataDocument from Ville
and plenty of fixes from Atsushi.
* MacOS patches:
Paolo integrated John Duncan's and Benjamin Reed
patches to make Mono run on MacOS X out of the box.
* IsolatedStorage
The initial implementation of it was done by Jonathan
Pryor and included in this release.
* Compilers:
More work on the Mono Visual Basic compiler (it is now
included in the packages).
Plenty of bug fixes from Jackson, Miguel to the C#
compiler.
Patches from Francesco and Daniel to the VB.NET
support runtime.
* Debugger support
Plenty of updates to run the new Mono Debugger from Martin.
* Main missing bits:
Some of everyone's favorite patches or code chunks have not yet
been integrated, hopefully Mono 0.20 will have them:
* Zoltan's patch to run IKVM is not yet on this release
* Some parts of Patrik's remoting code did not make it to the
release either.
* Reggie's MySQL native provider is also missing.
Enjoy!
Miguel.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Happy new year!
The Mono team is proud to release Mono 0.18, with plenty of bug
fixes and improvements. If you are a happy 0.17 user, this
release is a happiness extension release. Many bugs in the
runtime, class libraries and C# compiler have been fixed.
Also, our special envoy in Japan has reported that there is
some naming confussion about the naming of Mono, as can be
seen in the following documentary material:
Atsushi Enomoto shows the source of confussion:
http://primates.ximian.com/~duncan/gallery/Duncan-in-Tokyo/DSCN0702
Nick and Duncan echo it:
http://primates.ximian.com/~duncan/gallery/Duncan-in-Tokyo/DSCN0703
* Availability
Mono 0.18 packages and source code is available for download from:
http://www.go-mono.com/download.html
Those using Red Carpet on Linux can install Mono 0.18 from
the Mono channel. The packages have already been pushed for
you.
At release time we have packages for Red Hat 8.0, 7.3,
7.2 and 7.1 and Mandrake 8.2.
* Contributors to this release
This release is brought to you by:
Alejandro Sanchez, Alp Toker, Atsushi Enomoto, Cesar Octavio
Lopez Netaren, Daniel Lopez (mod_mono), Daniel Morgan, Dennis
Hayes, Dick Porter, Dietmar Maurer, Duncan Mak, Eduardo
Garcia, Gaurav Vaish, Gonzalo Paniagua, Jackson Harper, Jaime
Anguiano, Jeroen Janssen, Johannes Roith, Jonathan Pryor, Juli
Mallett, Lluis Sanchez, Marco Ridoni, Martin Baulig, Miguel de
Icaza, Nick Drochak, Paolo Molaro, Patrik Torstensson, Piers
Haken, Rachel Hestilow, Rafael Teixeira, Ravi Pratap,
Sebastian Pouliot, Tim Coleman, Tim Hayes, Ville Palo, Zoltan
Varga.
* New in this release
VB.NET compiler:
Many improvements to the Mono VB.NET compiler.
ASP.NET:
Plenty of bug fixes in ASP.NET. Larger applications
can now be run with it. The authentication system has
been deployed, most changes are from Gonzalo.
We have a modified IBuySpy running (without Xslt)
If you want to run ASP.NET you can run it with either
our XSP proof-of-concept server, or with Daniel's
Apache module that can be fetched from CVS (module
name: mod_apache)
Type Reflector:
A Console, Gtk# and Windows.Forms tool to browse
compiled assemblies and examine the types on it, from
Jonathan Pryor.
Moving to NUnit 2.0
Nick continues the work on moving our test suite to NUnit 2.0
Mobile.Controls:
Gaurav has started work on the Mobile controls, which
are required to run some of the reference applications
in full-mode like IBuySpy.
Remoting:
The remoting infrastructure has got a big boost from
Lluis in this release.
System.Data/XML
Ville has been working on improving our System.Data
classes in the XML assembly.
Crypto:
Plenty of new crypto from Sebastien as well. A new
web page in our site can be used to track this.
http://www.go-mono.com/crypto.html
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Hello!
Version 0.17 of Mono has been released.
There are plenty of new features, bug fixes, new classes,
performance improvements, optimizations and much more
available in this release.
* Stats
2605 cvs commits to the Mono repository since October 1st, an
average of 37 commits per day including weekends.
212 commits to the Mono module.
1438 commits to the MCS module.
* Mono Improvements:
Work has begun to make the runtime run a finalizer thread and
invoke all the finalizers from this thread. This is the same
behavior as Java and the Microsoft runtime, but it is disabled
on this build.
Integrated the s390 work from Neale Ferguson.
Beginning of the work for pre-compiling code (Ahead of time
compilation) for Mono (based on the early work of Zoltan).
New option `--noboundscheck' for benchmark purposes, it
disables array bound checks.
Uses mmap instead of SysV shared memory for the Windows API
emulation layer.
Plenty of bug fixes, improvements and integration with the
upper layer class libraries.
New exception handling code uses the GCC native support for
stack-walking if available and gives big performance boost
(15% on mcs bootstrap).
A lot of the work in the new release of Mono is required for
the Mono Debugger (which will be released separately). The
Mono debugger is interesting, because it can debug both
managed and unmanaged applications, but it only supports the
JITer for debugging.
Dick, Dietmar, Gonzalo, Martin and Paolo were in charge of
most of these changes.
* Compiler improvements:
Many bug fixes as usual, better C# compliancy.
Performance improvements. The new release of the Mono C#
compiler is 37% faster than the previous version (self-compile
is down to 8 seconds). On my P4 1.8Ghz machine, the Mono C#
compiler compiles (342,000 lines per minute).
Thanks to go Ravi and Martin for helping out with the bug
fixing hunt.
* Cryptography and Security classes
Sebastien Pouliot and Andrew Birkett were extremely busy
during the past two months working on the cryptography
classes, many of the crypto providers are now working
Jackson on the other hand helped us with the security
classes, he said about those:
`Writing security classes is the most exciting thing I have
ever done, I can not wait to write more of them'.
* ASP.NET:
We have now moved the code from the XSP server (which was our
test bed for ASP.NET) into the right classes inside
System.Web, and now any web server that was built by using the
System.Web hosting interfaces can be used with Mono.
The sample XSP server still exists, but it is now just a
simple implementation of the WorkerRequest and ApplicationHost
classes and can be used to test drive ASP.NET. A big thanks
goes to Gonzalo who worked on this night and day (mostly
night).
Gaurav keeps helping us with the Web.Design classes, and
improving the existing web controls.
* ADO.NET:
New providers are available in this release. The relentless
System.Data team (Brian, Dan, Rodrigo, Tim and Ville) are
hacking non-stop on the databse code. Improving existing
providers, and new providers.
The new providers on this release:
* Oracle
* MS SQL
* ODBC
* Sybase
* Sqlite (for embedded use).
Many regression tests have been added as well (Ville has been
doing a great job here).
Brian also created a DB provider multiplexor (The ProviderFactory)
Stuart Caborn contributed Writing XML from a DataSet.
Luis Fernandez contributed constraint handling code.
Also there is new a Gtk# GUI tool from Dan that can be used to
try out various providers.
* System.XML:
Atsushi has taken the lead in fixing and plugging the missing
parts of the System.XML namespace, many fixes, many
improvements.
* CodeDom and the C# provider.
Jackson Harper has been helping us with the various interface
classes from the CodeDOM to the C# compiler, in this release
a new assembly joins us: Cscompmgd. It is a simple assembly,
and hence Microsoft decided not to waste an entire "System"
"dot" on it.
* Testing
Nick Drochak has integrated the new NUnit 2.0 system.
* Monograph:
Monograph now has a --stats option to get statistics on
assembly code.
CVS Contributors to this release:
Alejandro Sanchez, Alp Toker, Andrew Birkett, Atsushi Enomoto,
Brian Ritchie, Cesar Octavio Lopez Nataren, Chris Toshok,
Daniel Morgan, Daniel Stodden, Dennis Hayes, Dick Porter,
Diego Sevilla, Dietmar Maurer, Duncan Mak, Eduardo Garcia,
Ettore Perazzoli, Gaurav Vaish, Gonzalo Paniagua, Jackson
Harper, Jaime Anguiano, Johannes Roith, John Sohn, Jonathan
Pryor, Kristian Rietveld, Mads Pultz, Mark Crichton, Martin
Baulig, Martin Willemoes Hansen, Miguel de Icaza, Mike
Kestner, Nick Drochak, Nick Zigarovich, Paolo Molaro, Patrik
Torstensson, Phillip Pearson, Piers Haken, Rachel Hestilow,
Radek Doulik, Rafael Teixeira, Ravi Pratap, Rodrigo Moya,
Sebastien Pouliot, Tim Coleman, Tim Haynes, Ville Palo,
Vladimir Vukicevic, and Zoltan Varga.
(Am sorry, I could not track everyone from the ChangeLog
messages, I apologize in advance for the missing
contributors).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hello!
Version 0.16 of Mono has been released! This is mostly a bug
fix release, a lot of work has been going on to make existing
features more robust and less buggy. Also, contributions are
too varied, so it is hard to classify them in groups.
* Stats
795 commits to mono and mcs since August 23rd.
* News
The changes that got in this releases are mostly
bugfixes. Miguel, Martin and Ravi attacked lots of bugs in the
compiler, Dick fixed a bunch of bugs related to processes and
threads. Mark Crichton resumed his work on the SPARC port and
made lots of progress there. Juli Mallett has been working on
making sure Mono also builds on BSD systems. As usual, Dietmar
and Paolo supplied their continuous stream of fixes to the
runtime.
Dietmar has completed the work on the runtime side for
remoting support and we ship now with a sample channel, the
System.Runtime.Remoting.Sample. This can be used as a
reference implementation for anyone interested in implementing
other channels (like a CORBA channel).
Duncan got preliminary XSLT support done by using
libxslt.
Gonzalo (with some help from Patrik) has been working hard
making our ASP.NET implementation work on both Mono and MS by
migrating the existing xsp code to the class library. Gaurav
started working on the classes in System.Design.dll and Chris
Toshok checked in Mono.Directory.LDAP, which will be the
foundation to implement the System.DirectoryServices assembly.
Various fixes from Kral, Jason, Piers and Gonzalo were
committed to System.Xml; Martin Algiers reports that the
upcoming NAnt release will be fully compatible with Mono.
Miguel imported Sergey Chaban's Mono.PEToolkit and ilasm code
to CVS. Nick, as always, continues to refine our testing
framework by improving our tests. Andrew Birkett continues to
improve the implementation of our security/cryptographic
classes. Jonathan Pryor contributed type-reflector the our
list of tools.
* Other News From Behind de Curtain.
While the above is pretty impressive on its own, various other
non-released portions of Mono have been undergoing: Adam Treat
has been leading the effort to document our class libraries
and produce the tools required for it.
Martin Baulig has been working on the Mono Debugger which is
not being released yet. This debugger allows both native
Linux application as well as CIL applications to be debugged
at the same time (and in fact, you can use this to debug the
JIT engine). The debugger is written in C# with some C glue
In the meant A new JIT engine is under development, focused on
adding more of the high-end optimizations which will be
integrated on an ahead-of-time-compiler. Dietmar and Paolo
have been working on this.
* Contributors to this release
* Non-Ximian developers: Adam Treat, Andrew Birkett, Dennis
Hayes, Diego Sevilla, Franklin Wise, Gaurav Vaish ,Jason
Diamond, Johannes Roith, John Sohn, Jonathan Pryor, Juli
Mallett, Kral Ferch, Mike Crichton, Nick Drochak, Nick
Zigarovich, Piers Haken, Rafael Teixeira, Ricardo Fernandez
Pascual, Sergey Chaban, Tim Coleman.
* Ximian developers: Dietmar, Paolo, Dick, Duncan, Ravi,
Miguel, Martin, Chris, Joe, Gonzalo, Rodrigo.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Sergey Chaban added thread-safe support to
System.Collections.SortedList.
* Fixes to the compiler by Andrew Birkett.
* Tim Coleman contributed the OleDb provider for System.Data and started
work on System.Web.Services.
* Radek fixed a lot of problems on the PPC side. [*]
* Miguel and Martin committed the new type lookup system.
* Dietmar rewrote the marshalling code. [*]
* Peter Williams and Martin contributed the new Makefiles, with help
from Alp Toker as well.
* Contributors to this release:
* Non-Ximian developers: Nick Drochak, Martin Baulig, Tim
Coleman, Mike Kestner, Alp Toker, Jonathan Pryor, Jaime
Anguiano, Piers Haken, Rafael Teixeira, Mark Crichton,
Sergey Chabon, Ajay Kumar Dwivedi, Andrew Birkett, Dennis
Hayes (SWF), Adam Treat, Johannes Roith and Lawrence Pit.
* Ximian developers: Duncan, Ravi, Dick, Dietmar, Paolo,
Gonzalo, Rachel, Radek, Rodrigo, Jeff, Peter Williams and
Miguel.
Special thanks to Duncan for helping me put this release together.
Hello!
A new version of Mono (0.12), is out.
Mono is an open source implementation of the Microsoft.NET
Framework, and ships with a C# compiler, a runtime engine
(with a JIT on x86 cpus) and a set of class libraries.
Mono is know to work on a number of platforms:
x86/Linux, x86/Windows, x86/FreeBSD; sparc/solaris;
linuxppc/linux; strongarm/linux.
There have been many changes since the last release of Mono in
late April, thanks to Duncan for assembling the list of new
features, any omissions are my fault.
Changes since 0.11:
It is hard to keep track of the changes, as there are 1632
patches that were posted to the mailing list. One third of
the total number of patches since we opened mono-patches
list. I am sure I missed some stuff and probably missed some
contributors. I apologize in advance.
Runtime:
Paolo: New Reflection.Emit generation code generates
code that can be executed in Windows. Now binaries
generated by Mono/MCS will run on Windows.
Paolo got Activator.CreateInstance to work.
Sergey's CPU-optimization for CPBLK.
Many many bug fixes to the runtime from Dick, Dan
Lewis, Dietmar, Gonzalo, Martin, Paolo, Radek and Sergey,
Compiler:
Many bug fixes: The compiler can now compile Gtk#,
Vorbis#, System.Data assembly and System.Xml assembly
which previously did not work (Dietmar, Miguel, Paolo,
Piers, Ravi, Miguel). Thanks to all the bug
reporters.
Class Libraries:
Mike started work on System.Xml.XPath
Christian, Dennis, Daniel and friends got more stubs
for System.Windows.Forms in.
Ajay revamped System.Xml.Schema. And Jason and Duncan
updated System.Xml
Daniel also checked in a working CodeDOM
implementation and a C# provider.
Many bug fixes by everyone. Thanks to Daniel, Duncan,
Jonathan, Lawrence, Martin Mike, Nick and Piers. I am
missing a lot of contributors that should be listed.
ASP.NET support
A lot of work from Gonzalo allows some small and
modest ASP.NET applications to run (you still need the
unreleased XSP code though).
System.Data:
Integrated the MySQL provider from Brad Merryl.
Lots of work by Dan, Rodrigo, Tim.
Microsoft.VisualBasic runtime support
Rafael and Chris have been working on the VisualBasic
runtime support DLLs
Hello everyone!
Mono 0.11 is out!
This new version has new features:
* Massive:
* Ultrich Kunitz implemented the whole calendar set of
classes. Yes, thats right. The whole thing, with a
complete test suite. Thanks Ultrich!
* JIT/runtime features:
* Martin's debugging framework is included (see web
site for details on how to use it). (Martin)
* Transparent Proxy has been implemented for the
runtime (lets you run/debug/hack on remoting for Mono) (Dietmar)
* Inline and constant folding/propagation support
in the JIT engine (Dietmar)
* Profiling support for the JIT engine (--profile).
* Cool runtime hacks, that made our compiler twice as fast:
* New string rewrite: faster, speedier, leaner, cooler!
Paolo had been talking about a new string rewrite,
and super hacker Patrik Torstensson started the
implementation, Dietmar then switched the object
layout and the Mono team helped iron out a few of
the details.