51

(12 replies, posted in Feature requests)

Rickard - Perhaps you should make a sticky post about 1.3. It seems a lot of people are asking wink

52

(4 replies, posted in Programming)

Dr.Jeckyl wrote:

by splitting do you mean open the file up in say notepad and cut out about half and make a new file with the remainder?

Exactly. Basically, make sure you don't cut off any statements, but cut down the file size.

I am in agreement that SSH is the best way to get there.

53

(10 replies, posted in PunBB 1.2 discussion)

Connor, do you like playing devil's advocate or are you just pessimistic?

It does not have to do with FreeBSD, but the idea of their CVSup system. Click a button, and all your sources are current. I run an unmodified board and a system like this would be very cool for me. It would make it even easier to administer than it already is - plus, if there's a security fix, I can have it right when Rickard commits it.

The system could edit files while maintaining permissions - it's not as hard as you might think! I wouldn't have to download the entire files from source, just the edits. I wouldn't have to download, ungzip, upload, upgrade.

54

(6 replies, posted in PunBB 1.2 discussion)

All I know is that Rickard has been working very hard and has taken a small and deserved break. I saw in another post that he's worked on a "Search Engine Friendly" feature (mod_rewrite), and re-done extern.php for some extra fun stuff!!

55

(10 replies, posted in PunBB 1.2 discussion)

I mean via PHP; via the PunBB administration panel.

56

(10 replies, posted in PunBB 1.2 discussion)

The idea, Connor, is that it uses the versioning system either automagically, or by request, to update to the most current version.

57

(10 replies, posted in PunBB 1.2 discussion)

CVSup Rundown
From the FreeBSD website:
"CVSup is a software package for distributing and updating source trees from a master CVS repository on a remote server host. The FreeBSD sources are maintained in a CVS repository on a central development machine..."

Would anyone be interested in using something like this for Pun? I could write/administer it fairly easily. Of course, one tricky part would be SQL Schema changes.

I think if implemented correctly, it would be very cool. Thoughts?

58

(7 replies, posted in General discussion)

Nice sausage... yikes

59

(3 replies, posted in PunBB 1.2 discussion)

Try PunRes, the Punbb modding site.

I upgraded this morning from 1.2.1 to 1.2.4 without a problem!

61

(10 replies, posted in Programming)

As far as I know, imagemagick is mostly for image manipulation. You won't need it if you're just trying for a gallery.

62

(1,382 replies, posted in General discussion)

DragonFlyBSD

63

(1,382 replies, posted in General discussion)

chrome

64

(1,382 replies, posted in General discussion)

volkswagen

65

(124 replies, posted in PunBB 1.2 discussion)

Rickard, look at the <base> tag.

66

(1,382 replies, posted in General discussion)

left

67

(36 replies, posted in Programming)

I don't use CMSs, but BlogCMS seems to be popular - AND it uses Pun!

68

(200 replies, posted in General discussion)

Here's a good place to put your invites: http://isnoop.net/gmailomatic.php EDIT - This page has been taken down

69

(1 replies, posted in Programming)

Nevermind - fixed.

70

(1 replies, posted in Programming)

Does anyone know if there is a maximum size for hosts.deny? I keep receiving an error stating that the string is too long, or syntax is incorrect. I know that the syntax is correct - I keep checking it...

71

(8 replies, posted in PunBB 1.2 bug reports)

I tested in IE and it didn't do anything different either.

72

(8 replies, posted in PunBB 1.2 bug reports)

I don't see the problem you're talking about.

73

(8 replies, posted in PunBB 1.2 bug reports)

wrote:

blalblablabla

testing^^^

74

(3 replies, posted in PunBB 1.2 discussion)

Since this board uses 1) (I am assuming) MySQL 4+ and 2) indexes, there is theoretically no performance hit. MySQL 4's query cache keeps it super-fast by keeping commonly used queries in the memory. The indexes act as a table of contents, telling MySQL exactly where the row exists so it doesn't have to search every time.

75

(3 replies, posted in General discussion)

Nothing worse than a pun about puns big_smile