'Runtime'에 해당되는 글 6건
- 2010.10.19 Apache Portable Runtime 0.9.19와 APR Utility 0.9.19 릴리즈
- 2010.10.05 Apache Portable Runtime Utility 1.3.10 릴리즈
- 2009.09.29 Apache Portable Runtime 1.3.9 릴리즈
- 2009.08.06 Apache Portable Runtime 1.3.8과 APR-Utility 1.3.9 릴리즈
- 2009.07.07 Apache Portable Runtime 1.3.6과 APR-Utility 1.3.8 릴리즈
아파치 프로젝트는 협업과 개발 프로세스를 기반으로 하는 상호간의 공감대와 개방되어 있는 실용적인 소프트웨어 라이센스, 그 분야에서 선두를 달릴 수 있는 고품질 소프트웨어 개발을 추구하고 있습니다.
우리는 심플한 서버 공유 프로젝트의 모임이라고도 하지만 오히려 개발자와 사용자간의 커뮤니티라고 생각합니다.
The Apache Software Foundation and the Apache Portable Runtime Project are proud to announce the General Availability of version 1.3.10 of the APR Apache Portable Runtime Utility library.
This is a bug fix release and corrects several potential security vulnerabilities and other defects. Users of previous versions are strongly cautioned to update to this release.
(See CHANGES-APR-UTIL-1.3 for more information.)
Version 1.4.2 of the Apache Portable Runtime remains current.
Version 1.2.1 of the companion APR-iconv library, an alternative portable implementation of the 'iconv' library, remains current.
APR is available for download from:
http://apr.apache.org/
The mission of the Apache Portable Runtime Project is to create and maintain software libraries that provide a predictable and consistent interface to underlying platform-specific implementations. The primary goal is to provide an API to which software developers may code and be assured of predictable
if not identical behavior regardless of the platform on which their software is built, relieving them of the need to code special-case conditions to work around or take advantage of platform-specific deficiencies or features.
APR and its companion libraries are implemented entirely in C and provide a common programming interface across a wide variety of operating system platforms without sacrificing performance.
Currently supported platforms include:
UNIX variants
Windows
Netware
Mac OS X
OS/2
To give a brief overview, the primary core subsystems of APR 1.3 include the following:
Atomic operations
Dynamic Shared Object loading
File I/O
Locks (mutexes, condition variables, etc)
Memory management (high performance allocators)
Memory-mapped files
Multicast Sockets
Network I/O
Shared memory
Thread and Process management
Various data structures (tables, hashes, priority queues, etc)
For a more complete list, please refer to the following URLs:
http://apr.apache.org/docs/
http://apr.apache.org/docs/
Users of APR 0.9 should be aware that migrating to the APR 1.x
programming interfaces may require some adjustments; APR 1.x is
neither source nor binary compatible with earlier APR 0.9 releases.
Users of APR 1.x can expect consistent interfaces and binary backwards
compatibility throughout the entire APR 1.x release cycle, as defined
in our versioning rules:
http://apr.apache.org/
APR is already used extensively by the Apache HTTP Server
version 2 and the Subversion revision control system, to
name but a few. We list all known projects using APR at
http://apr.apache.org/
if you find our libraries useful in your own projects!
Apache Portable Runtime 1.3.9 Released
The Apache Software Foundation and the Apache Portable Runtime Project are proud to announce the General Availability of version 1.3.9 of the APR Apache Portable Runtime library, and version 1.3.9 of the companion APR-util Apache Portable Utility library.
The corresponding version 1.2.1 of the companion APR-iconv library, an alternative portable implementation of the 'iconv' library, remains current.
APR is available for download from:
http://apr.apache.org/download.cgi
This version of APR is primarily a bug fix release, including fixes for specific platforms' configuration, feature detection, and run time behavior. Most developers and users are encouraged to adopt the latest APR 1.x version to ensure the most comprehensive support and access to the latest features and enhancements.
Note that the APR library release 1.3.8 introduced security fixes, users of prior versions are strongly cautioned to upgrade to a later release.
The mission of the Apache Portable Runtime Project is to create and maintain software libraries that provide a predictable and consistent interface to underlying platform-specific implementations. The primary goal is to provide an API to which software developers may code and be assured of predictable
if not identical behavior regardless of the platform on which their software is built, relieving them of the need to code special-case conditions to work around or take advantage of platform-specific deficiencies or features.
APR and its companion libraries are implemented entirely in C and provide a common programming interface across a wide variety of operating system platforms without sacrificing performance.
Currently supported platforms include:
UNIX variants
Windows
Netware
Mac OS X
OS/2
To give a brief overview, the primary core subsystems of APR 1.3 include the following:
Atomic operations
Dynamic Shared Object loading
File I/O
Locks (mutexes, condition variables, etc)
Memory management (high performance allocators)
Memory-mapped files
Multicast Sockets
Network I/O
Shared memory
Thread and Process management
Various data structures (tables, hashes, priority queues, etc)
For a more complete list, please refer to the following URLs:
http://apr.apache.org/docs/apr/modules.html
http://apr.apache.org/docs/apr-util/modules.html
Users of APR 0.9 should be aware that migrating to the APR 1.x programming interfaces may require some adjustments; APR 1.x is neither source nor binary compatible with earlier APR 0.9 releases.
Users of APR 1.x can expect consistent interfaces and binary backwards compatibility throughout the entire APR 1.x release cycle, as defined in our versioning rules:
http://apr.apache.org/versioning.html
APR is already used extensively by the Apache HTTP Server version 2 and the Subversion revision control system, to name but a few. We list all known projects using APR at http://apr.apache.org/projects.html -- so please let us know if you find our libraries useful in your own projects!
The Apache Software Foundation and the Apache Portable Runtime Project are proud to announce the General Availability of version 1.3.8 of the APR Apache Portable Runtime library, and version 1.3.9 of the companion APR-util Apache Portable Utility library.
The corresponding version 1.2.1 of the companion APR-iconv library, an alternative portable implementation of the 'iconv' library, remains current.
APR is available for download from:
http://apr.apache.org/download.cgi
This version of APR is a security and bug fix release, including fixes for specific platforms' configuration, feature detection, and run time behavior. Most developers and users are encourage to adopt the latest APR 1.x version to ensure the most comprehensive support and access to the latest features and enhancements.
Note that the APR library release 1.3.8 and APR-util library release 1.3.9 introduce security fixes, users of prior versions are strongly encouraged to upgrade to this release.
SECURITY: CVE-2009-2412 (cve.mitre.org)
Fixes overflow in pools and rmm, due to size alignment. The APR project thanks Matt Lewis for his diligent reporting, analysis, and submitted patch.
The mission of the Apache Portable Runtime Project is to create and maintain software libraries that provide a predictable and consistent interface to underlying platform-specific implementations. The primary goal is to provide an API to which software developers may code and be assured of predictable
if not identical behavior regardless of the platform on which their software is built, relieving them of the need to code special-case conditions to work around or take advantage of platform-specific deficiencies or features.
APR and its companion libraries are implemented entirely in C and provide a common programming interface across a wide variety of operating system platforms without sacrificing performance.
Currently supported platforms include:
UNIX variants
Windows
Netware
Mac OS X
OS/2
To give a brief overview, the primary core subsystems of APR 1.3 include the following:
Atomic operations
Dynamic Shared Object loading
File I/O
Locks (mutexes, condition variables, etc)
Memory management (high performance allocators)
Memory-mapped files
Multicast Sockets
Network I/O
Shared memory
Thread and Process management
Various data structures (tables, hashes, priority queues, etc)
For a more complete list, please refer to the following URLs:
http://apr.apache.org/docs/apr/modules.html
http://apr.apache.org/docs/apr-util/modules.html
Users of APR 0.9 should be aware that migrating to the APR 1.x programming interfaces may require some adjustments; APR 1.x is neither source nor binary compatible with earlier APR 0.9 releases.
Users of APR 1.x can expect consistent interfaces and binary backwards compatibility throughout the entire APR 1.x release cycle, as defined in our versioning rules:
http://apr.apache.org/versioning.html
APR is already used extensively by the Apache HTTP Server version 2 and the Subversion revision control system, to name but a few. We list all known projects using APR at http://apr.apache.org/projects.html -- so please let us know if you find our libraries useful in your own projects!
The Apache Software Foundation and the Apache Portable Runtime Project are proud to announce the General Availability of version 1.3.6 of the APR Apache Portable Runtime library, and version 1.3.8 of the companion APR-util Apache Portable Utility library.
The corresponding version 1.2.1 of the companion APR-iconv library, an alternative portable implementation of the 'iconv' library, remains current.
APR is available for download from:
http://apr.apache.org/download.cgi
This version of APR is a primarily a bug fix release, including fixes for specific platforms' configuration, feature detection, and run time behavior. Most developers and users are encouraged to adopt the latest APR 1.x version to ensure the most comprehensive support and access to the latest features and enhancements.
Note that the APR-util library release 1.3.7 introduced security fixes, users of prior versions are strongly cautioned to upgrade to a later release.
The mission of the Apache Portable Runtime Project is to create and maintain software libraries that provide a predictable and consistent interface to underlying platform-specific implementations. The primary goal is to provide an API to which software developers may code and be assured of predictable if not identical behavior regardless of the platform on which their software is built, relieving them of the need to code special-case conditions to work around or take advantage of platform-specific deficiencies or features.
APR and its companion libraries are implemented entirely in C and provide a common programming interface across a wide variety of operating system platforms without sacrificing performance.
Currently supported platforms include:
UNIX variants
Windows
Netware
Mac OS X
OS/2
To give a brief overview, the primary core subsystems of APR 1.3 include the following:
Atomic operations
Dynamic Shared Object loading
File I/O
Locks (mutexes, condition variables, etc)
Memory management (high performance allocators)
Memory-mapped files
Multicast Sockets
Network I/O
Shared memory
Thread and Process management
Various data structures (tables, hashes, priority queues, etc)
For a more complete list, please refer to the following URLs:
http://apr.apache.org/docs/apr/modules.html
http://apr.apache.org/docs/apr-util/modules.html
Users of APR 0.9 should be aware that migrating to the APR 1.x programming interfaces may require some adjustments; APR 1.x is neither source nor binary compatible with earlier APR 0.9 releases.
Users of APR 1.x can expect consistent interfaces and binary backwards compatibility throughout the entire APR 1.x release cycle, as defined in our versioning rules:
http://apr.apache.org/versioning.html
APR is already used extensively by the Apache HTTP Server version 2 and the Subversion revision control system, to name but a few. We list all known projects using APR at http://apr.apache.org/projects.html -- so please let us know
if you find our libraries useful in your own projects!