Since then we've made several improvements, including:
* a RESTful API for programmatically controlling your tahoe node with
- the programming language of your choice:
+ * the programming language of your choice:
http://allmydata.org/trac/tahoe/browser/docs/webapi.txt
* a command-line interface for uploading and downloading files in the
- old Unix style (ticket #53)
+ Unix style (ticket #53)
- * significantly reduced the memory used when uploading files (ticket #29)
+ * ported to Solaris
- * significantly reduced the bandwidth and disk space used when uploading many small files (tickets #80, 81, #85)
+ * significantly reduced the memory used when uploading files
+ (ticket #29)
+
+ * significantly reduced the bandwidth and disk space used when
+ uploading many small files (tickets #80, 81, #85)
* added configurable erasure-coding parameters: how many total shares
to produce, and how many shares are required to reconstruct the
file (ticket #84)
- * many bugs fixed or enhancements implemented; for a list of all
- tickets closed since the v0.4 release, see [2].
-
* added configurable limits on how much disk space your node will
allocate for storing data on behalf of other peers (ticket #34)
+ * many bugs fixed and enhancements implemented
+
For complete details, see this web page which shows all ticket
changes, repository checkins, and wiki changes from June 29 to today,
August 16: [2].
INSTALLATION
-This release of Tahoe works on Linux/x86, Linux/amd64, Mac/Intel,
-Mac/PPC, Windows-native, and Cygwin.
+This release of Tahoe works on Linux, Mac OS X, Windows-native,
+Cygwin, and Solaris.
To install, download the tarball [4], untar it, go into the resulting
directory, and follow the directions in the README [5].