forked from Mirrors/freeswitch
00654d880e
git-svn-id: http://svn.freeswitch.org/svn/freeswitch/trunk@8545 d0543943-73ff-0310-b7d9-9358b9ac24b2
62 lines
3.2 KiB
Plaintext
62 lines
3.2 KiB
Plaintext
For a release-by-release change history, see
|
|
<http://xmlrpc-c.sourceforge.net/change.html>.
|
|
|
|
XML-RPC For C/C++ was created by Eric Kidd in 2000, when XML-RPC was
|
|
new and vital. Its development was funded in significant part by
|
|
First Peer, Inc. Eric released the package in January 2001 and set up
|
|
an extensive project to maintain it. The project used virtually every
|
|
feature on Sourceforge, had about 8 official developers, and
|
|
distributed code in various formats. There were mailing lists,
|
|
trackers, CVS branches, RPMs, and a full PHP-based web site, just to
|
|
name a few features of the project.
|
|
|
|
Then everything ground to a halt in June 2001, with the disappearance
|
|
of Eric. We don't know what happened to him, but Google searches in
|
|
late 2004 indicated he dropped off the face of the web at that time.
|
|
While people continued to use Xmlrpc-c, and some developed fixes and
|
|
enhancements and posted them to the Sourceforge trackers, the release
|
|
remained frozen at 0.9.10. The web site also became frozen in time.
|
|
|
|
In the years that followed the great freeze, XML-RPC became
|
|
marginalized by more sophisticated alternatives such as SOAP. XML-RPC
|
|
consequently became rather stable and interest in Xmlrpc-c levelled
|
|
off.
|
|
|
|
This dark age of Xmlrpc-c lasted until October 2004, when Bryan Henderson
|
|
set out to find an RPC mechanism to use in one of his projects. Bryan
|
|
found XML-RPC and then Xmlrpc-c. He decided that the two were almost right
|
|
for his needs, but he needed some small extensions.
|
|
|
|
On finding out that the project was orphaned, Bryan decided to take it
|
|
over. Bryan became the Sourceforge project administrator through
|
|
Sourceforge's abandonned project process, then gathered the patches
|
|
that had been submitted over the years and made a come-back release
|
|
called 1.0.
|
|
|
|
Bryan then proceeded to add a lot of features in subsequent releases
|
|
about every two months. Most of it was code Bryan wrote himself, but
|
|
significant parts were contributed by others, as you can see in the
|
|
detailed history below. Among the larger enhancements was a new
|
|
C++ interface; the old one was a fairly weak wrapper around the
|
|
C interface and required the user to manage memory and access the
|
|
underlying C structures; the new one used pure C++ principles with
|
|
automatic memory management.
|
|
|
|
Bryan also wrote a complete user's manual. Surprisingly, in spite of
|
|
the wide array of features the project had, documentation wasn't one
|
|
of them. There was only a smattering of information available on how
|
|
to use the package.
|
|
|
|
One significant change Bryan made to the project was to strip it down
|
|
considerably. In order to concentrate the small amount of time Bryan
|
|
had available for Xmlrpc-c development on actual code and
|
|
documentation, Bryan had to greatly reduce the amount of bureaucracy
|
|
involved in administering the project and making releases, and reduce
|
|
the set of skills required to do it. Bryan made static make files
|
|
(for GNU Make) to replace the two extra build stages that originally
|
|
generated make files. Bryan moved away from Libtool and toward simple
|
|
compiling and linking. Bryan eliminated all pre-built distributions;
|
|
each of his releases consisted of a single source code tarball, and
|
|
that tarball was not signed. Bryan removed some redundant sources of
|
|
information from the package and the web site.
|