home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- 2.5.0
- -----
-
- Very minor adjustments since RC2, see the NEWS file for details.
-
- 2.5.0-RC2
- ---------
-
- Many fixes since the RC1 release. This one is as close to production quality as
- they come, so this will be the last release before 2.5.0. The SGML documentation
- files have also been removed from the tarball. If you want them, get them from
- the CVS repository.
-
- 2.5.0-RC1
- ---------
-
- Release Candidate 1. All $smarty vars can now be dynamic, such as
- $smarty.get.$foo. A new class function get_function_object() gets you a
- reference to an assigned object, useful within your own custom functions.
- append() can now merge as well as append with a third optional attribute. A new
- class function get_config_vars() was added, and get_template_vars() can now be
- used to get individual vars. Full variable syntax is now supported within
- double quotes via a backtick (`) syntax. Files created by smarty are now
- written to a tmp file then renamed to avoid file lock retention. html_radios,
- html_checkboxes, html_table, html_image, nl2br functions added, see the NEWS
- file for full details.
-
- 2.4.2
- -----
- Another point release. Added support for dynamic object reference syntax
- ($foo->$bar), support for full variable syntax within quotes ("$foo[0].bar"),
- and other minor fixes. See the NEWS file for full details.
-
- 2.4.1
- -----
-
- This is basically a point release, cleaning up a few things caught
- in the 2.4.0 release. See the NEWS file for full details.
-
- 2.4.0
- -----
-
- Smarty now supports the ability to access objects within the templates. Two
- methods are available, one which closely follows Smartys conventions, and
- another that follows more traditional object syntax for those familiar with
- PHP.
-
- The internal compiling engine has also undergone some major work. The regex
- parsing was rewritten to be much more strict, more secure and more
- maintainable. Config files are now compiled, which can speed up pages quite a
- bit that use config files extensively. Assigned variables are no longer
- extracted to PHP namespace, saving an extract call for every template. There is
- now support for applying modifiers to static values and functions. You can now
- access constants with $smarty.const.VAR. See the NEWS file for complete
- changes.
-
- 2.3.1
- -----
-
- The mtime on compiled files will now match the source files, in the case where
- the source file may not get the current timestamp, recompiling will still work
- as expected. Proper support for open_basedir has been added, so Smarty should
- work correctly in safe mode. Added a few new features such as textformat block
- function, strip variable modifier and optgroup support for html_options. Also
- other minor bug fixes, see the Change Log.
-
- 2.3.0
- -----
-
- Smarty now has a {debug} template function that brings up the debugging console
- right where {debug} is called, regardless of $debugging settings. This works a
- little different than turning on $debugging in the sense that it shows all the
- template variables available at the time {debug} is called, including local
- scope vars. It does not show the templates names however, since this
- executed during runtime of the template.
-
- You can now supply an expire time when clearing cache or compile files. This is
- mostly useful for removing stale files via the API.
-
- Plugins now stop execution upon error, instead of outputting a warning and
- continuing.
-
- Two new API functions, assign_by_ref() and append_by_ref() were added. They
- allow assigning template variables by reference. This can make a significant
- performance gain, especially if you are assigning large arrays of data. PHP 5.0
- will do this implicitly, so these functions are basically workarounds.
-
- Several misc bug fixes, see the Change Log for information.
-
-
- 2.2.0
- -----
-
- Smarty now allows an array of paths for the $plugin_dir class variable. The
- directories will be searched in the order they are given, so for efficiency keep
- the most-used plugins at the top. Also, absolute paths to the plugin directories are
- more efficient than relying on the PHP include_path.
-
- Cache files can now be grouped with the cache_id. See the documentation under
- the new "Caching" section for details. compile_id also respects the same
- grouping syntax. The cache/compile file structure changed, so be sure to clear
- out all your cache and compile files when upgrading Smarty. Also if you are
- using PHP-accelerator, restart apache. I've seen some quirky things happen if
- the phpa files do not get cleared (known issue with phpa and parent
- class-member changes, so just clear 'em.)
-
- Smarty now correctly respects the PHP include_path for $template_dir, $compile_dir,
- $cache_dir, $config_dir and $plugin_dir. Be aware that relying on the
- include_path is an overhead, try to use absolute pathnames when possible
- (or relative to working directory.)
-
- Documentation has been updated and rearranged a bit. Most notably, the
- installation instructions are completely revamped, and a new Caching section
- explains Smarty's caching in detail along with the new grouping functionality.
-
- Many misc. bug fixes and enhancements, see the full ChangeLog (NEWS file) for
- details.
-
- 2.1.1
- -----
-
- There was a bug with template paths and the include_path, this has been fixed.
- Also register_outputfilter() did not work, this is fixed. A new template
- function named "cycle" has been added to the distribution, nice for cycling
- through a list (or array) of values.
-
- 2.1.0
- -----
-
- This release has quite a few new features and fixes. Most notable are the
- introduction of block functions, so you can write plugins that work on a block
- of text with {func}{/func} notation. Also output filters were added, so you can
- apply a function against the output of your templates. This differs from the
- postfilter function, which works on the compiled template at compile time, and
- output filters work on the template output at runtime.
-
- Many other features and bug fixes are noted in the NEWS file.
-
-
- 2.0.1
- -----
-
- This is a point release, fixing a few bugs and cleaning things up. A plugin
- was renamed, the dash "-" was removed from compiled template and cached file
- names. If you're upgrading, you might want to clear them out first. See the
- ChangeLog for details.
-
- 2.0.0
- -----
-
- This release is a huge milestone for Smarty. Most notable new things are a
- plugin architecture, removal of PEAR dependency, and optimizations that
- drastically improve the performance of Smarty in most cases.
-
- The plugin architecture allows modifiers, custom functions, compiler functions,
- prefilters, postfilters, resources, and insert functions to be added by
- simply dropping a file into the plugins directory. Once dropped in, they are
- automatically registered by the template engine. This makes user-contributed
- plugins easy to manage, as well as the internal workings of Smarty easy to
- control and customize. This new architecture depends on the __FILE__ constant,
- which contains the full path to the executing script. Some older versions of
- PHP incorrectly gave the script name and not the full filesystem path. Be sure
- your version of PHP populates __FILE__ correctly. If you use custom template
- resource functions, the format of these changed with the plugin architecture.
- Be sure to update your functions accordingly. See the template resource section
- of the documentation.
-
- The PEAR dependancy was removed from Smarty. The Config_File class that comes
- with Smarty was actually what needed PEAR for error handling which Smarty didn't
- use, but now everything is self-contained.
-
- Performance improvements are graphed on the benchmark page, you will see that
- overall performance has been sped up by as much as 80% in some cases.
-
- Smarty-cached pages now support If-Modified-Since headers, meaning that if a
- cached template page has not changed since the last request, a "304 Not
- Modified" header will be sent instead of resending the same page. This is
- disabled by default, change the setting of $cache_modified_check.
-
-
- 1.5.2
- -----
-
- Mostly bug fixes, added a default template resource handler.
-
-
- 1.5.1
- -----
-
- Critical bug fix release. If you use caching, you'll need to upgrade.
-
-
- 1.5.0
- -----
-
- Several feature enhancements were made to this version, most notably the
- {foreach ...} command which is an alternative to {section ...} with an easier
- syntax for looping through a single array of values. Several functions were
- enhanced so that the output can be automatically assigned to a template
- variable instead of displayed (assign attribute). Cache files can now be
- controlled with a custom function as an alternative to the built-in file based
- method. Many code cleanups and bug fixed went into this release as well.
-
-
- 1.4.6
- -----
-
- The behavior with caching and compile_check has been slightly enhanced. If
- caching is enabled AND compile_check is enabled, the cache will immediately get
- regenerated if _any_ involved template or config file is updated. This imposes
- a slight performance hit because it must check all the files for changes, so be
- sure to run live sites with caching enabled and compile_check disabled for best
- performance. If you update a template or config file, simply turn on
- compile_check, load the page, then turn it back off. This will update the cache
- file with the new content. This is accomplished by maintaining a list of
- included/loaded templates and config files at the beginning of the cache file.
- Therefore it is advisable to remove all cache files after upgrading to 1.4.6
- (although not absolutely necessary, old cache files will regenerate)
-
- The debug console now has script timing and array values printed. You MUST
- update your debug.tpl file with this version of Smarty. Also, the new debug.tpl
- will not work with older versions of Smarty.
-
-
- 1.4.5
- -----
-
- Mostly bug fixes and minor improvements. Added compile id for separate compiled
- versions of the same script. The directory format and filename convention for
- the files in templates_c has changed, so you may want to remove all of the
- existing ones before you upgrade.
-
-
- 1.4.4
- -----
-
- A few bug fixes, new section looping attributes and properties, debugging
- console function for control via URL, and overLib integration and access
- to request variables from within the template.
-
-
- 1.4.3
- -----
-
- This release has a few bug fixes and several enhancements. Smarty now supports
- template security for third-party template editing. These features disallow the
- ability for someone to execute commands or PHP code from the template language.
- Smarty also now has a built-in debugging console, which is a javascript pop-up
- window that displays all the included template names and assigned variables.
-
-
- 1.4.2
- -----
-
- This was mostly one bug fix with variable scoping within included templates
- and a few documentation changes and updates. See the ChangeLog file for full
- details.
-
-
- 1.4.1
- -----
-
- It seems that the EX_LOCK logic from the previous release didn't fix all the
- problems with windows platforms. Hopefully this one does. It basically
- disables file locking on windows, so there is a potential that two programs
- could write over the same file at the same time, fyi.
-
- The reset is minor bug fixes, please refer to the ChangeLog file.
-
-
- 1.4.0
- -----
-
- IMPORTANT NOTICE
-
- Smarty now has a new syntax for accessing elements within section loops. The
- new syntax is easier to use and nicely handles data structures of any
- complexity. Consequently, this breaks the old syntax.
-
- Here is an example of the syntax change:
-
- old syntax:
- {$sec1/sec2/sec3/customer.phone}
-
- new syntax:
- {$customer[$sec1][$sec2][$sec3].phone}
-
- The section names used to come first, followed by the variable name. Now the
- variable name always comes first, followed by the section names in brackets.
- You can access variable indexes anywhere, depending on how you passed the
- variables in.
-
- To fix your current templates, we have provided a script that will adjust the
- syntax for you. Located in misc/fix_vars.php, run this script from the the
- command line, giving each template as an argument. Be sure to use absolute
- pathnames, or pathnames relative to the executing script. Probably the easiest
- way to do this is to copy the fix_vars.php script into your template directory
- and run 'php -q fix_vars.php *.tpl' Be sure you have proper write permission,
- and backup your scripts first to be safe! The examples in the 1.4.0
- documentation have been updated to reflect the changes.
-
- cd /path/to/templates
- cp /path/to/fix_vars.php .
- find . -name "*.tpl" -exec php -q ./fix_vars.php {} \;
-
- NEW AND IMPROVED COMPILATION PROCESS
-
- Smarty 1.4.0 also has a new compilation process. Instead of compiling all the
- templates up front, it now compiles them at runtime. This has several
- advantages. First of all, there is no longer a need to have a single template
- directory. You can now have arbitrary template sources, such as multiple
- directories or even database calls. This also speeds the performance of Smarty
- when $compile_check is enabled, since it is only checking the template that is
- being executed instead of everything found in the template directory. The
- $tpl_file_ext is no longer needed, but kept for backward compatability.
- Templates can now be named anything you like with any extension.
-
- MINOR FIXES
-
- A workaround for LOCK_EX on Windows systems was added, and changed a couple of
- file permissions for better security on public servers.
-
- $show_info_header is now defaulted to false instead of true. This header causes
- problems when displaying content other than HTML, so now you must explicitly
- set this flag to true to show the header information (or change the default in
- your copy of Smarty.)
-
- Documentation is written in docbook format. I updated the docbook -> HTML
- generating software & style-sheets, and consequently the examples are no longer
- in a different background color. If anyone wants to contribute a better
- stylesheet or help with documentation, drop me a line. <monte@ispi.net>
-
- CHANGES/ENHANCEMENTS/UPDATES
-
- date_format, html_select_date and html_select_time used to require a unix
- timestamp as the format of the date passed into the template. Smarty is now a
- bit smarter at this. It will take a unix timestamp, a mysql timestamp, or any
- date string that is parsable by strtotime, such as 10/01/2001 or 2001-10-01,
- etc. Just give some formats a try and see what works.
-
- Smarty now has template prefilters, meaning that you can run your templates
- through custom functions before they are compiled. This is good for things like
- removing unwanted comments, keeping an eye on words or functionality people are
- putting in templates, translating XML -> HTML, etc. See the register_prefilter
- documentation for more info.
-
- Another addition are the so-called compiler functions. These are custom
- functions registered by the user that are executed at compilation time of the
- template. They can be used to inject PHP code or time-sensitive static content
- into the compiled template.
-
- The run-time custom functions are now passed the Smarty object as the second
- parameter. This can be used, for example, to assign or clear template variables
- from inside the custom function.
-
- clear_compile_dir() was added for clearing out compiled versions of your
- templates. Not something normally needed, but you may have a need for this if
- you have $compile_check set to false and you periodically update templates via
- some automated process. As of 1.4.0, uncompiled templates _always_ get
- compiled regardless of $compile_check setting, although they won't be checked
- for recompile if $compile_check is set to false.
-
- You can now refer to properties of objects assigned from PHP by using the '->'
- symbol and specifying the property name after it, e.g. $foo->bar.
-
- {php}{/php} tags were added to embed php into the templates. Not normally
- needed, but some circumstances may call for it. Check out the "componentized
- templates" tip in the documentation for an example.
-
- {capture}{/capture} and {counter} functions were added. See the documentation
- for a complete description and examples.
-
- UPGRADE NOTES
-
- The format of the files created in the $compile_dir are now a bit different.
- The compiled template filename is the template resource name url-encoded.
- Therefore, all compiled files are now in the top directory of $compile_dir.
- This was done to make way for arbitrary template resources. Each compiled
- template also has a header that states what template resource was used to
- create it. From a unix command prompt, you can use "head -2 *" to see the first
- two lines of each file.
-
- When upgrading to 1.4.0, you will want to clear out all your old files in the
- $compile_dir. If you have $compile_check set to false and the compiled template
- does not yet exist, it will compile it regardless of this setting. This way you
- can clear out the $compile_dir and not worry about setting $compile_check to
- true to get the inital compilation under way.
-
-
- 1.3.2
- -----
-
- Smarty now has (an optional) header prepended to the output of the Smarty
- templates. This displays the Smarty version and the date/time when the page was
- generated. This is useful for debugging your cache routines, and purely
- informational so there is evidence that the page was generated by Smarty. Set
- $show_info_header to false to disable it.
-
- {config_load ...} performance was tuned by placing the loaded variables into a
- global array, so basically a config file is read from the file system and
- placed into a php array structure only once, no matter how many times it is
- called in any of the templates. The scope of the loaded variables has changed a
- bit as well. Variables loaded by config_load used to be treated as global
- variables, meaning that parent templates (templates that included the current
- template) could see them. Now the default behavior is such that loaded
- variables are only visible by the current template and child templates (all
- templates included after the {config_load ...} is called.) To mimic the
- original behavior, provide the attribute "global=yes" like so: {config_load
- file="mystuff.conf" global=yes}. Now when you load in mystuff.conf, the
- variables will be visible to parent templates (merged with any existing config
- variables.)
-
- A formatting attribute was added to the {math ...} function, adding the ability
- to control the format of the output. Use the same formatting syntax as the PHP
- function sprintf().
-
- {html_select_time ...} was added, a custom function that works much like
- {html_select_date ...} except it displays time elements instead of dates.
-
- A few custom modifiers were added: count_characters, count_words,
- count_sentences, count_paragraphs. All pretty self-explanatory.
-
- /* vim: set et: */
-