Bricolage 1.8.11 Released

2006.06.19

The Bricolage development team is pleased to announce the release of Bricolage 1.8.11. This maintenance release addresses a number of minor issues in Bricolage 1.8.10 and adds a few improvements, including a preview link for related media. Important bug fixes include:

  • My Workspace now remembers the sort order of assets just as well as desks do. [David]

  • Added more code to the inst/upgrade/1.8.9/fix_publish_status.pl upgrade script to better cover the possible variations in publish status inaccuracies. [Brad Fox, Brad Harder, & David]

  • Fixed media publishing so that when a media document is published to more than one output channel, and there are differences in the URIs for that media document between the output channels, that they won't trigger the expiration of each other's files. Reported by Rod Taylor. [David]

  • Fixed bug where users granted CREATE permission were unexpectedly allowed to PUBLISH items on the Publish Desk. [Christian Niles]

  • bric_queued now works with all burners, not just the Mason burner. Reported by Christian Niles. [Scott]

  • Changing an asset note and then going back to the notes screen before saving the asset now properly shows the changed note instead of the old note. Reported by Phillip Smith. [David]

  • New categories created via the SOAP interface with underscores in their URIs no longer end up with backslashes in the URIs. Reported by Ashlee Caul. [David]

For the complete history of ongoing changes in Bricolage, see Bric::Changes.

Download Bricolage 1.8.11 now from the Bricolage Web site Downloads page, from the SourceForge download page, and from the Kineticode download page.

About Bricolage

Bricolage is a full-featured, enterprise-class content management and publishing system. It offers a browser-based interface for ease-of use, a full-fledged templating system with complete HTML::Mason, HTML::Template, and Template Toolkit support for flexibility, and many other features. It operates in an Apache/mod_perl environment and uses the PostgreSQL RDBMS for its repository. A comprehensive, actively-developed open source CMS, Bricolage has been hailed by eWEEK as quite possibly the most capable enterprise-class open-source application available.

blog comments powered by Disqus