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<title>Recoll 1.19 series release notes</title>
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<h1>Release notes for Recoll 1.19.x</h1>
<h2>Caveats</h2>
<p><em>Installing over an older version</em>: 1.19 </p>
<p>Case/diacritics sensitivity is still off by default for this release. It can
be turned on <em>only</em> by editing recoll.conf (<a
href="usermanual/usermanual.html#RCL.INDEXING.CONFIG.SENS">see the manual</a>).
If you do so, you must then reset the index.</p>
<p>Always reset the index if you do not know by which version it was created
(you're not sure it's 1.18). The simplest way to do this is to quit all Recoll
programs and just delete the index directory (<span
class="literal">rm��-rf��~/.recoll/xapiandb</span>), then start
<code>recoll</code> or <code>recollindex</code>. <br>
<span class="literal">recollindex��-z</span> ��will do the same in most, but
not all, cases. It's better to use the <tt>rm</tt> method, which will also
ensure that no debris from older releases remain (e.g.: old stemming files
which are not used any more).</p>
<p>Installing 1.19 over an 1.18 index will force a lot of reindexing anyway
because Recoll switched to using <i>st_ctime</i> instead of <i>st_mtime</i> to
detect file modifications, meaning that all files which were modified since
created will be updated.</p>
<p><span class="important">Viewer exceptions</span>: as in 1.18 (but we kept
this section for 1.17 users), there is a list of mime types that should be
opened with the locally configured application even when <em>Use Desktop
Preferences</em> is checked. This allows making use of new functions (direct
access to page), which could not be available through the desktop's
<tt>xdg-open</tt>. The default list contains PDF, Postscript and DVI, which
should be opened with the <em>evince</em> (or <em>atril</em> for Mint/MATE
users) viewer for the page access functions to work. If you want to keep the
previous behaviour (losing the page number functionality), you need to prune
the list after installation . This can be done from the <em>Preferences->Gui
Configuration</em> menu.</p>
<h2><a name="minor_releases">Minor releases at a glance</a></h2>
<ul>
<li>1.19.5 works around a Linux kernel bug that would make it
impossible to index data from a network share mounted through cifs
(this worked in 1.18 and stopped working in 1.19 because of its
wider use of extended attributes)</li>
<li>1.19.4 has a German translation, and a few fixes
for <a href="BUGS.html#b_1_19_3">relatively ennoying
bugs</a>.</li>
<li>1.19.3 has more translations (Spanish, Russian, Czech), and a few
minor bug and usability fixes.</li>
<li>1.19.2 fixes a bug in path translations for additional indexes.</li>
<li>1.19.1 was released 2 hours after 1.19.0 (book of records anyone?)
because of a bug in the advanced search history feature which crashed
the GUI as soon as a <i>filename</i> search was performed.</li>
</ul>
<h2>Changes in Recoll 1.19.0</h2>
<ul>
<li>Indexing can use multiple threads. This can be a major performance boost
for people with multiprocessor machines and big indexes. The threads setup
is roughly auto-configured when recollindex starts, based on the number of
processors, but it is also possible to taylor it in the configuration.There
is a <a
href="http://www.recoll.org/usermanual/usermanual.html#RCL.INSTALL.CONFIG.RECOLLCONF.IDXTHREADS">section
in the manual</a> to describe the configuration, and also some <a
href="http://www.recoll.org/idxthreads/threadingRecoll.html">notes about
the transformation and the performance improvements</a>. </li>
<li>There is a new result list/table popup menu option to display all the
sub-documents for a given one. This is mostly useful to display the
attachments to an email. The resulting screen can be used to select
multiple entries and save them to files.</li>
<li>It is now possible to use OR with "dir:" clauses, and wildcards have been
enabled.</li>
<li>When the option to follow symbolic links is not set -which is the
default- symbolic links are now indexed as such (name and
content).</li>
<li>The advanced search panel now has a history feature. Use the
up/down arrows to walk the search history list.</li>
<li>There are new GUI configuration options to run in "search as you type"
mode (which I don't find useful at all...), and to disable the Qt
auto-completion inside the simple search string. The completion was often
more confusing and ennoying than useful, especially because it is
case-insensitive when case sometimes matter for Recoll searches
(capitalization to disable stemming).</li>
<li>When the option to collapse identical results is used, documents which do
have duplicates are shown with a link to list the clones. This function
needs new data from the index, so it will only completely work after a full
1.19 reindex.</li>
<li>Recoll should now behave reasonably on video files: index the name and
propose an Open button in the result list to start the configured
player.</li>
<li>Thanks to Recoll user <a href="https://github.com/koniu">Koniu</a>, you
can now access your Recoll indexes through a Web browser interface. The
server side is based on the <a href="http://bottlepy.org/docs/dev/">Bottle
Python Web framework</a> and the Recoll Python module, and can run
self-contained (no necessity to run apache or another web server), so it's
quite simple to set up. See: See the <a
href="https://github.com/koniu/recoll-webui/">Recoll WebUI project</a> on
GitHub. </li>
<li>Thanks to Recoll user David, there is now a filter to index and retrieve
<b>Lotus Notes</b> messages. See the software <a
href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/rcollnotesfiltr/">site on
sourceforge</a> and some <a
href="http://richardappleby.wordpress.com/2013/04/11/you-dont-have-to-know-the-answer-to-everything-just-how-to-find-it/">notes</a>
from a user with a slightly different configuration.</li>
<li>There is a new path translation facility, with a GUI interface, to make
it easier to share an index from a network share on clients on which the
mount points might be different. This could also probably be put to use to
design a "portable index" feature (for removable media).</li>
<li>The first indexing run after Recoll installation (for a new user) will
run in a fashion which will put data likely to be useful into the index
faster, so that an impatient user can more quickly try searches.</li>
<li>Implemented cache for last file uncompressed. This will much improve
usage, e.g. for people fetching successive messages from a compressed mail
folder.</li>
<li>Recollindex will now change its current directory to a temporary one
(e.g. /tmp) to mitigate the problems of some filters creating temporary
files and not cleaning them.</li>
<li>There is a new recursive explicit reindex option to the command line
indexer.</li>
<li>The default result list paragraph format has been slightly tweaked
(removed the relevance percentage and small ordering and formatting
changes).</li>
<li>Mime type wildcard expansion is now performed against the index, not the
configuration. This fixes many problems when searching for, e.g., media
files indexed only by name.</li>
<li>The choice for case/diacritics sensitivity is now fully processed during
wildcard expansion (for case-sensitive indexes).</li>
<li>The Snippets popup (list of pages and excerpts typically produced for PDF
documents) can now use an external CSS stylesheet. This is useful because
the Qt Webkit objects do not fully inherit the Qt configuration so that,
for example, a style sheet is needed for using a different background
color. The style sheet is chosen from the <tt>Preferences->GUI
configuration->Result list</tt> panel.</li>
<li>Improved handling of filters during indexing resulting in less
subprocesses.</li>
<li>Added function to import tags from external application (e.g. Tmsu).</li>
<li>Changed format for rclaptg field. Was colon-separated, now uses normal
value/attributes syntax with an empty value like:
<pre> localfields = ; attr1 = val1 ; attr2 = val2
</pre>
</li>
<li>Extended file attributes are now indexed by default. As a side effect,
recoll now uses st_ctime, not st_mtime to detect file changes. This means
that installing 1.19 will reindex many files (all those that were modified
since created). Recoll also now processes the <tt>charset</tt> and
<tt>mime_type</tt> standardized extended attributes.</li>
<li>The Python module has been expanded to include the interface for
extracting data. This means that you could now write most of the Recoll GUI
in Python if you wished. There is a <a
href="https://bitbucket.org/medoc/recoll/src/5b4bd9ef26a1/src/python/samples/recollgui/qrecoll.py?at=default">bit
of sample code</a> in the source package doing just this. A few
incompatible changes had to be made to the Python module. Especially the
"Query.next" field is gone and the module structure has been changed
(different import statement needed). Adapting your code is trivial, have a
look at the changes in the <a
href="https://bitbucket.org/medoc/recoll/src/5b4bd9ef26a10912bf8bd833fe6c084bd5a7bdbd/src/desktop/unity-lens-recoll/recollscope/rclsearch.py?at=default">Unity
Lens module</a> for an example. The new module is compatible with the <a
href="http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0249/">Python Database API
Specification v2.0</a> for the parts that make sense for a non-relational
DB.</li>
<li>Recoll now uses a dynamic library for the code shared by the query
interface, the indexer and the Python module. This should have no visible
impact but was rendered necessary by the Python module evolutions.</li>
<li>And quite a few <a href="BUGS.html#b_1_18_2">Fixed bugs</a></li>
</ul>
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