+Exim version 4.77
+-----------------
+
+PP/01 Solaris build fix for Oracle's LDAP libraries.
+ Bugzilla 1109, patch from Stephen Usher.
+
+TF/01 HP/UX build fix: avoid arithmetic on a void pointer.
+
+TK/01 DKIM Verification: Fix relaxed canon for empty headers w/o
+ whitespace trailer
+
+TF/02 Fix a couple more cases where we did not log the error message
+ when unlink() failed. See also change 4.74-TF/03.
+
+TF/03 Make the exiwhat support code safe for signals. Previously Exim might
+ lock up or crash if it happened to be inside a call to libc when it
+ got a SIGUSR1 from exiwhat.
+
+ The SIGUSR1 handler appends the current process status to the process
+ log which is later printed by exiwhat. It used to use the general
+ purpose logging code to do this, but several functions it calls are
+ not safe for signals.
+
+ The new output code in the SIGUSR1 handler is specific to the process
+ log, and simple enough that it's easy to inspect for signal safety.
+ Removing some special cases also simplifies the general logging code.
+ Removing the spurious timestamps from the process log simplifies
+ exiwhat.
+
+TF/04 Improved ratelimit ACL condition.
+
+ The /noupdate option has been deprecated in favour of /readonly which
+ has clearer semantics. The /leaky, /strict, and /readonly update modes
+ are mutually exclusive. The update mode is no longer included in the
+ database key; it just determines when the database is updated. (This
+ means that when you upgrde Exim will forget old rate measurements.)
+
+ Exim now checks that the per_* options are used with an update mode that
+ makes sense for the current ACL. For example, when Exim is processing a
+ message (e.g. acl_smtp_rcpt or acl_smtp_data, etc.) you can specify
+ per_mail/leaky or per_mail/strict; otherwise (e.g. in acl_smtp_helo) you
+ must specify per_mail/readonly. If you omit the update mode it defaults to
+ /leaky where that makes sense (as before) or /readonly where required.
+
+ The /noupdate option is now undocumented but still supported for
+ backwards compatibility. It is equivalent to /readonly except that in
+ ACLs where /readonly is required you may specify /leaky/noupdate or
+ /strict/noupdate which are treated the same as /readonly.
+
+ A useful new feature is the /count= option. This is a generalization
+ of the per_byte option, so that you can measure the throughput of other
+ aggregate values. For example, the per_byte option is now equivalent
+ to per_mail/count=${if >{0}{$message_size} {0} {$message_size} }.
+
+ The per_rcpt option has been generalized using the /count= mechanism
+ (though it's more complicated than the per_byte equivalence). When it is
+ used in acl_smtp_rcpt, the per_rcpt option adds recipients to the
+ measured rate one at a time; if it is used later (e.g. in acl_smtp_data)
+ or in a non-SMTP ACL it adds all the recipients in one go. (The latter
+ /count=$recipients_count behaviour used to work only in non-SMTP ACLs.)
+ Note that using per_rcpt with a non-readonly update mode in more than
+ one ACL will cause the recipients to be double-counted. (The per_mail
+ and per_byte options don't have this problem.)
+
+ The handling of very low rates has changed slightly. If the computed rate
+ is less than the event's count (usually one) then this event is the first
+ after a long gap. In this case the rate is set to the same as this event's
+ count, so that the first message of a spam run is counted properly.
+
+ The major new feature is a mechanism for counting the rate of unique
+ events. The new per_addr option counts the number of different
+ recipients that someone has sent messages to in the last time period. It
+ behaves like per_rcpt if all the recipient addresses are different, but
+ duplicate recipient addresses do not increase the measured rate. Like
+ the /count= option this is a general mechanism, so the per_addr option
+ is equivalent to per_rcpt/unique=$local_part@$domain. You can, for
+ example, measure the rate that a client uses different sender addresses
+ with the options per_mail/unique=$sender_address. There are further
+ details in the main documentation.
+
+TF/05 Removed obsolete $Cambridge$ CVS revision strings.
+
+TF/06 Removed a few PCRE remnants.
+
+TF/07 Automatically extract Exim's version number from tags in the git
+ repository when doing development or release builds.
+
+PP/02 Raise smtp_cmd_buffer_size to 16kB.
+ Bugzilla 879. Patch from Paul Fisher.
+
+PP/03 Implement SSL-on-connect outbound with protocol=smtps on smtp transport.
+ Heavily based on revision 40f9a89a from Simon Arlott's tree.
+ Bugzilla 97.
+
+PP/04 Use .dylib instead of .so for dynamic library loading on MacOS.
+
+PP/05 Variable $av_failed, true if the AV scanner deferred.
+ Bugzilla 1078. Patch from John Horne.
+
+PP/06 Stop make process more reliably on build failure.
+ Bugzilla 1087. Patch from Heiko Schlittermann.
+
+PP/07 Make maildir_use_size_file an _expandable_ boolean.
+ Bugzilla 1089. Patch from Heiko Schlittermann.
+
+PP/08 Handle ${run} returning more data than OS pipe buffer size.
+ Bugzilla 1131. Patch from Holger Weiß.
+
+PP/09 Handle IPv6 addresses with SPF.
+ Bugzilla 860. Patch from Wolfgang Breyha.
+
+PP/10 GnuTLS: support TLS 1.2 & 1.1.
+ Bugzilla 1156.
+ Use gnutls_certificate_verify_peers2() [patch from Andreas Metzler].
+ Bugzilla 1095.
+
+PP/11 match_* no longer expand right-hand-side by default.
+ New compile-time build option, EXPAND_LISTMATCH_RHS.
+ New expansion conditions, "inlist", "inlisti".
+
+PP/12 fix uninitialised greeting string from PP/03 (smtps client support).
+
+PP/13 shell and compiler warnings fixes for RC1-RC4 changes.
+
+PP/14 fix log_write() format string regression from TF/03.
+ Bugzilla 1152. Patch from Dmitry Isaikin.
+
+