-PH/01 There is a new global option called disable_ipv6, which does exactly what
- its name implies. If set true, even if the Exim binary has IPv6 support,
- no IPv6 activities take place. AAAA records are never looked up for host
- names given in manual routing data or elsewhere. AAAA records that are
- received from the DNS as additional data for MX records are ignored. Any
- IPv6 addresses that are listed in local_interfaces, manualroute route
- data, etc. are also ignored. If IP literals are enabled, the ipliteral
- router declines to handle IPv6 literal addresses.
-
-PH/02 There are now 20 of each type of ACL variable by default (instead of 10).
- It is also possible to change the numbers by setting ACL_CVARS and/or
- ACL_MVARS in Local/Makefile. Backward compatibility is maintained if you
- upgrade to this release with existing messages containing ACL variable
- settings on the queue. However, going in the other direction
- (downgrading) will not be compatible; the values of ACL variables will be
- lost.
-
-PH/03 If quota_warn_message contains a From: header, Exim now refrains from
- adding the default one. Similarly, if it contains a Reply-To: header, the
- errors_reply_to option, if set, is not used.
-
-PH/04 The variables $auth1, $auth2, $auth3 are now available in authenticators,
- containing the same values as $1, $2, $3. The new variables are provided
- because the numerical variables can be reset during string expansions
- (for example, during a "match" operation) and so may lose the
- authentication data. The preferred variables are now the new ones, with
- the use of the numerical ones being deprecated, though the support will
- not be removed, at least, not for a long time.
-
-PH/05 The "control=freeze" ACL modifier can now be followed by /no_tell. If
- the global option freeze_tell is set, it is ignored for the current
- message (that is, nobody is told about the freezing), provided all the
- "control=freeze" modifiers that are obeyed in the current message have
- the /no_tell option.
-
-PH/06 In both GnuTLS and OpenSSL, an expansion of tls_privatekey that results
- in an empty string is now treated as unset.
-
-PH/07 There is a new log selector called sender_verify_fail, which is set by
- default. If it is unset, the separate log line that gives details of a
- sender verification failure is not written. Log lines for the rejection
- of SMTP commands (e.g. RCPT) contain just "sender verify failed", so some
- detail is lost.
-
-PH/08 The default for dns_check_names_pattern now allows slashes within names,
- as there are now some PTR records that contain slashes. This check is
- only to protect against broken name servers that fall over on strange
- characters, so the fact that it applies to all lookups doesn't matter.
-
-PH/09 The default for rfc4131_query_timeout has been changed from 30s to 5s.
-
-PH/10 When compiled on FreeBSD, NetBSD, or BSD/OS, the pipe transport has a new
- Boolean option called use_classresources, defaulting false. If it is set
- true, the setclassresources() function is used to set resource limits
- when a pipe transport is run to perform a delivery. The limits for the
- uid under which the pipe is to run are obtained from the login class
- database.
-
-PH/11 If retry_interval_max is set greater than 24 hours, it is quietly reset
- to 24 hours. This avoids potential overflow problems when processing G
- and H retry rules, and it seems reasonable to require a retry at least
- once a day.
-
-PH/12 When the plaintext authenticator is running as a client, the server
- challenges are now checked to ensure they are valid base64 strings. The
- default action on failure is to abort the authentication. However, if
- client_ignore_invalid_base64 is set true, invalid responses are ignored.
-
-PH/13 When the plaintext authenticator is running as a client, the challenges
- from the server are placed in $auth1, $auth2, etc. as they are received.
- Thus, the challege that is received in response to sending the first
- string (with the AUTH command) can be used in the expansion of the second
- string, and so on. Currently, up to 3 challenge strings are available in
- this way. If an invalid base64 string is received when client_ignore_
- invalid_base64 is set, an empty string is put in the $auth<n> variable.
-
-PH/14 Messages created by the autoreply transport now contain a References:
- header. This is constructed in accordance with rules that are described
- in section 3.64 of RFC 2822, which states that replies should contain
- such a header line, and section 3.14 of RFC 3834, which states that
- automatic responses are not different in this respect. However, because
- some mail processing software does not cope well with very long header
- lines, no more than 12 message IDs are copied from the References: header
- line in the incoming message. If there are more than 12, the first one
- and then the final 11 are copied, before adding the message ID of the
- incoming message.