Prepare some news from original content from Trac (#10)
Jekyll / jekyll (push) Successful in 1m8s Details

Signed-off-by: Benoit Donneaux <benoit@leastauthority.com>
Reviewed-on: #10
Co-authored-by: Benoit Donneaux <benoit@leastauthority.com>
Co-committed-by: Benoit Donneaux <benoit@leastauthority.com>
This commit is contained in:
bEn 2024-05-29 21:39:58 +00:00 committed by btlogy
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---
layout: single
title: "Welcome"
date: 2020-09-08 22:24:38 +0200
excerpt: "Welcome to Dummy Jekyll"
header:
teaser: /assets/images/posts/unsplash-welcome.jpg
gallery:
- image_path: /assets/images/posts/unsplash-welcome.jpg
alt: "welcome"
---
{% include gallery %}
Youll find this post in your `_posts` directory. Go ahead and edit it and re-build the site to see your changes. You can rebuild the site in many different ways, but the most common way is to run `jekyll serve`, which launches a web server and auto-regenerates your site when a file is updated.
To add new posts, simply add a file in the `_posts` directory that follows the convention `YYYY-MM-DD-name-of-post.ext` and includes the necessary front matter. Take a look at the source for this post to get an idea about how it works.
Jekyll also offers powerful support for code snippets:
{% highlight ruby %}
def print_hi(name)
puts "Hi, #{name}"
end
print_hi('Tom')
#=> prints 'Hi, Tom' to STDOUT.
{% endhighlight %}
Check out the [Jekyll docs][jekyll-docs] for more info on how to get the most out of Jekyll. File all bugs/feature requests at [Jekylls GitHub repo][jekyll-gh]. If you have questions, you can ask them on [Jekyll Talk][jekyll-talk].
[jekyll-docs]: https://jekyllrb.com/docs/home
[jekyll-gh]: https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll
[jekyll-talk]: https://talk.jekyllrb.com/

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---
layout: single
title: "Post 1"
date: 2020-09-09 00:03:05 +0200
excerpt: "This is a generic post."
header:
teaser: /assets/images/posts/unsplash-post.jpg
gallery:
- image_path: /assets/images/posts/unsplash-post.jpg
alt: "post"
---
{% include gallery %}
This is a generic post.

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---
layout: single
title: "Post 2"
date: 2020-09-09 00:03:05 +0200
excerpt: "This is a generic post."
header:
teaser: /assets/images/posts/unsplash-post.jpg
gallery:
- image_path: /assets/images/posts/unsplash-post.jpg
alt: "post"
---
{% include gallery %}
This is a generic post.

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---
layout: single
title: "Post 3"
date: 2020-09-09 00:03:05 +0200
excerpt: "This is a generic post."
header:
teaser: /assets/images/posts/unsplash-post.jpg
gallery:
- image_path: /assets/images/posts/unsplash-post.jpg
alt: "post"
---
{% include gallery %}
This is a generic post.

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---
layout: single
title: "v1.18.0 is released"
date: 2022-10-03 16:17:57 +0000
excerpt: "ANNOUNCING Tahoe, the Least-Authority File Store, v1.18.0"
header:
teaser: /assets/images/posts/release.jpg
---
ANNOUNCING Tahoe, the Least-Authority File Store, v1.18.0
The Tahoe-LAFS team is pleased to announce version 1.18.0 of
Tahoe-LAFS, an extremely reliable decentralized storage
system. Get it with "pip install tahoe-lafs", or download a
tarball here:
[https://tahoe-lafs.org/downloads][download]
Tahoe-LAFS is the first distributed storage system to offer
"provider-independent security" — meaning that not even the
operators of your storage servers can read or alter your data
without your consent. Here is the one-page explanation of its
unique security and fault-tolerance properties:
[https://tahoe-lafs.readthedocs.org/en/latest/about.html][about]
The previous stable release of Tahoe-LAFS was v1.17.1, released on
January 7, 2022.
This release drops support for Python 2 and for Python 3.6 and earlier.
twistd.pid is no longer used (in favour of one with pid + process creation time).
A collection of minor bugs and issues were also fixed.
[Read the full announcement][more]
[download]: https://tahoe-lafs.org/downloads
[about]: https://tahoe-lafs.readthedocs.org/en/latest/about.html
[more]: https://lists.tahoe-lafs.org/pipermail/tahoe-dev/2022-October/010043.html

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---
layout: single
title: "Haskell client"
date: 2023-11-08 18:32:59 +0100
excerpt: "Exciting new work on a Haskell client implementation"
header:
teaser: /assets/images/posts/haskell.png
---
Exciting new work on a Haskell client implementation:
Hackage `tahoe-great-black-swamp`: An implementation of the "Great Black Swamp" LAFS protocol.
Read [more] directly from Hackage
[more]: https://hackage.haskell.org/package/tahoe-great-black-swamp

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---
layout: single
title: "v1.19.0 is released"
date: 2024-01-18 00:23:08 +0000
excerpt: "ANNOUNCING Tahoe, the Least-Authority File Store, v1.19.0"
header:
teaser: /assets/images/posts/release.jpg
---
The Tahoe-LAFS team is pleased to announce version 1.19.0 of
Tahoe-LAFS, an extremely reliable decentralized storage
system. Get it with "pip install tahoe-lafs", or download a
tarball here:
[https://tahoe-lafs.org/downloads][download]
Tahoe-LAFS is the first distributed storage system to offer
"provider-independent security" — meaning that not even the
operators of your storage servers can read or alter your data
without your consent. Here is the one-page explanation of its
unique security and fault-tolerance properties:
[https://tahoe-lafs.readthedocs.org/en/latest/about.html][about]
The previous stable release of Tahoe-LAFS was v1.18.0, released on
October 2, 2022. Major new features and changes in this release:
A new "Grid Manager" feature allows clients to specify any number of
parties whom they will use to limit which storage-server that client
talks to. See docs/managed-grid.rst for more.
The new HTTP-based "Great Black Swamp" protocol is now enabled
(replacing Foolscap). This allows integrators to start with their
favourite HTTP library (instead of implementing Foolscap first). Both
storage-servers and clients support this new protocol.
`tahoe run` will now exit if its stdin is closed (but accepts `--allow-stdin-close` now).
Mutables may be created with a pre-determined signature key; care must
be taken!
This release drops Python 3.7 support and adds Python 3.11 and 3.12
support. Several performance improvements have been made. Introducer
correctly listens on Tor or I2P. Debian 10 and Ubuntu 20.04 are no
longer tested.
Besides all this there have been dozens of other bug-fixes and
improvements.
Enjoy!
[Read the full announcement][more]
[download]: https://tahoe-lafs.org/downloads
[about]: https://tahoe-lafs.readthedocs.org/en/latest/about.html
[more]: https://lists.tahoe-lafs.org/pipermail/tahoe-dev/2024-January/010064.html

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---
layout: single
title: "New landing page"
date: 2024-05-29 21:47:57 +0200
excerpt: "The old Tahoe-LAFS landing page is gone!"
header:
teaser: /assets/images/posts/old-landing-page-teaser.png
gallery:
- image_path: /assets/images/posts/old-landing-page.png
alt: "original"
---
We're happy to announce that the migration of the [original][old] landing page to this one has been completed.
Help us to contribute to it using this [repository][repo].
Goodbye Trac...
{% include gallery %}
[old]: https://tahoe-lafs.org/trac/tahoe-lafs/wiki/WikiStart
[new]: https://www.lafs.eval.latfa.net/
[repo]: https://code.lafs.eval.latfa.net/tahoe-lafs/web-landing-page/

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