Great news, congratulations on the release! Are there more details over what the upgrade of the JS engine means in practice? Can we write ES2015 modules and use let/const, arrow functions and the like for map/reduce functions?
On Wed, Feb 26, 2020 at 8:37 PM Joan Touzet <[email protected]> wrote: > On 2020-02-26 14:06, Martin Broerse wrote: > > Thanks for creating this version. Good job!! > > You're welcome! > > > As all Ember App's we use need > > https://www.npmjs.com/package/ember-cli-deploy-couchdb Will Virtual > hosts > > and Rewrite functions (/{db}/{ddoc}/_rewrite) be supported in 3.0 and > > removed in 4.0 ? > > Yes, exactly. 3.x will retain these, but are flagged as deprecated. The > plan is to remove them entirely with 4.0, along with show and list > functions. > > > https://docs.couchdb.org/en/stable/whatsnew/3.0.html#deprecated-feature-warnings > > -Joan > > > Thanks, > > > > - Martin > > > > On Wed, 26 Feb 2020 at 18:49, Jan Lehnardt <[email protected]> wrote: > > > >> Dear community, > >> > >> Apache CouchDB® 3.0.0 has been released and is available for download. > >> > >> Apache CouchDB® lets you access your data where you need it. The Couch > >> Replication Protocol is implemented in a variety of projects and > products > >> that span every imaginable computing environment from globally > distributed > >> server-clusters, over mobile phones to web browsers. > >> > >> Store your data safely, on your own servers, or with any leading cloud > >> provider. Your web- and native applications love CouchDB, because it > speaks > >> JSON natively and supports binary data for all your data storage needs. > >> > >> The Couch Replication Protocol lets your data flow seamlessly between > >> server clusters to mobile phones and web browsers, enabling a compelling > >> offline-first user-experience while maintaining high performance and > strong > >> reliability. CouchDB comes with a developer-friendly query language, and > >> optionally MapReduce for simple, efficient, and comprehensive data > >> retrieval. > >> > >> https://couchdb.apache.org/#download > >> > >> Pre-built packages for Windows, macOS, Debian/Ubuntu and RHEL/CentOS are > >> available. Docker images have been submitted to Docker Hub for review > and > >> will be available as soon as that process is done. > >> > >> CouchDB 3.0.0 is a major release, and was originally published on > >> 2020-02-26. > >> > >> The community would like to thank all contributors for their part in > >> making this release, from the smallest bug report or patch to major > >> contributions in code, design, or marketing, we couldn’t have done it > >> without you! > >> > >> See the official release notes document for an exhaustive list of all > >> changes: > >> > >> http://docs.couchdb.org/en/stable/whatsnew/3.0.html > >> > >> Release Notes highlights: > >> > >> - Default installations are now secure and locked down. > >> > >> - User-defined partitioned databases for faster querying > >> > >> - Live Shard Splitting for incremental scale-out > >> > >> - Updated to modern JavaScript engine SpiderMonkey 60 > >> > >> - Official support for ARM and PPC 32bit and 64bit systems > >> > >> - Many large and small performance improvements > >> > >> - Automatic view index warmer > >> > >> - Smarter Compaction Daemon > >> > >> - Smarter I/O Queue > >> > >> - Much improved installers for Windows > >> > >> - macOS binaries are now Notarized for full future Catalina support > >> > >> - Extremely simplified setup of Lucene search > >> > >> See the “Road to CouchDB 3.0” blog post series for many more details: > >> http://blog.couchdb.org/2020/02/25/the-road-to-couchdb-3-0/ > >> > >> On behalf of the CouchDB PMC, > >> Jan Lehnardt > >> — > >> > >> > > >
