tis 2003-06-03 klockan 17.12 skrev Christian Kunst: > I sent my request for subscription to the squid-dev mailinglist.
To subscribe you need to send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] If you have already sent such message please send it again as it seems it may have been lost. See http://www.squid-cache.org/mailing-lists.html#squid-dev for details and policy of the squid-dev list. > I already have a SourceForge account. But it is only a web account, > and I can't access the ssh CVS with it. The account name is: "ckunst". To access CVS your first need to become member of the project you want to access.. You now have CVS access to the Squid project. It is recommended you upload your SSH key to your account for CVS, saving your from having to type the password on each CVS operation. http://sourceforge.net/my/ Then see http://devel.squid-cache.org/ for instructions and rules on how to access the Squid developer CVS tree. If you have any questions post them here on squid-dev and we will try to help you. > From your e-mail, I understood that you are developing the 2.5 branch > of the iCAP client. I am only fixing up some issues seen when reading the patch. The bulk of the ICAP client is developed by Geetha Manjunath with help from Ralf Horstmann. > Do you need some help, maybe in testing and debugging for first? If > yes, then I'll be glad if I can help you! Help is needed in all areas. There is many small things still missing in the Squid-2.5 ICAP client, and a lot of testing to do. I am trying to keep some notes on http://devel.squid-cache.org/icap/ > Regarding the 3.0 branch, I understood that the software architecture > of squid has changed, and it is also not C anymore, but C++, Correct. A lot of the code is still "C" code however, merely translated to C++ syntax, but gradually more and more is refactored into an OO architecture. As a guideline each area of the Squid code extended in Squid-3 (the C++ version of Squid) is refactored into C++ and cleaned up design to get rid of many ugly things which have grown onto the old C code over the years. > which is great for me, because I have much more experience in OOP as > with structured programming ( although I programed in C during my > "Uni" period, back in '92-'97, since then I've programmed mostly in > C++ and Java ). Very Good. Regards Henrik