Special thanks to the following folks for improving the security of bbPress:
Also in this release are: various typographical fixes, a few PHP warnings & notices were eradicated, more accurate escaping of Search results, and support for some recently added WordPress Plugin headers.
This security release came together very quickly, with the help of several WordPress Core, Meta Team, and Security Team members. I appreciate all of your help today.
Another big shoutout to my employer, Sandhills Development, for allowing me the freedom to responsibly shirk my plans for today, enabling me to focus on getting this release out ASAP.
]]>Special thanks to Yuvraj Dighe for his responsible disclosure of the BuddyPress Group Forums bug over at HackerOne. Thank you for helping improve bbPress.
Work continues on improving bbPress 2.6 while also doing a bit more clean-up for 2.7.
Expect for the next minor release (bbPress 2.6.5) to be released sometime before March 1.
]]>We’re continuing to work on improving bbPress 2.6 while also deciding what exactly will make it into 2.7.
Expect for the next minor release (bbPress 2.6.4) to be released sometime before Christmas 2019.
]]>bbpress.css
files were not having their custom styling applied in some cases. We fixed at least one case that we could find. Let us know if this is still not working correctly for you.Thanks to everyone in the forums for being persistent and helping us identify all these annoyances.
We’re going to continue minor releases as bugs get reported and fixed. The team is committed to making sure your forums are running as smoothly as can be, so don’t be surprised if you see 2.6.3 soon too!
]]>bbPress 2.6.1 fixes a few small (but very annoying bugs) that warranted some immediate attention:
Thanks to the quick reporting of stevehammatt and pdvwp, we were able to identify all of these problems and get them into bbPress 2.6.1 right away. You both rock!
One bug still remains that we could use your help with, that is affecting sites that have a custom bbpress.css
file in their theme. If you need to fix this ASAP, you can rename it to bbpress.min.css
temporarily. If you’re able to chime into this topic in the forums, that would be super helpful!
If you have a few moments, the great Justin Tadlock from WPTavern asked me a few questions about bbPress 2.6, so consider giving it a read.
Lastly, thank you everyone for the positive comments and responses to seeing bbPress 2.6 finally happen. It made my day, and I really appreciate it.
]]>This version of bbPress has been in development for just a bit under 6 years (yikes!) over which 420 tickets were resolved via 1737 individual code commits.
There are so many improvements that a changelog hardly seems fitting for this post, but the major features include per-forum moderation, a bunch of new platforms to import from, and an extensible engagements API that now powers the relationships between users, forums, topics, replies, subscriptions, and favorites.
At the time of this writing, bbPress is installed on approximately 336,000 WordPress installations, and is the most widely installed forum software in the world (according to BuiltWith.com and other sources.) Several of those are right here on bbPress.org, BuddyPress.org, and WordPress.org, the later of which includes a few dozen separate languages for non-English speaking communities of contributors all over the world.
The elephant in the room… the reason that 2.6.0 took so long, is pretty simple. bbPress has a small contributor pool, and none of us are 100% dedicated towards it. The project gets very little community feedback, which makes it hard to know if everything is working perfectly, or nobody is testing it at all.
So… 4 less-than part-time folks supporting over 300k sites, each with their own thousands of users, depending on us.
The pressure is high, and the chamber is echo’y, and as my own career has progressed these past 13 years, the numbers above make me increasingly nervous.
And the longer something takes to do is the higher the expectations are, and I personally locked up pretty hard multiple times on whether done was done enough to be trusted by so many having been tested by so few.
But… good things come to those who wait, and I’m sincerely sorry to have kept any of you waiting for too long.
bbPress 2.6.0 has been running smoothly on these forums since day 0. It’s stable, pretty, and a joy to use. We know you are gonna love it!
]]>Also, remember that since bbPress 2.5.12, the minimum WordPress version allowed is 4.7. If you need to use a previous version of WordPress, you will want to continue to use 2.5.11.
bbPress 2.6 is still in the release candidate phase while we tie up some loose ends across WordPress.org, but I’ll let you know when it’s ready to go!
]]>If your site allows anonymous users (users without registered accounts) to create topics & replies in your forums, you’ll want to upgrade to 2.5.13 right away. This feature is not very widely used on public forums because spammers very aggressively target these kinds of sites, but for communities that rely on this feature, please know you can safely upgrade to 2.5.13 without any issues.
Also, remember that since bbPress 2.5.12, the minimum WordPress version allowed is 4.7. If you need to use a previous version of WordPress, you will want to continue to use 2.5.11.
bbPress 2.6 is still in the release candidate phase while we tie up some loose ends across WordPress.org, but I’ll let you know when it’s ready to go!
]]>2.5.12 officially bumps the minimum WordPress version requirement to 4.7 for all releases going forward. If you are stuck on a previous version of WordPress, please continue to use 2.5.11.
This cut-off is in place because the improvements to user-roles in WordPress 4.7 are really that important, and all future bug-fix releases to 2.5 and major releases going forward will be taking advantage of them.
If you’ve updated to 4.7 and are one of the unlucky few to get stung by the missing-menu bug, please accept my sincere apologies along with an update to 2.5.12 to relieve the itching.
]]>If you’re using any version of bbPress 2.x and have not yet updated, please take a moment to update your bbPress installations to 2.5.11. If you’re using WordPress’s built-in updater, it should only take a click or two. If you need help, please reach out in our support forums and someone will be happy to assist you.
These fixes have also been ported over to 2.6, which we continue to run here at bbPress.org and BuddyPress.org.
Speaking of bbPress 2.6, per-forum moderators, favorites, and subscriptions are fully refactored and working pretty great. Our findings have also helped push performance improvements upstream to WordPress core, and are already employed across the forums on WordPress.org.
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