Drupal 4.3.1 released
The Drupal project has released version 4.3.1 of its open-source content management platform today. There are no new features in this installment, just fixes bugs from the 4.3.0 release.
Drupal: powerful, modular and extensible
Drupal is a full fledged platform for web applications: its flexible, modular architecture can host virtually any type of dynamic website, as is easily adapted to specific needs.
All modules and themes that work for 4.3.0 will work with 4.3.1.
Fixes and changes in 4.3.1:
- Fixed broken link in forum module.
- Fixed broken usernames in 'Who's new' block.
- Fixed error messages not being shown.
- Fixed incorrect link title in watchdog module.
- Fixed invalid XHTML in poll.module.
- Fixed leftover debug statement in story module.
- Fixed menu glitch in book module.
- Fixed non-ANSI SQL query in path module.
- Fixed typo in cloud module.
- Fixed bug #2617: editing user information does not work.
- Fixed bug #3900: PostgreSQL problem with locale module.
- Fixed bug #4055: Added missing break statements.
- Fixed bug #4080: comments shown against wrong node.
- Fixed bug #4323: Renamed 'Content-length' to 'Content-Length.
- Translation fix: made the word 'permission' translatable in the system module' help text.
- Translation fix: the date in the calendar block could not be translated.
- Translation fix: the ping module's help text was translated twice.
About Drupal
Since its start in December of 2000, Drupal has grown into an industrial strength dynamic web site platform which allows an individual or community of users to publish, manage and organize a variety of content, Drupal integrates many popular features of content management systems, weblogs, collaborative tools and discussion-based community software into one easy-to-use package.
As an open source software project maintained and developed by a community, Drupal is free to download and use. The source code is available at:
http://drupal.org/drupal/4.3.1/drupal/drupal-4.3.1.tar.gz
Drupal is written for PHP version 4.1 or newer and supports a variety of databases including MySQL, PostgreSQL and MSSQL. More information on Drupal is available from the main Drupal developer site, drupal.org. For a complete list of features, please see the official CHANGELOG.