tinc/debian/NEWS

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tinc (1.1~pre11-1) experimental; urgency=medium
This package now provides a native systemd service file, allowing multiple
instances of tinc to be managed. Existing networks listed in
/etc/tinc/nets.boot will be converted to service instances once during this
upgrade. Afterwards, you can enable and disable networks using:
systemctl enable tinc@<netname>
systemctl disable tinc@<netname>
If you do not have systemd installed, the SysV init script will continue to
work as usual. For more information, see README.Debian.
Please note that tinc 1.1pre11 is backwards compatible with tinc 1.0.x, but
is not backwards compatible with 1.1pre1 to 1.1pre10 nodes if
ExperimentalProtocol is enabled, which is the default.
If you have more than one node running an 1.1 prerelease version in your VPN,
make sure you upgrade them all at the same time, or disable the new protocol
by adding the following line to tinc.conf:
ExperimentalProtocol = no
If you do want to use the new protocol, be aware that this version of tinc
switched to Ed25519 keys. You can generate a new Ed25519 keypair by running
the following command:
tinc -n <netname> generate-ed25519-keys
You have to manually restart tinc after this upgrade.
-- Guus Sliepen <guus@debian.org> Sat, 08 Jan 2015 14:02:27 +0100
tinc (1.1~pre2-1) experimental; urgency=low
tinc-1.1 has separate control utility, tinc (without the d), which is now
used to start/stop tinc instances, to reload configuration, to get various
information about running tincd (including dump of nodes and connections)
and so on. tincd still reacts to some signals as before, but this usage is
deprecated. In particular, -k option is now gone. Also, node/connection/etc
dumps are produced on tincctl stdout, not into syslog.
-- Michael Tokarev <mjt@tls.msk.ru> Sun, 07 Aug 2011 13:16:17 +0400