Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago
Like many projects, we keep a rolling "next version" doc in the source tree.
There hasn't been a 1.3 release; when there is we'll mark the 1.3 wiki as
featured (which will make it appear on the main project page) and deprecate 1.2.
The biggest gating item to a release is (as ever) Windows support. Plenty of
opportunities for heroism there for anyone who's interested...
Original comment by kml.mash...@gmail.com
on 15 Nov 2010 at 8:55
Why is 1.3 waiting on a Windows port?
Seems plenty of important geospatial projects (for example gdal and ogr2ogr) no
longer work with 1.2. And that has lead many projects (for example debian) to
package a fork of trunk as a claimed 1.3 (
http://packages.debian.org/wheezy/libkml-dev ).
Apparently they need to maintain their forks partially because the 1.2
release's makefiles order of libraries is wrong, and won't build with the
"--as-needed" linker flags:
http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=605889
Considering it's been over 2 years since that comment suggesting that people
have been waiting for 1.3; how about just merge in that debian compilation
patch and release it as 1.3; (or 1.2.9 or whatever, so long as it gets
released).
Original comment by rama...@gmail.com
on 28 Dec 2012 at 2:46
Please release libkml 1.3.0. gdal's libkml support requires it. Package
management systems like MacPorts that prefer to track stable versions are
unlikely to update libkml to an unstable development version to accommodate
this.
Original comment by ryandesi...@gmail.com
on 31 Aug 2013 at 6:35
There has been no response from google for a long time regarding libkml
development. So we tried to move the sources to github as ab effort-to-try-keep
this library alive. Even though dont know for how long this could go..
I think it is possible to tag a new release on libkml github page? perhaps 1.3.1
Any thoughts?
Original comment by rasha...@gmail.com
on 4 Apr 2015 at 9:13
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
dav3h...@gmail.com
on 15 Nov 2010 at 7:21