Releases: nextcloud/server
v9.0.54RC1
v10.0.0
Nextcloud 10 is now available with many new features for system administrators to control and direct the flow of data between users on a Nextcloud server. Rule based file tagging and responding to these tags as well as other triggers like physical location, user group, file properties and request type enables administrators to specifically deny access to, convert, delete or retain data following business or legal requirements. Monitoring, security, performance and usability improvements complement this release, enabling larger and more efficient Nextcloud installations. You can get it on our install page or read our detailed announcement post.
10.0 RC1
Today we made available a release candidate of Nextcloud 10! We’d love to get feedback on this and thus ask you to help test it!
Almost ready
Since our beta release some weeks ago we made a lot of progress. The last features were integrated and we did a lot of testing and stabilization. As the name ‘release candidate’ suggests, we think this release is pretty much ready to go out. Still, a good test round would be very welcome to make sure the last serious issues are really shaken out.
We’d really like feedback on:
- The upgrade process
- tests on a realistic system like copy of a production install would be super helpful
- New features and capabilities
- see our beta announcement for an overview, but you’ll find several more features in this RC!
v9.0.53
9.0.53
v9.0.52
9.0.51
This minor release mainly fixes some remaining branding problems, it contains the following PRs:
#88 Add strict config check to config.js
#108 #109 #134 #161 #170 #172 #178 Proper branding
#110 Soften the cookie check if no cookies are sent
#114 fix padding of 3-dot button on mobile
#118 Fix strengthify issues
#174 Upstream Sync
#177 v9.0.51
9.0.50
The first Nextcloud release