After one alpha and one beta release in October 2020, and the RC1 (Release Candidate) version released on November 2nd, the Tiki 22.0 final was released on November 4th, 2020. Thanks to Roberto again and everyone who helped the Release Team!

Also, as always, many thanks to our developers, contributors, supporters, bug reporters and new feature requests (aka wishes) submitters!

Special thanks to luciash d' being for responsible disclosure while reporting a security issue found in Tiki just in time before the release.

Tiki 22 is a new major (standard term support) version and its requirements have changed, with PHP 7.4 as the minimum PHP version, so please keep that in mind while installing.

What's new?

Most significant changes include:

  • Tiki Check improvements
  • Mail-in enhancements
  • Improved Mail Notifications
  • Numeric fields data modification via mouse scroll can be disabled or enabled
  • Shamir's Shared Secrets
  • Trackers:
    • New Duration field type
    • Search for orphaned field names
    • Exclude indexing of non-searchable tracker fields
    • Shorten tracker field names in mysql search index to allow greater number of fields in the index
    • Group can see their own items
  • New or improved Wiki Plugins:
    • PluginListExecute
    • PluginList editable filters
    • PluginPivotTable
    • PluginTOTP
  • Suggestions
  • Unified Index: Now supports emails which are stored as files


Removed:

  • Zend Search


For more details please see the Documentation.

About the code name

Usually we choose a star name (and not a constellation) for our code names but this time, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, we could not resist and "Corona Borealis" was the "chosen one".

Wikipedia wrote:
Corona Borealis is a small constellation in the Northern Celestial Hemisphere. It is one of the 48 constellations listed by the 2nd-century astronomer Ptolemy, and remains one of the 88 modern constellations. Its brightest stars form a semicircular arc. Its Latin name, inspired by its shape, means "northern crown". In classical mythology Corona Borealis generally represented the crown given by the god Dionysus to the Cretan princess Ariadne and set by him in the heavens. Other cultures likened the pattern to a circle of elders, an eagle's nest, a bear's den, or even a smokehole.


Here's an interesting short movie about the biggest object in the Universe related to the Corona Borealis constellation:


If you are interested to learn more about Corona Borealis, feel free to read the Wikipedia article.