Releases: AtlasOfLivingAustralia/bie-index
Releases · AtlasOfLivingAustralia/bie-index
1.4.13.1
1.4.13
An update to https://github.com/AtlasOfLivingAustralia/bie-index/releases/tag/v1.4.12 to acommodate changes in the WordPress site map.
- Fix #311 to accommodate multi-sitemap WordPress crawl
- Update to latest versions of ala-bootstrap3 and ala-auth plugins
1.4.12
1.4.11
- A release to fix a bug noted during the deployment of 1.4.10. If a search contains no taxon entries, there will be an empty call to the biocache service for counts
- Update ALA admin plugin to 2.2
1.4.10
- Imports go to a separate log file to allow easier tracing of problems
- Prevent whole-index downloads unless explicitly asked for AtlasOfLivingAustralia/ala-infrastructure#542
- Change link identifiers to make them more browser-friendly AtlasOfLivingAustralia/bie-plugin#199
- Fix for species image API entry
- /ws server path for those who want to check out the API via the API page #273
Requires the addition of linkText
to schema.xml
in Solr.
<field name="linkText" type="lowercase" omitNorms="true" multiValued="false" indexed="true" stored="true"/>
1.4.9
- Updated translations
- Bug-fixes to the preferred image services
1.4.8
1.4.7
Allow sitemap crawling across the new ALA wordpress site
- Sub-sitemaps are handled properly, with nested sitemaps being crawled recursively
- Configuration options to allow:
- Timeout (defaults to 10000ms)
- Testing of TLS certificates (defaults to false)
- The source of the page title within the page (defaults to
head > title
) - The source of the page body within the page (defaults to
body main
)
1.4.6
- Support for the ALA knowledgebase as searchable resources
- Include a low-weight contents search for knowledgebase and web page information
- Improvements to the handling of "headline" common names, ensuring that for multi-language installations, only common language names appear in the headline.
1.4.5
This release allows lists of "favourites". Lists maintained by the lists tool can be used to mark particular species as having iconic
, favourite
, preferred
or interest
status (you can also use your own vocabulary). These favourite status markers can be used to manipulate the scoring rules, moving popular species to the top of the research results.