* Downloading files you uploaded to ownCloud broke because of a change in ownCloud 8.
DNS:
* Internationalized Domain Names (IDNs) should now work in email. If you had custom DNS or custom web settings for internationalized domains, check that they are still working.
* It is now possible to set multiple TXT and other types of records on the same domain in the control panel.
* The custom DNS API was completely rewritten to support setting multiple records of the same type on a domain. Any existing client code using the DNS API will have to be rewritten. (Existing code will just get 404s back.)
System:
* Backups now use duplicity's built-in gpg symmetric AES256 encryption rather than my home-brewed encryption. Old backups will be incorporated inside the first backup after this update but then deleted from disk (i.e. your backups from the previous few days will be backed up).
* Internationalized Domain Names (IDNs) should now work in email. If you had custom DNS or custom web settings for internationalized domains, check that they are still working.
* All Mail-in-a-Box release tags are now signed on github, instructions for verifying the signature are added to the README, and the integrity of all non-Ubuntu packages downloaded during setup is now verified against a SHA1 hash stored in the tag itself.
<tr><td>GET</td><td>Returns matching custom DNS records as a JSON array of objects. Each object has the keys <code>qname</code>, <code>rtype</code>, and <code>value</code>. The optional <code>qname</code> and <code>rtype</code> parameters in the request URL filter the records returned in the response. The request body (<code>-d "..."</code>) must be omitted.</td></tr>
<tr><td>PUT</td><td>Sets a custom DNS record replacing any existing records with the same <code>qname</code> and <code>rtype</code>. Use PUT (instead of POST) when you only have one value for a <code>qname</code> and <code>rtype</code>, such as typical <code>A</code> records (without round-robin).</td></tr>
<tr><td>POST</td><td>Adds a new custom DNS record. Use POST when you have multiple <code>TXT</code> records or round-robin <code>A</code> records. (PUT would delete previously added records.)</td></tr>
<tr><td>DELETE</td><td>Deletes custom DNS records. If the request body (<code>-d "..."</code>) is empty or omitted, deletes all records matching the <code>qname</code> and <code>rtype</code>. If the request body is present, deletes only the record matching the <code>qname</code>, <code>rtype</code> and value.</td></tr>
</table>
<h4>Parameters</h4>
<tableclass="table">
<thead><th>Parameter</th><th>Value</th></thead>
<tr><td>email</td><td>The email address of any administrative user here.</td></tr>
<tr><td>qname</td><td>The fully qualified domain name for the record you are trying to set.</td></tr>
<tr><td>rtype</td><td>The resource type. <code>A</code> if omitted. Possible values: <code>A</code> (an IPv4 address), <code>AAAA</code> (an IPv6 address), <code>TXT</code> (a text string), or <code>CNAME</code> (an alias, which is a fully qualified domain name).</td></tr>
<tr><td>value</td><td>The new record’s value. If omitted, the IPv4 address of the remote host is used. This is handy for dynamic DNS! To delete a record, use “__delete__”.</td></tr>
<tr><td>qname</td><td>The fully qualified domain name for the record you are trying to set. It must be one of the domain names or a subdomain of one of the domain names hosted on this box. (Add mail users or aliases to add new domains.)</td></tr>
<tr><td>rtype</td><td>The resource type. Defaults to <code>A</code> if omitted. Possible values: <code>A</code> (an IPv4 address), <code>AAAA</code> (an IPv6 address), <code>TXT</code> (a text string), <code>CNAME</code> (an alias, which is a fully qualified domain name — don’t forget the final period), <code>MX</code>, or <code>SRV</code>.</td></tr>
<tr><td>value</td><td>For PUT, POST, and DELETE, the record’s value. If the <code>rtype</code> is <code>A</code> or <code>AAAA</code> and <code>value</code> is empty or omitted, the IPv4 or IPv6 address of the remote host is used (be sure to use the <code>-4</code> or <code>-6</code> options to curl). This is handy for dynamic DNS!</td></tr>
</table>
<pstyle="margin-top: 1em">Note that <code>-d ""</code> is merely to ensure curl sends a POST request. You do not need to put anything inside the quotes. You can also pass the value using typical form encoding in the POST body.</p>
<p>Strict <ahref="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4408">SPF</a> and <ahref="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-kucherawy-dmarc-base/?include_text=1">DMARC</a> records will be added to all custom domains unless you override them.</p>
<h4>Examples:</h4>
<p>Try these examples. For simplicity the examples omit the <code>--user me@mydomain.com:yourpassword</code> command line argument which you must fill in with your email address and password.</p>
<pre># sets laptop.mydomain.com to point to the IP address of the machine you are executing curl on