asterisk/doc/CHANGES-staging
Mike Bradeen 3a4fd2fa42 format_sln: add .slin as supported file extension
Adds '.slin' to existing supported file extensions:
.sln and .raw

ASTERISK-30465

Change-Id: Ice848addc03a64c8404b87cb5d3b13399c57e496
(cherry picked from commit 8d2ffc8aa5)
2023-05-08 18:13:35 +00:00
..
README.md doc: Fix CHANGES entries to have .txt suffix and update READMEs 2020-02-07 14:08:39 -06:00
ami_hook_flash.txt app_senddtmf: Add SendFlash AMI action. 2023-05-08 18:13:35 +00:00
app_queue.txt app_queue: periodic announcement configurable start time. 2023-05-08 18:13:35 +00:00
cli_channel_display_length_increase.txt cli: increase channel column width 2023-05-08 18:13:35 +00:00
format_sln_support_for_slin.txt format_sln: add .slin as supported file extension 2023-05-08 18:13:35 +00:00
res_http_media_cache.txt res_http_media_cache: Introduce options and customize 2023-05-08 18:13:35 +00:00

README.md

DO NOT REMOVE THIS FILE!

The only files that should be added to this directory are ones that will be used by the release script to update the CHANGES file automatically. The only time that it is necessary to add something to the CHANGES-staging directory is if you are either adding a new feature to Asterisk or adding new functionality to an existing feature. The file does not need to have a meaningful name, but it probably should. If there are multiple items that need documenting, you can add multiple files, each with their own description. If the message is going to be the same for each subject, then you can add multiple subject headers to one file. The "Subject: xxx" line is case sensitive! For example, if you are making a change to PJSIP, then you might add the file "res_pjsip_my_cool_feature.txt" to this directory, with a short description of what it does. The files must have the ".txt" suffix. If you are adding multiple entries, they should be done in the same commit to avoid merge conflicts. Here's an example:

Subject: res_pjsip Subject: Core

Here's a pretty good description of my new feature that explains exactly what it does and how to use it.

Here's a master-only example:

Subject: res_ari Master-Only: True

This change will only go into the master branch. The "Master-Only" header will never be in a change not in master.

Note that the second subject has another header: "Master-Only". Changes that go into the master branch and ONLY the master branch are the only ones that should have this header. Also, the value can only be "true" or "True". The "Master-Only" part of the header IS case-sensitive, however!

For more information, check out the wiki page: https://wiki.asterisk.org/wiki/display/AST/CHANGES+and+UPGRADE.txt