[Dibbler] Dibbler 1.0.0 released!

This is the 1.0.0 release of the Dibbler software. After over 11 years, Dibbler project finally reaches 1.0.0. This significant milestone was planned when all features described in RFC3315, a document that specifies DHCPv6, were implemented. It took radically more time then I initially thought. But here it is - a portable DHCPv6 implementation that features a server, a client, relay agent and a leasequery requestor. It works on a variety of Windows operating systems, starting from XP to 8, Linux, Mac OS, FreeBSD, NetBSD and OpenBSD. It may compile or even partially work on other systems. There are a handful of fixes since 1.0.0RC2 and one small feature: the server may be told to reject incoming unicast traffic with status code UseMulticast. According to my knowledge, this was the last missing feature. As you may have noticed, Dibbler development slowed down considerably in the last couple years. The reason is that I'm now involved in a new DHCP implementation, which takes more than 40 hours a week. It's simply a matter of work/life balance. I'm no longer able to dedicate significant amount of time for further Dibbler development. So is the project dead? No, I will still fix bugs occasionally. If there are patches that do not require significant rework, I may review and accept them. Even new features may appear occasionally, but they will be infrequent. My plan is to keep Dibbler alive long enough for Kea, the new project I'm involved in , to be a viable alternative. As of today, it has many of the server features, but still lacks client, relay and requestor components. See CHANGELOG for a complete list of changes. If you find bugs, please report them on http://klub.com.pl/bugzilla/. Appropriate links are on project website: http://klub.com.pl/dhcpv6/. If you need help or want to share your thoughts, take a look at one of two mailing lists: dibbler or dibbler-devel. Please do not contact author directly, unless you want to report security issues or discuss confidential matters. Thank you for using Dibbler. Tomek Mrugalski, author