晋太元中,武陵人捕鱼为业。缘溪行,忘路之远近。忽逢桃花林,夹岸数百步,中无杂树,芳草鲜美,落英缤纷。渔人甚异之,复前行,欲穷其林。 林尽水源,便得一山,山有小口,仿佛若有光。便舍船,从口入。初极狭,才通人。复行数十步,豁然开朗。土地平旷,屋舍俨然,有良田、美池、桑竹之属。阡陌交通,鸡犬相闻。其中往来种作,男女衣着,悉如外人。黄发垂髫,并怡然自乐。 见渔人,乃大惊,问所从来。具答之。便要还家,设酒杀鸡作食。村中闻有此人,咸来问讯。自云先世避秦时乱,率妻子邑人来此绝境,不复出焉,遂与外人间隔。问今是何世,乃不知有汉,无论魏晋。此人一一为具言所闻,皆叹惋。余人各复延至其家,皆出酒食。停数日,辞去。此中人语云:“不足为外人道也。”(间隔 一作:隔绝) 既出,得其船,便扶向路,处处志之。及郡下,诣太守,说如此。太守即遣人随其往,寻向所志,遂迷,不复得路。 南阳刘子骥,高尚士也,闻之,欣然规往。未果,寻病终。后遂无问津者。
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For a release-by-release change history, see <http://xmlrpc-c.sourceforge.net/change.html>. XML-RPC For C/C++ was created by Eric Kidd in 2000, when XML-RPC was new and vital. Its development was funded in significant part by First Peer, Inc. Eric released the package in January 2001 and set up an extensive project to maintain it. The project used virtually every feature on Sourceforge, had about 8 official developers, and distributed code in various formats. There were mailing lists, trackers, CVS branches, RPMs, and a full PHP-based web site, just to name a few features of the project. Then everything ground to a halt in June 2001, with the disappearance of Eric. We don't know what happened to him, but Google searches in late 2004 indicated he dropped off the face of the web at that time. While people continued to use Xmlrpc-c, and some developed fixes and enhancements and posted them to the Sourceforge trackers, the release remained frozen at 0.9.10. The web site also became frozen in time. In the years that followed the great freeze, XML-RPC became marginalized by more sophisticated alternatives such as SOAP. XML-RPC consequently became rather stable and interest in Xmlrpc-c levelled off. This dark age of Xmlrpc-c lasted until October 2004, when Bryan Henderson set out to find an RPC mechanism to use in one of his projects. Bryan found XML-RPC and then Xmlrpc-c. He decided that the two were almost right for his needs, but he needed some small extensions. On finding out that the project was orphaned, Bryan decided to take it over. Bryan became the Sourceforge project administrator through Sourceforge's abandonned project process, then gathered the patches that had been submitted over the years and made a come-back release called 1.0. Bryan then proceeded to add a lot of features in subsequent releases about every two months. Most of it was code Bryan wrote himself, but significant parts were contributed by others, as you can see in the detailed history below. Among the larger enhancements was a new C++ interface; the old one was a fairly weak wrapper around the C interface and required the user to manage memory and access the underlying C structures; the new one used pure C++ principles with automatic memory management. Bryan also wrote a complete user's manual. Surprisingly, in spite of the wide array of features the project had, documentation wasn't one of them. There was only a smattering of information available on how to use the package. One significant change Bryan made to the project was to strip it down considerably. In order to concentrate the small amount of time Bryan had available for Xmlrpc-c development on actual code and documentation, Bryan had to greatly reduce the amount of bureaucracy involved in administering the project and making releases, and reduce the set of skills required to do it. Bryan made static make files (for GNU Make) to replace the two extra build stages that originally generated make files. Bryan moved away from Libtool and toward simple compiling and linking. Bryan eliminated all pre-built distributions; each of his releases consisted of a single source code tarball, and that tarball was not signed. Bryan removed some redundant sources of information from the package and the web site.