+ * Fixed "make test" bug when build dir is not the source dir.
+
+ * When using --cvs-exclude, the exclude items we get from a
+ directory's .cvsignore file once again only affect that one
+ directory (and not all following directories too).
+
+ * When transferring a file that has group 0 with -g specified
+ (typically via -a) and not enough privs to retain the group,
+ rsync no longer complains about "chown" failing.
+
+ * When specifying the USER@HOST: prefix for a file, the USER
+ part can now contain an '@', if needed (i.e. the last '@'
+ is used to find the HOST, not the first).
+
+ * Fixed some bugs in the handling of group IDs for non-root
+ users: (1) It properly handles a group that the sender didn't
+ have a name for (it would previously skip changing the group
+ on any files in that group). (2) If --numeric-ids is used,
+ rsync no longer attempts to set groups that the user doesn't
+ have the permission to set.
+
+ * Fixed the "refuse options" setting in the rsyncd.conf file.
+
+ * Improved the -x (--one-file-system) flag's handling of any
+ mount-point directories we encounter. It is both more optimal
+ (in that it no longer does a useless scan of the contents of
+ the mount-point dirs) and also fixes a bug where a remaped
+ mount of the original filesystem could get discovered on a
+ disk we should be ignoring.
+
+ * Rsync no longer discards a double-slash at the start of a filename
+ when trying to open the file. It also no longer constructs names
+ that start with a double slash (unless the user supplied them).
+
+ * Fixed compilation problem on Tru64 Unix (having to do with
+ sockaddr.sa_len and sockaddr.sin_len).
+
+ INTERNAL:
+
+ * Most of the I/O is now buffered, which results in a pretty
+ large speedup when running under MS Windows. (Craig Barratt)
+
+ * Optimizations to the name-handling/comparing code have made
+ some significant reductions in user-CPU time for large file
+ sets.
+
+ * Some variable-type cleanup that makes the code more consistent.
+
+ * Reduced memory requirements of hard link preservation.
+ (J.W. Schultz)
+
+ * Implemented a new algorithm for hard-link handling that speeds
+ up the code significantly. (J.W. Schultz and Wayne Davison)
+
+ * The --hard-link option now uses the first existing file in the
+ group of linked files as the basis for the transfer. This
+ prevents the sub-optimal transfer of a file's data when a new
+ hardlink is added on the sending side and it sorts alphabetically
+ earlier in the list than the files that are already present on the
+ receiving side.
+
+ * Dropped support for protocol versions less than 20
+ (2.3.0 released 15 Mar 1999) and activated warnings for
+ protocols less than 25 (2.5.0 released 23 Aug 2001)
+ (Wayne Davison and J.W. Schultz, severally)
+
+ * More optimal data transmission for --hard-links (protocol 28).
+
+ * More optimal data transmission for --checksum (protocol 28).
+
+ * Less memory is used when --checksum is specified.
+
+ * Less memory is used in the file list (a per-file savings).