The main culprits for this release are: Ryan Eatmon - Much of the early work on jadc2s, which fed into the design of SX and the components. Also the startup script, and some excellent design work which helped to set the long term goals for the project (router meshing, distributed components, etc). Jeremie Miller - Getting the project off the ground in the first place. MIO, much of the SM core (formerly jadlsm), most of the utilties (which came from the 1.4 server), and of course the NAD subsystem, which is the boon and the bane of a j2 developers' life ;) Thomas Muldowney - The original Autotools-based build system, some early jadc2s work (rate limiting), utilities, and lots of good testing and debugging advice. Robert Norris - Overall system design, pretty much all the other code, and the current coordinator for this whole mess. Stephen Marquard - Uber bug fixer and the main dev keeping this project alive Other people who chipped in: Casey Crabb - Original DB4.1 support - Original private XML storage module Matthias Wimmer - IPv6 support - Misc bugfixes and testing William Uther - Base64 passwords for pipe-auth Wim Lewis - SX partial write support - Numerous fixes for BSD Mike Prince - SQL templates for MySQL/PostgreSQL authreg modules Jamin W. Collins - Command line parsing fixes Jacek Konieczny - Misc bugfixes maqi - Doxygen bootstrapping Karsten Huneycutt - Patch to get PAM working on non-Linux systems Shane DeRidder - Patch for configurable syslog facility Magnus Henoch - Patch for proper router connect retry on OpenBSD Dudley Carr - Patches to bring mod_privacy in line with XMPP-IM Patrick Bihan-Faou - Patch to use PAM account management functions Peter Hinz - Original Win32 port - Misc bugfixes Karsten Petersen - Misc bugfixes, leak fixes and cleanups Etan Reisner - Patch to configure c2s to require TLS before auth Albert Chin - Various fixes to get things running on Solaris, AIX & Tru64 Thanks also go to the testers and bug reporters out there - you know who you are. Special thanks in this capacity to Justin Kirby, whose many failed efforts to compile j2 helped get much of the build system to where it is today. If you're have questions or problems, please check the README file for places you can go for help. Expect to be ignored if you contact the authors directly.