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phpBB is a popular free/open source forum system using the PHP scripting language and a variety of database management systems:
Besides the database support, phpBB's greatest advantages are:
See also: Software Development
phpBB was started by James Atkinson as a simple UBB-like forum for his own website on June 17, 2000. Nathan Codding and John Abela (both now former team members) joined the development team after phpBB went into sourceforge CVS, and work on 1.0.0 began. A fully-functional, pre-release version of phpBB was ready by July 1, 2000 .
phpBB 1.0.0 was released on December 16, 2000, with subsequent improvements to the 1.x codebase coming in two more major installments. (phpBB 1.2.0 was released on February 16, 2001 and 1.4.0 on April 25, 2001.) The final release in the 1.x line was phpBB 1.4.4, released on November 6, 2001. During the lifetime of the 1.x series, Bart van Bragt, Paul S. Owen (now lead developer), Johnathan Haase (now a former team member) and Frank Feingold joined the team.
phpBB 2.0.x was begun on February 17, 2001. It was developed entirely from scratch; the developer's ambitions for phpBB had outgrown the original codebase. Doug Kelly (now a former team member) joined the team shortly afterwards. After a year of development and extensive testing, phpBB 2.0.0, the "Super Furry" version, was released on April 4, 2002 (three days later than intended). The latest release in the 2.0.x line was 2.0.10 ("Murphy is furry"), on July 17, 2004. Releases in the 2.0.x line are now restricted to bug and security fixes, and 2.0.x is the only line for which support is currently given.
See also:
With the new 2.0.x codebase in a stable state, the development team (now including Ludovic Arnaud and Meik Sievertsen) have begun building upon and altering the codebase to produce 2.1.x; when 2.1.x reaches production quality, it will be released as 2.2.0. The improvements in 2.1.x to date are comparable with the improvements between 1.4.x and 2.0.x, though 2.1.x is a continuation of the 2.x line while the 1.4.x to 2.0.x move represented a clean break.
The 2.1.x codebase is not yet feature frozen, and the developers are prone to keep some features up their sleeves. However, an incomplete list of additional (over 2.0.x) features expected for 2.2.0 follows.