Release Notes: This release is the first to have been ported to ARM. As a result of this effort, users can now choose to disable many features/dependencies. In addition, video support has been greatly improved, with features such as call transfer, hold, and H.264 profile and level negotiation implemented for video calls. In the Gnome client, instant messaging was reimplemented and as a result, it no longer depends on Webkit. PJSIP has been updated to 1.14.2.


Release Notes: This release supports the Opus, iLBC, and g.729 audio codecs. SFLphone accounts now have an "Auto-answer" mode. Along with a number of bugfixes, SFLphone's backend has been migrated from PJSIP 1.14.2 to 2.0.1. Support has been added for multi-codec calls (e.g., PCMA outgoing, PCMU incoming). The backend has also migrated threading libraries from Common C++ to pthread.


Release Notes: This release is the first to have been ported to ARM. As a result of this effort, users can now choose to disable many features/dependencies. In addition, video support has been greatly improved, with features such as call transfer, hold, and H.264 profile and level negotiation implemented for video calls. In the Gnome client, instant messaging was reimplemented and as a result, it no longer depends on Webkit. PJSIP has been updated to 1.14.2.


Release Notes: This release adds support for CCRTP 2.0.2. In addition the Gnome client now builds with either GTK+2.0 or GTK+3.0. Compatibility with several SIP providers has been fixed, such as ekiga.org and sip2sip.info. Efforts have been made to improve test coverage and quality assurance, striving to ensure that regressions are caught early. The KDE client is now fully up-to-date with the latest version of the sflphone daemon.


Release Notes: This release has few changes but some fairly important bugfixes. It fixes history logic and the instant messaging user interface. It improves the SIP core by adding a keep-alive for account registration and updating the Contact header from 200 OK.


Release Notes: This version offers improved performance, better stability, and many bugfixes. It should be the most stable ever released.