JNDEVELOPER Posted November 24 Share Posted November 24 Fortunately, we had already coded our plugin using the latest standards with PHP 8.4 support. Therefore, there shouldn't be many changes needed, unless WHMCS renames functions such as hooks or database methods. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrators WHMCS John Posted November 27 Author Administrators Share Posted November 27 On 11/12/2025 at 11:05 PM, kon said: Was there no release due to v9.0 or there is no such mention "1 major release per quarter"? In short yes. We aim for 3 feature releases per year, but due to this extra work involved in a major release it has essentially consumed two release cycles. On 11/23/2025 at 11:50 AM, BENELUX said: Any update on the planned release timeline would be appreciated. The Release Candidate is coming next month. General Availability aim is a month later (depending on feedback). 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BENELUX Posted December 4 Share Posted December 4 Is there any update on when a beta or release candidate for version 9.0 will be available? Should we expect it within the next few days or rather in the coming weeks? 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
-M- Posted December 4 Share Posted December 4 On 11/27/2025 at 12:18 PM, WHMCS John said: In short yes. We aim for 3 feature releases per year, but due to this extra work involved in a major release it has essentially consumed two release cycles. Sorry, but sounds more like a personal (shortage) issue to me. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrators WHMCS John Posted December 8 Author Administrators Share Posted December 8 On 12/4/2025 at 12:23 PM, BENELUX said: Is there any update on when a beta or release candidate for version 9.0 will be available? Should we expect it within the next few days or rather in the coming weeks? This week or next! On 12/4/2025 at 6:47 PM, -M- said: Sorry, but sounds more like a personal (shortage) issue to me. It sure would be nice to double the size of the engineering team temporarily for one release every few years! 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hal9000 Posted Friday at 04:02 PM Share Posted Friday at 04:02 PM On 12/8/2025 at 6:12 PM, WHMCS John said: It sure would be nice to double the size of the engineering team temporarily for one release every few years! Please don't. We cannot afford yet another price increase. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BENELUX Posted Monday at 03:43 PM Share Posted Monday at 03:43 PM On 12/8/2025 at 6:12 PM, WHMCS John said: This week or next! Do you have an exact ETA? 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bear Posted Monday at 06:32 PM Share Posted Monday at 06:32 PM 2 hours ago, BENELUX said: Do you have an exact ETA? An exact *estimated* time of arrival? 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BENELUX Posted Monday at 10:07 PM Share Posted Monday at 10:07 PM 3 hours ago, bear said: An exact *estimated* time of arrival? For the BETA 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bear Posted yesterday at 12:14 AM Share Posted yesterday at 12:14 AM ETA: Estimated Time of Arrival. By definition, not exact. 😉 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrators WHMCS John Posted 23 hours ago Author Administrators Share Posted 23 hours ago @BENELUX, Today's the day!! https://blog.whmcs.com/133775/whmcs-90-release-candidate-out-now 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Humanbeing Posted 22 hours ago Share Posted 22 hours ago (edited) @WHMCS John Good news. Thanks. Are there any screenshots of the new client UI/Nexus/Search/Ordering etc. Edited 22 hours ago by Humanbeing 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
-M- Posted 18 hours ago Share Posted 18 hours ago Yes screenshots please. Especially the Nexus cart. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DennisHermannsen Posted 10 hours ago Share Posted 10 hours ago Nexus is gonna disappoint you. It's just a reskinned Twenty One template (for the system template) and a reskinned Standard Cart template (for the cart template). It's only during checkout that it's different. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JNDEVELOPER Posted 9 hours ago Share Posted 9 hours ago 14 minutes ago, DennisHermannsen said: Nexus is gonna disappoint you. It's just a reskinned Twenty One template (for the system template) and a reskinned Standard Cart template (for the cart template). It's only during checkout that it's different. Still using bootstrap 4.x ? -1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DennisHermannsen Posted 9 hours ago Share Posted 9 hours ago I don't know, I gave up. WHMCS shipped the v9.0 RC with hardcoded links to /var/www/html/whmcs in the Nexus cart assets. It attempts to load Node modules but these were not part of the version they shipped. The cart doesn't work. The Nexus template's all.css file has this, so I assume it's Bootstrap 4. /** * bootstrap-switch - Turn checkboxes and radio buttons into toggle switches. * * @version v4.0.0-alpha.1 * @homepage http://www.bootstrap-switch.org * @author Mattia Larentis <mattia@larentis.eu> (http://larentis.eu) * @license Apache-2.0 */ I think WHMCS just rushed this release because they promised a release in December. This release is so botched. They've technically delivered on their promise, but yeah... 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
andp97 Posted 9 hours ago Share Posted 9 hours ago 15 minutes ago, DennisHermannsen said: I don't know, I gave up. WHMCS shipped the v9.0 RC with hardcoded links to /var/www/html/whmcs in the Nexus cart assets. It attempts to load Node modules but these were not part of the version they shipped. The cart doesn't work. The Nexus template's all.css file has this, so I assume it's Bootstrap 4. /** * bootstrap-switch - Turn checkboxes and radio buttons into toggle switches. * * @version v4.0.0-alpha.1 * @homepage http://www.bootstrap-switch.org * @author Mattia Larentis <mattia@larentis.eu> (http://larentis.eu) * @license Apache-2.0 */ I think WHMCS just rushed this release because they promised a release in December. This release is so botched. They've technically delivered on their promise, but yeah... The Nexus theme have this bootstrap file: /whmcs/templates/nexus/sass stat ../../../node_modules/bootstrap-four/scss/bootstrap stat: ../../../node_modules/bootstrap-four/scss/bootstrap: stat: No such file or directory /*! * WHMCS Twenty-One Theme * Global Stylesheet * Copyright (c) 2020 WHMCS Limited * https://www.whmcs.com/license/ */ @import "../../../node_modules/bootstrap-four/scss/bootstrap"; @import "global"; @import "forms"; -1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheHostingHeroes Posted 9 hours ago Share Posted 9 hours ago 14 hours ago, WHMCS John said: @BENELUX, Today's the day!! https://blog.whmcs.com/133775/whmcs-90-release-candidate-out-now https://docs.whmcs.com/releases/9.0/9-0-release-notes/ broken from the blog but i did manage to find working link https://docs.whmcs.com/releases/9-0/9-0-release-notes/ blog needs to replace 9.0 to 9-0 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DennisHermannsen Posted 9 hours ago Share Posted 9 hours ago Yeah, except for adding AI to domain search, this release doesn't really provide on any of the other promises. Credit notes doesn't work either. When you cancel an invoice, WHMCS just adds a transaction to the invoice. If the invoice has a total of $100, WHMCS just adds a transaction of $100 and cancels the invoice. There's no credit note or anything. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
andp97 Posted 9 hours ago Share Posted 9 hours ago The links to the template diffs are broken (or the tag for the new template has not been pushed to GitHub yet): Twenty-One Theme Six Theme Standard Cart Order Form 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DennisHermannsen Posted 9 hours ago Share Posted 9 hours ago Okay, maybe I was too quick about credit notes. It seems a lot of the features are "coming soon™️". This is not a Release Candidate lol. This is not even alpha. This is internal development. Nothing can convince me that this release didn't just happen because WHMCS promised us a release in December. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BENELUX Posted 8 hours ago Share Posted 8 hours ago (edited) While I understand that bugs are part of any Release Candidate cycle, it's concerning that we are still discussing basic optimization issues like proper OPcache support. And let's not even get started on the fact that we still don't have 100% native Nginx support. This becomes particularly ironic with the introduction of the new WHMCS Cloud Solution. With cloud hosting, the resource costs are on their side, so you'd think they'd be rushing to support Nginx to reduce their own infrastructure expenses. It's like being sold a high-performance engine but being told you have to power it with hamster wheels. Maybe once their bills start rolling in, Nginx support will suddenly become a priority. This all points to the bigger issue: the development velocity. Core development feels like it's just about "keeping the lights on" (PHP/ionCube updates) rather than actual innovation. This stagnation has allowed third-party developers like ModulesGarden to build entire businesses by selling us functionality that should have been in the core a decade ago. When you look at the "Total Cost of Ownership" license fees + necessary third-party modules, the value proposition is slipping. Newer platforms like Upmind are entering the market with an API-first architecture and modern features built-in from day one. If WHMCS continues to outsource innovation to the community while raising prices for maintenance updates, that competitive threat is going to become an exodus very quickly. We need core features that match the modern hosting landscape, not just compatibility patches. Edited 8 hours ago by BENELUX 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hal9000 Posted 8 hours ago Share Posted 8 hours ago It's quite bold to release an RC without any beta for a major new version. Sure not lacking confidence. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Humanbeing Posted 8 hours ago Share Posted 8 hours ago Ah, whmcs. The gift that keeps on giving. Happy holidays. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JNDEVELOPER Posted 7 hours ago Share Posted 7 hours ago 59 minutes ago, BENELUX said: While I understand that bugs are part of any Release Candidate cycle, it's concerning that we are still discussing basic optimization issues like proper OPcache support. And let's not even get started on the fact that we still don't have 100% native Nginx support. This becomes particularly ironic with the introduction of the new WHMCS Cloud Solution. With cloud hosting, the resource costs are on their side, so you'd think they'd be rushing to support Nginx to reduce their own infrastructure expenses. It's like being sold a high-performance engine but being told you have to power it with hamster wheels. Maybe once their bills start rolling in, Nginx support will suddenly become a priority. This all points to the bigger issue: the development velocity. Core development feels like it's just about "keeping the lights on" (PHP/ionCube updates) rather than actual innovation. This stagnation has allowed third-party developers like ModulesGarden to build entire businesses by selling us functionality that should have been in the core a decade ago. When you look at the "Total Cost of Ownership" license fees + necessary third-party modules, the value proposition is slipping. Newer platforms like Upmind are entering the market with an API-first architecture and modern features built-in from day one. If WHMCS continues to outsource innovation to the community while raising prices for maintenance updates, that competitive threat is going to become an exodus very quickly. We need core features that match the modern hosting landscape, not just compatibility patches. So your point is, whmcs should prioritize modern, clear and consistent development instead of just raising prices all the time? 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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