head	1.5;
access;
symbols
	RELEASE_8_3_0:1.5
	RELEASE_9_0_0:1.5
	RELEASE_7_4_0:1.4
	RELEASE_8_2_0:1.4
	RELEASE_6_EOL:1.4
	RELEASE_8_1_0:1.3
	RELEASE_7_3_0:1.2
	RELEASE_8_0_0:1.2
	RELEASE_7_2_0:1.1
	RELEASE_7_1_0:1.1
	RELEASE_6_4_0:1.1;
locks; strict;
comment	@# @;


1.5
date	2011.03.19.12.37.26;	author miwi;	state Exp;
branches;
next	1.4;

1.4
date	2010.10.06.19.52.56;	author pgollucci;	state Exp;
branches;
next	1.3;

1.3
date	2010.05.25.12.09.57;	author sylvio;	state Exp;
branches;
next	1.2;

1.2
date	2009.09.18.23.43.43;	author miwi;	state Exp;
branches;
next	1.1;

1.1
date	2008.07.19.21.28.04;	author miwi;	state Exp;
branches;
next	;


desc
@@


1.5
log
@- Get Rid MD5 support
@
text
@SHA256 (xpi/passwordmaker-1.7.8-fx+mz+sm.xpi) = 662d5281b2ae2f87bf6006e103b2a405881cfc655eec45ab8b80c7909d84445e
SIZE (xpi/passwordmaker-1.7.8-fx+mz+sm.xpi) = 275471
@


1.4
log
@- Update to 1.7.8

PR:             ports/151245
Submitted by:   myself (pgollucci)
Approved by:    anatoly.borodin@@gmail.com (maintainer)
@
text
@a0 1
MD5 (xpi/passwordmaker-1.7.8-fx+mz+sm.xpi) = 4e255ab4a0b64a1f5c53636b4186fb89
@


1.3
log
@- Update to 1.7.7

PR:		ports/146852
Submitted by:	Anatoly Borodin <anatoly.borodin@@gmail.com> (maintainer)
@
text
@d1 3
a3 3
MD5 (xpi/passwordmaker-1.7.7-fx+mz+sm.xpi) = 50cf6279a823bac4366aaeae965fd296
SHA256 (xpi/passwordmaker-1.7.7-fx+mz+sm.xpi) = 22443ede8d0169ae1b33c69284c3f2d50d59722652ee8a1eb7213650486c3c5e
SIZE (xpi/passwordmaker-1.7.7-fx+mz+sm.xpi) = 275638
@


1.2
log
@- Update to 1.7.3

PR:		138909
Submitted by:	Anatoly Borodin <anatoly.borodin@@gmail.com> (maintainer)
Feature safe: yes
@
text
@d1 3
a3 3
MD5 (xpi/passwordmaker-1.7.3-fx+mz+sm.xpi) = d1ac519d403a9b7d18359cdd883ae4f7
SHA256 (xpi/passwordmaker-1.7.3-fx+mz+sm.xpi) = 2ffa7100993558e5eeb3a36ea79c59cfc96ff971dfdedef8484a0c98c2aba1cb
SIZE (xpi/passwordmaker-1.7.3-fx+mz+sm.xpi) = 254557
@


1.1
log
@One Password To Rule Them All!

If you're like most people, you have a few passwords that you use over
and over again on many different websites. You know this isn't secure,
but you do it anyway. Why? Because it's difficult to remember a unique
password for each and every web site that requires one.

PasswordMaker manages all your online accounts using either new,
uncrackable passwords it creates, or your existing passwords. It even
automatically populates webforms for one-click login.

Moreover, passwords aren't stored anywhere--they are calculated over and over
again as they're needed--so there's nothing to be lost, hacked, or stolen!

WWW: http://passwordmaker.org/

PR:		ports/123902
Submitted by:	Anatoly Borodin <anatoly.borodin at gmail.com>
@
text
@d1 3
a3 3
MD5 (xpi/passwordmaker-1.7.2-fx+mz+sm.xpi) = 0e78759a753d77fd361e0c5e6830bdb2
SHA256 (xpi/passwordmaker-1.7.2-fx+mz+sm.xpi) = 87bec722d41be150d092e58d93ceab6e4517dbda2803544dcedf1e369a79c75c
SIZE (xpi/passwordmaker-1.7.2-fx+mz+sm.xpi) = 254903
@

