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60 lines
2.0 KiB
Plaintext
60 lines
2.0 KiB
Plaintext
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May 2011 - 1.1
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Fixes to mime types, icons and desktop integration. A new 'list'
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command provides an overview on all tombs currently open. Now a
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tomb cannot be mounted multiple times, the message console has
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colors and better messages. Different mount options (like
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read-only) can also be specified by hand on the commandline.
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March 2011 - 1.0
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Clean and stable. Now passwords are handled exclusively using
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pinentry. Also support for steganography of keys (bury and exhume)
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was added to the commandline. Commandline and desktop operations
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are well separated so that tomb can be used via remote terminal. A
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new command 'slam' immediately closes a tomb killing all processes
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that keep it busy.
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February 2011 - 0.9.2
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The tomb-open wizard now correctly guides you through the creation
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of new tombs and helps when saving the keys on external USB
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storage devices. The status tray now reliably closes its tomb.
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February 2011 - 0.9.1
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Sourcecode cleanup, debugging and testing.
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Integrated some feedback after filing Debian's ITP and RFS.
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January 2011 - 0.9
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Tomb is now a desktop application following freedesktop standards:
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it provides a status tray and integrates with file managers. The
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main program has been thoroughly tested and many bugs were fixed.
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August 2010
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The first usable version of Tomb goes public among hacker friends
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During the year 2009
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Tomb has been extensively tested, perfectioned and documented
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after being used by its author
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Sometime in 2007
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mknest was refactored to work on the Debian distribution and since
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then renamed to Tomb. dyne:bolic specific dependencies where
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removed, keeping Zsh as the shell script it is written with.
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Back in 2005
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The "nesting" feature of dyne:bolic GNU/Linux lets users encrypt
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their home in a file, using a shell script and a graphical
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interface called Taschino.
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Taschino included a shell script wrapping cryptsetup to encrypt
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loopback mounted partitions with the algo AES-256 (cbc-essiv
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mode): this script was called 'mkNest' and its the ancestor of
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Tomb.
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