Tomb/ChangeLog
2011-05-26 19:21:09 +02:00

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