Join the AMA (Ask Me Anything) with the Firefox leadership team to celebrate Firefox 20th anniversary and discuss Firefox’s future on Mozilla Connect. Mark your calendar on Thursday, November 14, 18:00 - 20:00 UTC!

为提升您的使用体验,本站正在维护,部分功能暂时无法使用。如果本站文章无法解决您的问题,您想要向社区提问的话,请到 Twitter 上的 @FirefoxSupport 或 Reddit 上的 /r/firefox 提问,我们的支持社区将会很快回复您的疑问。

搜索 | 用户支持

防范以用户支持为名的诈骗。我们绝对不会要求您拨打电话或发送短信,及提供任何个人信息。请使用“举报滥用”选项报告涉及违规的行为。

详细了解

I need access to older versions of FireFox and checksums for these files.

  • 2 个回答
  • 2 人有此问题
  • 16 次查看
  • 最后回复者为 bhackerITT

more options

For each version listed below I need the installation download file and md5/shaXXX checksum from Mozilla for each download.

WindowsOS: Firefox v3.5, v3.6

Solaris 10 x86: Firefox v3.5, v3.6

Solaris sparc: Firefox v3.6.17

              filename: firefox-3.6.17.en-US.solaris-10-fcs-sparc-pkg
For each version listed below I need the installation download file and md5/shaXXX checksum from Mozilla for each download. WindowsOS: Firefox v3.5, v3.6 Solaris 10 x86: Firefox v3.5, v3.6 Solaris sparc: Firefox v3.6.17 filename: firefox-3.6.17.en-US.solaris-10-fcs-sparc-pkg

由bhackerITT于修改

被采纳的解决方案

Everything you want for current Firefox 3.6 is on the FTP server here:

There's two big files for all MD5 and SHA1 sums of everything. Solaris is under the contrib dir.

The current version of Firefox 3.x is 3.6.23. Firefox 3.5 is no longer supported and Firefox 3.6 is considered a direct update (aka minor update) to Firefox 3.5; when Firefox 3.5 users check for updates they go directly to 3.6 for security and stability fixes.

If you really need an old version for testing purposes, you can get any version of Firefox that ever existed off of the FTP server:

定位到答案原位置 👍 0

所有回复 (2)

more options

选择的解决方案

Everything you want for current Firefox 3.6 is on the FTP server here:

There's two big files for all MD5 and SHA1 sums of everything. Solaris is under the contrib dir.

The current version of Firefox 3.x is 3.6.23. Firefox 3.5 is no longer supported and Firefox 3.6 is considered a direct update (aka minor update) to Firefox 3.5; when Firefox 3.5 users check for updates they go directly to 3.6 for security and stability fixes.

If you really need an old version for testing purposes, you can get any version of Firefox that ever existed off of the FTP server:

more options

Thanks Dave!

I just needed to verify some old versions in use were the same as what was originally provided by Mozilla.

Thanks for the speedy reply!

-Ben