Hi Teldin
A quick and dirty way to make sure that is not a password problem you can change this line in the sql file
Code: Select all
INSERT INTO `admin` (`User_ID`, `User_Name`, `Login_Name`, `Password`, `Group`, `User_Language`, `User_Template`) VALUES (1, 'Administrator', 'admin', '51a71aa84f5e79ad', 'Admin', 'en', 'zm');
To This
Code: Select all
INSERT INTO `admin` (`User_ID`, `User_Name`, `Login_Name`, `Password`, `Group`, `User_Language`, `User_Template`) VALUES (1, 'Administrator', 'admin', 'password', 'Admin', 'en', 'zm');
Now the admin user will have the password = password, or you can copy paste this :
as the password.
There are a small bug in the password handeling atm, but the version iam working on will fix this, and it will proberly be released within a week or two.
The bug is that you have to give a password when you change the user or it will store the password value found in MySql witch is an encoded one.