As others have pointed out, the standard password manager lets you do this - if you do things in the right order (show passwords for everything, enter master password, THEN search on the password of interest).

While waiting, did some digging and found some stuff. For anyone who's interested:

WaltS wrote:

I am thinking signon.sglite, but not sure.
<https://addons.mozilla.org/en-us/firefox/addon/sqlite-manager/>

WaltS is correct - passwords are stored inside <profile>/signon.sqlite

the sqlite-manager lets you browse an sqlite file, but, not available (yet) for seamonkey 2.13.2
- of course, nothing stops one from browing the file via FireFox
- there's also a stand-alone sqlite browser at sqlitebrowser.sourceforge.net and command line tools at sqlite.org
- probably a good idea to play with a copy of the file, not the live profile

Data in the username and password field are encrypted, at least if you use a master password. If you DON'T have a master password set, some of the documentation on the mozilla dev website suggests things might be encoded Base64 (though the doc was for pre-sqlite password files, not sure if it's still the case).

This is kind of where I stopped, once NooP and Dave pointed out how to get to what I'm looking for through the standard password manager. I expect there is a way to decrypt a column in one of the above browsers; or it might take a little bit of SQL.

Thanks folks,

Miles



--
In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice.
In practice, there is.   .... Yogi Berra

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