rclone
com.bitwarden.desktop | rclone | |
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15 | 963 | |
14 | 44,201 | |
- | 1.9% | |
7.3 | 9.8 | |
7 days ago | 4 days ago | |
Go | ||
- | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
com.bitwarden.desktop
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Flathub – The Linux App Store
> One thing I don't know about (which maybe somebody can inform me/us about): the wiki states that PRs are reviewed by Flathub reviewers, but I see no sign of human review on e.g. https://github.com/flathub/com.bitwarden.desktop/pull/167 (or others in that repo). What's the actual process?
In this case, I think the lack of human involvement is mostly a good thing. Flathub was criticised for having outdated packages[1]. Using automation to automatically update packages is mostly a good thing.
Obviously, we want to see thorough review of new packages, but that's a separate issue.
[1] I thought I read this in an LWN article, but I can't find it. But see e.g. https://github.com/flathub/org.qutebrowser.qutebrowser/issue...
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Can I trust Flatpak apps if they are not managed by the app developer?
for example, bitwarden's flatpak on github shows basically just repackages the official debian build into a flatpak build. in this case i think it's pretty safe (in fact i use the flatpak).
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Bitwarden not working
You might also be interested in learning a little about Flatpaks and downloading/installing programs from Flathub. I'll give you the basic background: It's an alternative (in some ways, honestly, modern) way of installing programs that can be sandboxed/permissioned. It's a way of releasing software that also helps ensure compatibility across a wide variety of systems. It's also a way of releasing software that can update independently from the base installation. You can think of it sort of like an app store on a phone where the programs are a bit self-contained and can update independently from the phone's operating system. https://flathub.org/apps/details/com.bitwarden.desktop
- First config install
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In using Ubuntu for ARM, I noticed there's a 4-year-old version of Bitwarden ARM64 on the Ubuntu Software Center. Be cool if you updated it, but maybe remove it at this point. It’s identified as unsafe due to ‘using a legacy windowing system’, and while it installs, the login errors out.
See https://github.com/flathub/com.bitwarden.desktop/issues/63
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Publishing Electron apps to flathub
Example of an application but with Electron: https://github.com/flathub/com.bitwarden.desktop
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I'm a very basic user. What am I missing?
Since we're on the subject, you can also host your own BitWarden if you wanted. Bitwarden also has a desktop client for Linux as well. Alternatively if enabled 3rd Party Repositories or just manually enabled Flathub, you can install the Bitwarden flatpak.
- I made a BASH script that removes Snap from an Ubuntu system and replaces it with Flatpak.
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Vote for the Bitwarden flatpak app to become official
It's not really that much of a risk. If you look at the yaml file you can see exactly what permissions it requests and what happens when the package is built.
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What's the current obstacle to more developers directly pushing their apps to flathub?
Luckily, Flathub is transparent in what manifests are used in the production of the Flatpaks they host. For example, this is the one for Bitwarden. You can take some time to learn how Flatpaks are built, but this one seems pretty straight forward. They are taking the .deb file from Bitwarden's github release page and extracting the executable from there. Then it adds a couple extra files, which are viewable within the manifest file, to make it into a Flatpak app.
rclone
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Supabase Storage: now supports the S3 protocol
rclone: a command-line program to manage files on cloud storage.
- World Backup Day
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S3 Client against disasters (hacks, fires, catastrophes)
Synchronise buckets with Sclone or Rclone
- Show HN: Query Your Sheets with SheetSQL
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Rclone syncs your files to cloud storage
Says that Apple doesn't provide a multi platform API. It doesn't provide any official supported way to access iCloud from Windows, Linux.
There's a ticket covering everything you might ever want to know:
https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/1778
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Ask HN: Best modern file transfer/synchronization protocol?
seconding rsync and syncthing.
the server could expose an smb or nfs share, the client could mount it, and then sync to that mount.
rsync over ssh also works, if you do not want to run smb/nfs.
this is also a cool tool https://rclone.org/
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Ask HN: How do you do personal backups in 2023? (Google and Dropbox issues)
rclone [1] to dropbox. works since years without problems
[1] https://rclone.org/
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Which synchronization tool are you using together with the pCloud Crypto Folder?
rclone provides a special pCloud config option, which makes the setup straight forward. rclone can encrypt the data it uploads with its own encryption but not with the pCloud encryption. Therefore it can only upload data to the unencrypted pCloud folders, not to the Crypto Folder.
- Backup of Google Drive (and photos?) to local disk (not to Google Drive)
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All I want for Christmas is
The arkclone project impliments rclone in ArkOS to achieve cloud saves. Not yet built in to ArkOS yet, and not a lot of recent traction on the pull request to get it added, but it can be installed manually.
What are some alternatives?
desktop - The desktop vault (Windows, macOS, & Linux).
syncthing - Open Source Continuous File Synchronization
snapd - The snapd and snap tools enable systems to work with .snap files.
Cryptomator - Multi-platform transparent client-side encryption of your files in the cloud
flatpak-external-data-checker - A tool for checking if the external data used in Flatpak manifests is still up to date
rsync - An open source utility that provides fast incremental file transfer. It also has useful features for backup and restore operations among many other use cases.
org.qutebrowser.qutebrowser
s3fs-fuse - FUSE-based file system backed by Amazon S3
snap-to-flatpak - A BASH script that removes Snap from an Ubuntu system and replaces it with Flatpak
Duplicati - Store securely encrypted backups in the cloud!
aws-cli - Universal Command Line Interface for Amazon Web Services
restic - Fast, secure, efficient backup program