git-remote-gcrypt
Android-Password-S
git-remote-gcrypt | Android-Password-S | |
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8 | 9 | |
748 | - | |
- | - | |
0.0 | - | |
over 1 year ago | - | |
Shell | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | - |
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.
git-remote-gcrypt
- End to end encrypted git
- Soft-serve: A tasty, self-hostable Git server for the command line
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password manager solution advice
Are you aware of https://spwhitton.name/tech/code/git-remote-gcrypt/?
- Using GNU Stow to manage your dotfiles (2012)
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Please explain like I'm 5 years old: what is a GPG key, a key server, and (especially) a keyring?
We use a modified https://github.com/spwhitton/git-remote-gcrypt on some of our git repos and employ the GPG Keychain app (from https://gpgtools.org) to help us manage the associated keys.
- Ask HN: Why should I trust password managers?
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keybase git repositories
I used to rely heavily of Keybase reops, but since the takeover I'm no longer confident in their longevity. An alternative option is to encrypt files yourself and use a mainstream git provider. There are utils like gcrypt specifically for this use case. That way you can be confident in the encryption AND availability.
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git-annex encrypted on rsync.net?
Yes, git-annex is perfect for this. It can do this with encryption via the rsync special remote. To store the git branches themselves, you can use git-remote-gcrypt. For backups, you can store the files on external hdds (additional to rsync.net) and keep them mostly offline/powered off. git-annex works really well with offline drives. Alternatively you can backup to another cloud provider that is supported as a special-remote.
Android-Password-S
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Bitwarden: Free, open-source password manager
There is no "database", it's just a bunch of GPG encrypted files synced with git.
For Android there is https://github.com/android-password-store/Android-Password-S....
For Windows the only thing (Pass4Win) i found is unmaintained.
See https://www.passwordstore.org/#other
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Joplin – open-source note-taking and to-do application with sync
These are the types of applications that I really love. It stores the data in a cloud service that already has enough free capacity for say a notes app. It's like how we can store pass(1) passwords on a git repository (Sync it with Github) and use that as the destination of Android Password Store[1], and you have a easy password manager.
[1] https://github.com/android-password-store/Android-Password-S...
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Passwordless authentication with FIDO2–beyond just the web
Since I store most of my passwords using https://www.passwordstore.org/, I have used mobile with https://github.com/android-password-store/Android-Password-S.... I'm happy enough with it. Sucks for getting anything into consoles, for obvious reasons.
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LastPass: Notice of Recent Security Incident
That's the exact setup I use on my main phone. There's also https://github.com/android-password-store/Android-Password-S..., which I use on throwaway phones.
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Bitwarden Raises $100M
I moved to pass cli (on i3 with a simple rofi selector) and the FOSS android app https://github.com/android-password-store/Android-Password-S... synced over Syncthing and I never look back
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GitJournal: Mobile first Markdown notes synchronized with Git
For encrypted secrets in git I'd suggest looking at sops and password store:
https://github.com/mozilla/sops
https://github.com/android-password-store/Android-Password-S...
Both are extremely useful secrets oriented git tools with support for things like PGP encryption. Both will encrypt with multiple keys too, making sharing relatively easy. The android pass app even manages SSH keys for pushing and pulling. There may be good inspiration in those repos, or even code you can borrow.
Also, thanks so much for making this: it is elegant and lovely. Keep it up!
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Ask HN: Why should I trust password managers?
In addition, plasma-pass, qtpass, android password store (https://github.com/android-password-store/Android-Password-S...) are nice as well. Throw in a NFC Yubikey and OpenKeychain on android, then you can lock them with hardware keys. Since pass uses git, syncing can be done to a private repo on your home network or even just a cheap usb stick.
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Clever uses of pass, the Unix password manager
Oh dammit. I have stopped using Gopass and started rewriting pass just for that reason - missing AGE encryption. At least I have learned something new and I feel better while my fuzzy finder UI instead of their TUI. However, big kudos to Gopass team for awesome work and really useful tool.
Before I start working on next project... Do you recognize any mobile app, which could replace PasswordStore.app for Android but with AGE support?
[0]: https://github.com/android-password-store/Android-Password-S...
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Pass: The standard Unix password manager
I'm thinking about adding encrypted file support to my pass wrapper, p, but I've not really found a good argument to support breaking mobile apps (such as https://github.com/android-password-store/Android-Password-S...).
You'd have to manually look up the entries in a lookup table to resolve obfuscated names back to readable names... Or upstream support for whatever format is devised. I dunno.
What are some alternatives?
hashpass - A simple password manager with a twist.
gopass - The slightly more awesome standard unix password manager for teams
passff-host - Host app for the WebExtension PassFF
pass-tomb - A pass extension that helps you keep the whole tree of passwords encrypted inside a Tomb.
client - Keybase Go Library, Client, Service, OS X, iOS, Android, Electron
pass-otp - A pass extension for managing one-time-password (OTP) tokens
passff - zx2c4 pass manager extension for Firefox, Chrome and Opera
OkcAgent - A utility that makes OpenKeychain available in your Termux shell
homesick - Your home directory is your castle. Don't leave your dotfiles behind.
pass-coffin - A password store extension to hide data inside a signed and encrypted coffin
git-secret - :busts_in_silhouette: A bash-tool to store your private data inside a git repository.
passage - A fork of password-store (https://www.passwordstore.org) that uses age (https://age-encryption.org) as backend.