pass-coffin
pass-tomb
pass-coffin | pass-tomb | |
---|---|---|
4 | 9 | |
34 | 367 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 7.1 | |
over 1 year ago | 2 months ago | |
Shell | Shell | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | 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.
pass-coffin
-
The easiest way to secure a flash drive (i.e. password protection)?
Easy is pass and for folders/drives pass-coffin. On Windows, it might require some setup for WSL though. Pass has a huge load of Extensions, for Windows-Tools too.
- pass-coffin: A password store extension that hides data inside a GPG coffin
- Pass-coffin: password store extension to hide data
-
Clever uses of pass, the Unix password manager
Besides pass-tomb, there's also pass-coffin which doesn't need to rely on a 3k+ line ZSH script. I'll add support for using age and signify in pass-coffin soon.
https://github.com/ayushnix/pass-coffin
pass-tomb
-
KeePass is the free, open source, light-weight and easy-to-use password manager
By itself, Passwordstore will not encrypt file names or directory names, which might not be a problem if no one else has access to the machine that hosts your git repo, but if that's not the case (even if it's a private repo on whatever platform), you might want to use either Tomb or git-crypt-remote to have full end-to-end encryption. There are even some tools that glue tomb and pass together (https://github.com/roddhjav/pass-tomb for one), though I'm not sure what's the situation is like when it comes to mobile integration with tomb/git-crypt-remote.
- Vim: Warning: Input is not from a terminal - how to prevent with given command in script
- Clever uses of pass, the Unix password manager
-
Any self-hostable password managers worth using?
That can of course be fixed by using pass-tomb, but that isn’t implemented in mobile clients (at least not on iOS).
-
Using gpg + pass + tomb and yubikey for secrets management ?
- https://pujol.io/blog/tomb-with-gpg-keys/ - https://github.com/roddhjav/pass-tomb
- Pass: The standard Unix password manager
-
LastPass is finally a no-brainer to ditch: Bitwarden?
A plug-in called pass-tomb exists to fix this, but doesn’t work with mobile apps (a least not iOS)
What are some alternatives?
Android-Password-S
gopass - The slightly more awesome standard unix password manager for teams
chezmoi - Manage your dotfiles across multiple diverse machines, securely.
pass-grave - An extension for pass (the standard Unix password manager) to easily hide the metadata of the password store
pass-otp - A pass extension for managing one-time-password (OTP) tokens
age - A simple, modern and secure encryption tool (and Go library) with small explicit keys, no config options, and UNIX-style composability.
pass-import - A pass extension for importing data from most existing password managers
OpenKeychain - OpenKeychain is an OpenPGP implementation for Android.
yubitouch - Bash script for setting or clearing touch requirements for # cryptographic operations the OpenPGP application on a YubiKey 4
passhole - A secure hole for your passwords (KeePass CLI)
passage - Password store and secret manager using age encryption. This is my attempt to replace passwordstore's use of PGP, with age encryption. I am sure there are more elegant ways to accomplish this, but it is working for my purposes.
Android-Password-Store - Android application compatible with ZX2C4's Pass command line application