vault-plugin-secrets-onepassword
1password-linux-to-bitwarden
vault-plugin-secrets-onepassword | 1password-linux-to-bitwarden | |
---|---|---|
4 | 5 | |
187 | 36 | |
1.1% | - | |
6.2 | 0.0 | |
6 months ago | over 2 years ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | 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.
vault-plugin-secrets-onepassword
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1Password Has Raised $620M
People thinking this is an absurd amount of money are sleeping on how 1Password is quietly positioning itself to become the ground truth storage solution for corporate secret management, across devops and non-technical groups alike.
Given Hashicorp's market cap of 11B, and 1Password's narrative on how to become even more central to corporate use cases by being the storage layer for Vault deployments, it's a very reasonable leap for them to make!
https://1password.com/secrets/
https://1password.com/secrets/integrations/
https://1password.com/enterprise-password-manager/
- Vault and 1Password for different cases
- 1Password/vault-plugin-secrets-onepassword
- 1Password Secrets Automation
1password-linux-to-bitwarden
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1Password Has Raised $620M
They have been doing some pretty unfriendly moves towards their long-term customers, like making sure the new 1Password cannot be used without 'the cloud' like the old one could be.
I have no doubt raising more VC money will only accelerate such trends.
In fact I've decided to move off of 1Password to BitWarden, since at least one can realistically self-host it. That being said, it's not exactly easy to migrate from the latest 1Password so I wrote my own little utility to do it[1].
I think we need more competition to VC backed products in general, just imagine what would happen if the building blocks of say a GNU/Linux system we take for granted today would've been built with the mindset that investors are going to want a return on their investment.
I am not saying there's anything wrong with that in principle, but am not sure I want to surrender my passwords to these kinds of incentives.
1 - https://github.com/MatejLach/1password-linux-to-bitwarden
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New version of 1Password means no way to import 1Password data into Bitwarden
By looking at the decoder of the tool linked in this post, it's just a zip that contains .data files, which are JSON. Still, hiding known file formats (.zip, .json) behind some obscure names (.1pux and .data) does look like a shady pattern to me.
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1Password .pux file
There are compiled version available: 1.0 - initial binary release
What are some alternatives?
secretive - Store SSH keys in the Secure Enclave
MacPass - A native macOS KeePass client
vault-plugin-secrets-onepasswor
vaultwarden - Unofficial Bitwarden compatible server written in Rust, formerly known as bitwarden_rs
bitwarden - Bitwarden client applications (web, browser extension, desktop, and cli) [Moved to: https://github.com/bitwarden/clients]
onepassword-operator - The 1Password Connect Kubernetes Operator provides the ability to integrate Kubernetes Secrets with 1Password. The operator also handles autorestarting deployments when 1Password items are updated.
infrastructure - The infrastructure monorepo for the Rocky Linux project. This project will be archived/deprecated in the future.
portwarden - Create Encrypted Backups of Your Bitwarden Vault with Attachments
mkcert - A simple zero-config tool to make locally trusted development certificates with any names you'd like.