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Keeweb
Keeweb










keeweb
  1. Keeweb mac os x#
  2. Keeweb update#
  3. Keeweb password#
  4. Keeweb windows#

Many good pull requests were never merged and the original project is missing some features which users can expect from a modern password manager. Hopefully they'll add back the missing display features soon, but until then I'll stick with KeePassX 0.4.x.Ī "new contender" has emerged, KeePassXC, that describes itself as " a community fork of KeePassX, a native cross-platform port of KeePass Password Safe, with the goal to extend and improve it with new features and bugfixes to provide a feature-rich, fully cross-platform and modern open-source password manager."Ī: KeePassX is an amazing password manager, but hasn't seen much active development for quite a while. Viewing/editing an entry does not open a new window, it changes the whole KeePassX window into the view/edit window.įor some reason, it wouldn't let me resize the window to any smaller than this screenshot. It uses the new database version 2.x, but you can't use TwoFish encryption, and it removes some display features like the preview panel (the bottom/right panel with details on the selected entry) and customizing columns. In Ubuntu 16.04 LTS & 16.10, using the KeePass v2.x database - AES/Rijndael only. Opening an entry to view/edit opens a new window: You can customize the columns & see the preview panel. This is basically the same font & sizes as other windows, looks great & fits in. This version's in Ubuntu "Trusty Tahr" 14.04 LTS, and uses the KeePass v1.x database - AES/Rijndael or Twofish See this Ubuntu package search for keepass for what version's currently in what release: KeePassX 0.4.3 (version 1.x compatible) These are on a Linux Mint 17 XFCE (Ubuntu 14.04 based) system. Screenshots of KeePassX "1.x"/(0.4.x) & "2.x", and KeePass2 And, KeePassX's version 0.4.x & 2.x display issues.Īlso, KeePassX/XC doesn't support plugins (there are several plugins for KeePass), as the user Grief points out in their answer so do upvote it too.

Keeweb mac os x#

Ĭurrently, the biggest difference between KeePass & KeePassX seems to be the appearance and "feel" of each program, especially on Linux or Mac OS X where KeePassX doesn't rely on Mono, so matches the look of other native programs closer.

Keeweb update#

KeePassXC seems to have been forked from KeePassX because of the slow development of KeePassX (it's last update was v2.0.2 on ) while KeePassXC started with v2.1.0 on. After KeePass/L became a cross platform application the name was not appropriate anymore and therefore, on 22 March 2006 it has been changed.

Keeweb windows#

Originally KeePassX was called KeePass/L for Linux since it was a port of Windows password manager Keepass Password Safe. It is now available as a native program for Linux, Windows, OS X, and others. KeePassX is an "Contributed/Unofficial KeePass Port" of KeePass that was started in 2005 (if the copyright notice on the bottom of their webpages is accurate) to run KeePass on Linux. KeePass was started about 2003, originally for Windows only, but now uses Mono to run on anything that Mono supports, like Mac OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. user names, passwords, urls, attachments and comments. kdbx file on a shared resource (Webdav, Dropbox, Google Drive, or OneDrive) and have people use to access it- other than the URL, there's no difference between this and self hosting.You probably already know, but both KeePass and KeePassX (& now KeePassXC, a fork of KeePassX) are open source (published under the GNU General Purpose Licence 2) secure (using AES or Twofish) data storage programs, using a single database file to store (mainly) passwords, or pretty much any data you'd like e.g. So, really, all you need to do is put your. html file (the same one you can self host) so everything in this web app runs client side in your browser- even when you are logging into your cloud storage. All in all, I think it is a reasonable solution for shared access.Īll that being said, in hindsight, I'm kind of realizing that self hosting is a bit unnecessary. So, the only way that multiple people saving at the same time might cause problems is if they edited the same entry or if they sync simultaneously and don't pick up each other's changes. You can definitely edit at the same time and when you save, Keeweb does a sync instead of overwriting the entire file. Now that it is all working, I have had a chance to open a shared file saved in Google Docs on 2 different computers using 2 different accounts. Also, getting the config file option to work without error was tricky too because it took me a while to figure out that clearing my browser cache was 100% necessary after editing index.html and it's easy to make malformed JSON data. The Google authentication was quite a bit of work since I'm not well versed in this. I'm really late to this party but, I just did what you were asking about.












Keeweb