

For other websites, if I search for ‘passkey’ on the KeePass website feature list nothing comes up. Plugins in a password manager sketch me out a bit tbh lol
He/Him, Bi Furry Boi


For other websites, if I search for ‘passkey’ on the KeePass website feature list nothing comes up. Plugins in a password manager sketch me out a bit tbh lol


KeeAnywhere
That’s a neat one, although it doesn’t look like KeePass supports passkeys yet, at least I don’t see it in the feature list.


I switched over to keepass yesterday, and surprisingly the import from BW was perfect (as far as I can tell), even passkeys came over just fine.


I ended up using Keepass2Android and just pointing it at my webdav server, it seems to work pretty well!
On desktop it’s already taken care of since I put the DB in my folders that already sync via Syncthing.


KeePassXC + KeePassDX is probably the best option, with the downside of no way to sync easily (syncthing is probably the best option there)
I might switch back at some point, been getting frustrated with the bitwarden extension performance always being so poor.


Yes too up to date can be a downside for most, I want stability and just want my OS to be there and do its thing with a monthly or so update I run.


Ubuntu is not great due to Canonicals choices. However I do wonder if they have more enterprise/business install base.


I use zram only with no swap on the SSD for my laptop/desktop.
For my server it has zram too but with extra low priority swap on the SSD just in case zram gets full up.
Hibernate isn’t something I’ve really ever used, my laptop uses very little power in sleep mode.


Mostly just quick notes in Obsidian, if I do anything complex or ‘unusual’ to set something up I’ll save the history that I ran.


Fedora w/ KDE always just feels like home to me, I like the defaults so I don’t spend much time mucking around, and it feels stable and reliable.


Proxmox has a UI for ZFS. But you don’t really need it, ZFS is kind of set and forget and setting it up is quite easy via CLI.


Crowdsec does everything fail2ban does so not much point.


You can analyze with either the CLI or log files piped into something like OpenObserve which is what I do. You don’t technically need their dashboard.


Should be able to create 2 rules, 1 for each subnet.


RClone maybe? https://rclone.org/
There are some open source rclone android apps like RCX, and on windows/linux you can just use rclone mount to use it like a normal filesystem.


I do worry.
Technically right now the age thing in systemd is just a stored field that you can set to anything easily. In its current form pretty benign and not a privacy issue.
But it almost always gets worse and more and more controls get added, until we’re at face verification services and other privacy invasive stuff.


Komodo.


An SSL error is expected because you’re using localhost and not the common name that the cert is issued for. But the fact that it’s connecting and showing the error means the server is working.


Start with basic diagnostics, see if apache is running inside the container, if it is can you curl from inside the container, if that works can you curl from the docker host, if that works did docker create the firewall rule to expose the port or is the VPS overriding things in some way?
If that all looks good, is there a VPS provider firewall in place outside the OS?
Gotta start with the basics.
This is for OTP not Passkeys it seems?
How do you go about loading plugins on the Android version for sync with your setup?