![]() ![]() You can see the docker-compose entry at my dockerfiles repo. I’ve recently moved this entire fragile stack over to Bitwarden, which in my experience works a lot better. KeeAnywhere is a KeePass plugin that provides access to cloud storage providers (cloud drives) like Amazon AWS S3, Box, Dropbox, Google Drive, HiDrive, hubiC or OneDrive. Lastly, if you’re even considering accessing this application remotely you’ll want to do this using HTTPS via a reverse proxy such as Caddy or Nginx. This needed to be ‘Overwrite kdbx file with PUT’ otherwise you’ll end up with a load of temporary files that make versioning interesting to say the least. One thing I had to change to get everything working perfectly was Settings > General > Storage > Save Method. Your URL will be server_address/webdav/database_name.xdbx, and your username and password will be the values specified above. You can select your webdav share under the More… menu item, and WebDAV as a sub option. When accessing your server on port 80 (First 80 in definitions is your local access port), you should now see the login screen. One point worth noting is that keeweb cannot create a database, so you’ll need to create a blank database using KeepassX or something similar. Or alternatively, in docker-compose notation: keeweb: Ghacks: Self-hosted KeePass Web and Desktop client Ghacks is a technology blog that was founded in 2005 by Martin Brinkmann. Assuming you have a working docker installation, simply run: docker run -d -p 80:80 -e WEBDAV_USERNAME=username -e WEBDAV_PASSWORD=password -v $HOME/keeweb:/var/www/html/webdav viossat/keeweb-webdav An article about KeeWeb in the Wikipedia. Helpfully, there are docker images available already which cover most of the leg work associated with grabbing the application and setting up a working webdav share. As an added bonus, it can also be run as a cross-platform application which offers a nice offline alternative as well. This would be where Keeweb comes in, as a single file, web based password manager that uses the standard KeePass format it seems like a nice fit for our requirements. It is made in PHP, Javascript, MySQL and it run on a docker service. Password Managers bridge part of this gap, but then you’re either relying on a third party to host these for you, or you’re using a locally installed application which both come with their own collections of baggage and issues. A KeePass/Password Safe Client for iOS and OS X. This issue is only made worse by brute forcing passwords being made easier every day as more and more datasets from large websites are leaked, showing patterns, schemes and weaknesses in unlikely places. ![]() Passwords in my experience are a fickle thing, on one hand you absolutely need long and complex passwords, different for every site you use, but remembering these unique and complex passwords is nigh impossible. Tags: Guides, Linux, Selfhosted, Software
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |