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A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.
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This is what recommend as well. The various KeePasses all to pretty good jobs of merging databases, in case of sync conflicts, and you can utterly ignore whether you're online or not. Plus, there's a really fantastic tool, written by a veritable genius of a developer, that lets you use a KeePass DB as a secret service on your desktop.
You delicious bastard! Thanks for the rook tip.
But keepassxc already provides a secret service ootb?
KeePassXC can't be run in headless mode, and the GUI is tightly coupled to the app. You have to have all of X installed, and have a display running, to run it.
Here's the runtime dependencies of KeePassXC:
I don't know why it links to a systemd library. Here are the runtime dependencies of rook:
Don't get me wrong: KeePassXC is one of my favorite programs. But don't leave it running all the time, and it can't be run on headless systems.
I see, thanks for explaining. So IIUC, rook is intended for headless systems?
I use it for everything, but then, I wrote it. All of the desktop secret service tools have desktop dependencies (Gnome's uses Gnome libraries, KDE's pulls some KDE libraries) and run through DBUS; since I don't use a DE, it's a fair bit of unnecessary bloat. And I don't like GUI apps that just hang around in the background consuming resources. I open KeePassXC when I need to make changes to the DB, and then I shut it down. Otherwise, it hangs out in my task bar, distracting me.
Rook is for people who want to run on headless systems, or want to minimize resources usage, or don't use a desktop environment (such as Gnome or KDE), or don't run DBUS, or don't run systemd. It's for people who don't want a bunch of applications running in the background in their task bar. KeePassXC providing a secret service is great, but it's overkill if that's most of what it's providing for you, most of the time.
I don't think took is for everyone, or even for most people. It's for people who like to live mostly in the command line, or even in VTs.