pws is a command-line password safe/manager written in Ruby using aes-256-cbc and pbkdf2.
You can install pws with: $ gem install pws
Run $ pws --help
for usage information.
On Linux, please make sure you've got xclip
or xsel
installed (for the clipboard).
You should use a Ruby that was built with bindings to an openssl version >= 1.0 or pws will fall back to a Ruby-only version of the PBKDF2 function, which is much slower. If using openssl 1.0 is not possible for you, you can work around that issue by using the --iterations
option with a value below 75_000 (see help). If you have problems using openssl 1.0 with your Ruby, please look for a solution in this issue.
The 0.9 password files are not compatible with the 1.0 version of pws, however, you can convert your safe with:
$ pws resave --in 0.9 --out 1.0
Besides using the --filename path/to/safe
option, you can shortly call pws --cwd
for using a .pws
file in the current directory.
Trust the code by reading the source! It's originally based on this tutorial. You might want to start reading in the 0.9.2 tag, because it's got less features and therefore is less code.
- namelessjon
- brianewing
- dquimper
- grapz
- thecatwasnot (cucumber specs loosely based on these)
© 2010-2012 Jan Lelis, MIT license