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Manage Passwords
Written while listening to āCielo Super Accesoā by Verdena.
Published: 2022-10-02
Tagged with:
TL;DR plass(1) is a NIH pass(1), but I like it more!
Many many moons ago, so many that I donāt remember the details, I was trying to hack something with pass(1) and got really fed up with it. It was my second password manager, with keepassxc being the first, and I really loved the idea behind it but I started to hate the interface.
I remember that I found the output of the various pass commands difficoult to parse programmatically; having to bypass it (for example by means of find(1) seems wrong.) When Iām using a CLI tool, I want a good output I can further hack on.
For those who donāt know, pass(1) is a simple password manager. It stores passwords in a directory tree rooted at ā~/.password-storeā where the passwords are files encrypted with GPG. How to organize things is up to you; for example if I have to save the password for the website āexample.comā where my username is āfooā Iād probably persist it as āwww/example.com/fooā.
So, dirven by my scriptability problem (and also the fact that I wanted to use got(1) instead of git(1)) I wrote mine. The name? Itās a āperl passā, so āplassā! (God, Iām awful at picking names...)
What Iām really happy about plass is that I started with a set of commands that I thought they were āminimalā and managed to remove stuff as I went on in the implementation.
Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.
The command set of plass is indeed very minimal and it mimicks a bit the other well-known tools, so it should be pretty self-explanatory
The only thing that I may remove in the future is the āgenā (generate password) command. I think that it may be better to reuse an existing password generator and use āplass teeā to persist the password:
$ cool-password-generator | plass tee www/example.com | clip
Otherwise, the command set of āplassā is very minimal: it provides a mean to manage sets of encrypted files and nothing more. It doesnāt have flags to copy something from or to the clipboard, or to do other fancy things.
One small perk is that it implicitly uses got(1) to track changes to the file set, so changes are automatically committed to a git repository. I think itās cool, and being able to create branches was really helpful during the development and testing of the utility.
At the moment plass is completely compatible with pass. If youāre using pass but want to give plass a try you just need to re-check out ~/.password-store with got(1) and plass should work out of the box. If you want to go back, re-re-check out your pass repo with git to go back to pass(1).
However, in the future, Iād like to change the encryption to something different to gpg.
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