Home » KeePass files. KeePass On this page, you can find the list of file extensions associated with the KeePass application. KeePass website. Keepaway Framework ». It allows you to use your passwords auto-type, copy to clipboard without opening the KeePass window. Author: Unixeco. Language: This browser extension retrieves credentials from KeePass. It requires KeePassHttp.
Author: Tony McCreath. Language: Allows passwords from Firefox to be imported into KeePass. For KeePass 1. For KeePass 2. Author: Janis Estelmann. Language: This plugin imports credentials from various browsers. Author: Adrium. Author: ReadySignOn. Language: This plugin imports and exports ReadySignOn records. Author: Stacy Vicknair. Keyring is a password manager for Palm OS. For both KeePass 1. Language: [Website]. Author: Helmut Franz.
Language: Convert KeePass 1. The export format is HTML. Note: This plugin is a converter. For a list of KeePass ports for iPhones, see the downloads page. Language: Export data with a new master key. Author: Heinrich Ulbricht. Language: Export tagged entries to a new database. The new database can use a different master password. Author: lukeIam. The group structure is copied to the new database, multiple export jobs are supported, and protection of the new database using a key file is supported.
Author: Jareth Lomson. Language: This plugin provides a button in the entry dialog with the number of entries that use the password of the open entry, too.
It is possible to get the complete list of entries that use the reference password by clicking the button and choosing the menu item for this. The following plugins add password generator algorithms that create passphrases.
Language: The Readable Passphrase Generator plugin generates passphrases, which are mostly grammatically correct, but nonsensical. These are easy to remember for humans , but difficult to guess for humans and computers. Language: The Word Sequencer plugin generates passphases consisting of words. Language: Generates passphrases within KeePass. Language: A plugin that provides a custom, configurable password generator implementation that generates diceware-style passwords.
Author: tiuub. Language: This plugin periodically reminds you to change the password of certain entries after specific time spans. Author: Zacchary Dempsey-Plante. Language: This plugin allows to store and view pattern-based passwords like the Android lock-screen. Author: Rookiestyle. Language: This plugin allows to define a default lifetime for passwords, which will be used to calculate the next expiry date of an entry everytime you change its password.
The default lifetime can be defined on both group level and entry level. Instead of asking for characters at the very beginning of auto-type, it will postpone it to the place where it occurs in the auto-type sequence. This is useful when a login screen consists of two parts and it is not known in advance what characters will be needed. Author: Jan Benjamin Engracia.
Language: This plugin adds a custom password generation algorithm, which generates pronounceable passwords. Author: Andreas Albang. Language: AdvancedConnect allows to specify different applications for direct connections. Author: Cristian Stoica. Language: QuickSearch is a plugin providing enhanced search capabilities. It can be used as a replacement for the built-in QuickFind toolbar control. Features include: Search as you type aka instant search or incremental search.
Match anywhere. Quick access to search settings. Latest version: [Website] [Downloads] Old version: [Website]. Language: Adds support for a 'Password Quality' column in the main entry list. Author: Scott Richter. Language: This plugin highlights entries based on the password quality. Author: Ira Hanson.
Language: This plugin makes it easy to tell KeePass how to generate a password for each entry and streamlines the process of changing passwords. Authors: Peter Torok, Adam Erdelyi. Various strength measuring methods are supported including dictionary-based tests. Reports can be customized layout, font, size, colors, etc. Author: Niki Hammler. Language: This plugin adds support for a placeholder that retrieves a TAN.
Author: Emil Kmetski. Author: GoGoGadgetScott. Language: This is a plugin for KeePass that allows the management of the main window title display. Language: This plugin lists your recent files directly in the system tray icon menu. Author: Mark Buchler. Language: Allows KeePass to use certificates from the Windows certificate store as master key source.
This advanced plugin creates a random key, which is used to encrypt the KeePass database. This random key is encrypted using one or more certificates and stored in a key file. Author: Dirk Heitzmann. From a selected RSA certificate, this simple plugin passes a part from the private key for cryptographers: the d value to KeePass as key. The private key must have been marked as 'Exportable' during the import into the certificate store. Author: Stephan Traub.
Language: Based on X. It has a graphical user interface for managing certificates and keys. Author: BodnarSoft. Language: Encrypt and decrypt your database using an X. Language: OtpKeyProv is a key provider based on one-time passwords. After protecting your database using this plugin, you need to generate and enter one-time passwords in order to open your database.
Author: Ben Rush. The plugin adds advanced functionality. If you instead want to protect your KeePass database using one-time passwords i. Language: KeeOtp2 provides a form to display one-time passwords. The TOTP secret keys are stored in a normalized format, so this plugin is fully compatible with the built-in OTP function see the note below. Authors: Time Crash, Victor Rezende. TOTPs can also be sent by auto-type.
The plugin is compatible with Google, Dropbox, Steam, and many more services. Author: Siddharth Hegde. Language: A bluetooth key provider plugin that allows you to save keys on your phone and then send them via bluetooth to unlock your KeePass database. Author: buergerservice.
Author: Daniel Kuczewski. Author: digitronic. Language: This plugin provides two-factor authentication to a KeePass database with a token possession and the token PIN knowledge. The token is accessed using the digitronic Token Engine. It is possible to bind additional tokens to a database in order to allow multiple users to access the data. Language: This plugin is a key provider that retrieves a key as part of the database master key from a key server.
The key server supplies the key only if certain conditions are met computer hardware ID, user name, IP address, etc. Language: Enables KeePass to encrypt databases using the Twofish algorithm. Author: Timothy Redaelli. Language: Enables KeePass to encrypt databases using the Serpent algorithm. Author: Scott Bennett.
After the concatenation, the obtained data should be a XML document. With kdbx file, you can encrypt a password field in the XML document, before the encryption of all the XML document, so that the password is encrypted twice. First you need to pass the password through a base64decode function, then you decrypt the result with the cipher : because the cipher is a stream cipher, you need to XOR the result of the decryption with the result of the base64decode function to obtain the real password.
In last paragraph Bonus kdbx there is a bug in description of usage of "Protected Stream Key". The correct way to handle with value from this field is to calculate SHA hash of this value because it is not guaranteed to be 32 bytes long and then use it as key for cipher. Even if this field has 32 bytes long value, you still should calculate SHA from it first.
Sorry, something went wrong. Thank you for writing this and sharing the knowledge. I might end up processing. The record format is two blocks of fixed length binary data, groups and entries, its not xml. Maybe there are subformats in ver 1 for bin and xml data? Maybe the x in. This has been supported since KeePass v2. Nice write-up, but what is missing is that after the 8 bytes of the file signature and before the header fields, there are 4 bytes with the file version information: 0x for v3.
No, the first one is the password hash. The pseudo code is correct. You need a password for the Windows network logon, your e-mail account, your homepage's FTP password, online passwords like website member account , etc.
The list is endless. Also, you should use different passwords for each account. Because if you use only one password everywhere and someone gets this password you have a problem A serious problem. The thief would have access to your e-mail account, homepage, etc. KeePass Password Safe icon size: px x px.
0コメント