I’ve used keepassxc, or earlier variants of it, for over a decade and a half 
and Ive been happy with it.  Keepassxc is gui based software.  There’s more 
info available on the project page: (https://keepassxc.org/project/ 
<https://keepassxc.org/project/>).  You might find a command line version more 
to your liking.  Various implementations for different platforms are documented 
at (https://pwsafe.org/relatedprojects.html 
<https://pwsafe.org/relatedprojects.html>)

Keepassxc is open source and cross platform.  Variants that can read the 
encrypted database exist for all the platforms I still have to deal with: 
Linux, MacOS, phones, and Windows.  It's based on the password safe code 
originally written by Bruce Schneier. 

It’s available from ports (openports.se <http://openports.se/>)

Regards,
Willy Gonnason

> 
> Date: Fri, 7 Jan 2022 14:53:33 -0500
> From: fo...@dnmx.org
> To: misc@openbsd.org
> Subject: What password manager do you recommend?
> Message-ID: 
> <db64f4d7f8c0ea4700385bedcd3996e7.squirrel@hxuzjtocnzvv5g2rtg2bhwkcbupmk7rclb6lly3fo4tvqkk5oyrv3nid.onion>
> 
> Hello. I hope this these types of questions are okay for an mailing list..
> I completely understand if they are not..
> 
> There's password-store, but it does need some shitty dependencies..
> Then there's opm, but since it doesn't seem to be popular fuck-knows-who
> if it's secure(ish)..
> 
> If I were to use password-store, I'd have dmenu pipe in the query, then
> just pipe the password to `xclip -i -selection clipboard` which is a
> decent setup I guess..

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