On 18-06-16 01:11:51, Steve Gilberd wrote:
I feel the same - the simplicity of it, and the ability for me to easily audit the source code, are significant reasons for my choosing *pass* as my password manager.I feel quite strongly that it should remain both simple / small, and ideally still written in bash. No objections to a rewrite to clean things up though.
I don't think that 'simple' necessarily means bash. Yeah, people can read the script but you can argue that about any language you know or don't know.
If you can re-write pass, keeping the gpg and git integration, then I don't think the language matters too much. If the maintainer feels a bash script is just spiralling out of control, then it should go.
What I like about pass is what Héctor mentioned... the fact that you can just use gpg to get a password out of the system is killer, and is huge insurance against data loss. There are other ways to access your data, not just with the program you created it with.
You know how pass works, even without looking at the source code. That's because you know how gpg and git work. It's a beautiful idea. I don't think that the language pass is written in matters that much so long as the core functionality stays.
Yes, I am a professional fence-sitter ;)
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