In all cases, however, the cloud provider's sync tool can be used in combination with a trigger in the KeePass client, see Trigger. KeeWeb is an alternative Keepass client which can be run directly in the browser without client installation. The Keepass files are compatible with the classic KeePass2 client and can either be opened from an existing KeePass file or created directly in Keeweb. The data is stored in the browser's memory for the time being, but can also be stored in Dropbox, Google Drive, OneDrive or on a WebDAV folder in addition to a local file. If the database is stored with a cloud provider, it can be accessed directly in the browser from any client or mobile device, completely without installation. KeeWeb is therefore much faster and simpler to implement than KeePass, but the existing Keepass plugins of the classic Keepass2 client are not compatible with Keeweb. It would also be conceivable to access the database from certain devices with the KeePass2 client, and from others without installation via KeeWeb. The easiest way to access Keeweb is via the KeeWeb website:, alternatively KeeWeb can be hosted on its own static webspace or locally on the client.īut now back to the classic KeePass2 client:įor the setup on Windows, the first thing you need is of course the actual KeePass client, which is available in different variants: as an example KeePassXC. KeePassXC has, compared to the original KeePass 2 client, a more modern interface, but no triggers or URL overrides, which is currently the reason for me to use the KeePass 2 client.
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