keepass-diff

This CLI-tool diffs two Keepass (.kdbx) files and prints their differences.

Installation

RUSTFLAGS="-C target-cpu=native" cargo install keepass-diff

The RUSTFLAGS variable will significantly boost performance. See installation note in keepass-rs.

Usage

keepass-diff <file-a> <file-b>

The CLI will ask for the password for both files individually.

Example Screencast

Providing passwords

You can also provide one or both passwords on the command line (please be aware that this will expose them to other users logged on to the system):

keepass-diff <file-a> <file-b> --password-a <password-a> --password-b <password-b>

If the files have the same password, you can use the --passwords <password> flag. Be aware this has the same problem as above:

keepass-diff <file-a> <file-b> --passwords <password>

To avoid exposing the password, use --same-password instead. The CLI will ask you to type it once for both files.

keepass-diff <file-a> <file-b> --same-password

Providing keyfiles

keepass-diff <file-a> <file-b> --keyfile-a <keyfile-a> --keyfile-b <keyfile-b>

If one of these flags is provided, it will use the keyfile for authentication. It will still ask for a password, if the password flags are not provided.

Disabling color output for scripts

If you want to pipe the output of the command into another file or script, you may want to disable the terminal colors. You can do so with the --no-color or -C flag.

--help yields:

``` USAGE: keepass-diff [FLAGS] [OPTIONS]

FLAGS: -h, --help Prints help information -C, --no-color Disables color output --no-password-a Sets no password for the first file (and will not ask for it) --no-password-b Sets no password for the second file (and will not ask for it) --no-passwords Sets no password for both files (and will not ask for both files) --same-password Asks for password only once, and tries to open both files with it -V, --version Prints version information -v, --verbose Enables verbose output

OPTIONS: --keyfile-a Sets the key file for the first file --keyfile-b Sets the key file for the second file --keyfiles Sets the same key file for both files (keyfile-a and keyfile-b would take precedence if set as well) --password-a Sets the password for the first file (will be asked for if omitted) --password-b Sets the password for the second file (will be asked for if omitted) --passwords Sets the password for both files (if it's the same for both files)

ARGS: Sets the first file Sets the second file ```

Used libraries:

Testing

Password for the Keepass demo files: demopass.

test_file.kdbx is locked without password and keyfile keyfile.key. test2_file.kdbx is locked with demopass and the keyfile keyfile.key.

A small bash script for running tests is run-tests.sh. It will run a few tests to see if the outputs is correct. Best run as RUSTFLAGS="-C target-cpu=native" ./run-tests.sh for improved performance.

Contributing

Care to help? I'm pretty new to Rust, so if anyone likes to help or teach me cool stuff, please reach out!