Reviews for KeePassXC-Browser
KeePassXC-Browser by KeePassXC Team
657 reviews
- Rated 5 out of 5by Gerbrand van Dieyen, 8 months ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Roman Shomas, 8 months ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Firefox user 16084225, 9 months ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Sorcix, 9 months ago
- Rated 4 out of 5by Ivan, 9 months ago
- Rated 4 out of 5by Firefox user 12814982, 9 months agoFunktioniert an sich gut.
Manchmal buggt sich das Icon für das Ausfüllen des Loginformulars hinter Buttons in der Eingabebox, was die Übernahme von TOTP-Tokens manchmal unmöglich macht.
Leider geht das AddOn nicht mit Libre Wolf oder Waterfox. - Rated 5 out of 5by Firefox user 13436152, 9 months ago
- Rated 3 out of 5by Gongloss, 9 months agoBasically broken, like, apparently, all third-party password extensions.
Often doesn't find passwords for sites. Tells you every single time that you've updated the password and asks if you want to resave it, so you have no way to tell if the password has actually changed. It always says it has, whether it has or it hasn't.
Can't find TOTP codes even when they're in Keepass, you have to go copy them by hand.
All-around seems like a half-finished, "beta" release that is almost ready for use, but not quite.
It is extremely nerve-wracking to constantly be told the password has changed, and have to stop and think about whether it has and whether you want to save it, every single time you log into a site. Worse, you can only see this before you have logged in, before you know if the login was any good... it disappears as soon as you're in.
So, basically, it keeps you on your toes, always keeps you guessing and uncertain about what's going on... exactly what you DON'T EVER WANT A PASSWORD MANAGER TO DO.
Extremely disappointing.
EDIT: Response to the developer's comment below: The user guide, which is one mammoth long page from a page 2 or 3 levels deep on the website, contains one instance each of the phrases "new password" and "banner", neither telling me anything about how to fix this. I searched for the word "changed" too, that doesn't appear anywhere in the document at all.
Also, when you do need to use that banner, the buttons don't do anything. Click them, they sit there. Did they work? Did they not? Did anything get saved? No way to know.
I truly hate to criticize a FOSS project but this is really just awful design, to the point I don't trust this thing. If I don't know when passwords are new or not, or whether it's saving them or not, and I have to scour a huge 12,000 word single-page wall of text that doesn't turn up the information I need even when I search it for the specific terms the developer told the manual would instruct me on, so I can't find the new password banner settings by searching for "new password" or "banner" then, sorry, I have to nope out on it. I'm just not reading a 12,000 word manual to figure out how to use a password manager.
Just for fun, I printed the gargantuan "manual" page to a PDF. It's a single page that's 49 pages long when printed. That's what I'm expected to have read just to figure out how to get a password manager to work. That's not a user manual, it's a novella.
I scrolled slowly through the eldritch document's 78 different screenshots to see if there was one of the banner in question, to maybe tip me off where its behavior is documented. If there is one, I could not find it.
I did find the section on the browser integration plugin and read it through carefully, twice. It says nothing about that banner, or how to understand it, or get it to work in a way that seems to make sense. I'll limp along with copying and pasting codes from KeepassXC for TOTP since there's no way I'm going back to Authy or using Google Auth, but for passwords, I've had to go back to the limitations of just using Firefox's built-in password manager. I'd hoped for a better solution than that, but... :-\Developer response
posted 9 months agoIf a password is always offered to a site, or it doesn't find your passwords, your entry URL is probably incorrect. Use the simplest possible form of the URL, for example https://example.com.
Users can modify the settings how the new password created banner is displayed. Reading the User Guide is highly recommended. - Rated 5 out of 5by Firefox user 14719713, 9 months ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Josep Morán, 9 months ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Firefox user 18323959, 9 months ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Fede, 9 months ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Firefox user 18215945, 10 months ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Firefox user 18316019, 10 months ago
- Rated 4 out of 5by Firefox user 14083796, 10 months ago
- Rated 1 out of 5by Firefox user 18309804, 10 months agoThe plug-in (the key exchange) does not work for me on Ubuntu 22.04 - although it works well on Windows 11
- Rated 5 out of 5by Victor Engmark, 10 months ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Firefox user 12698138, 10 months ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by AntiFTW, 10 months ago
- Rated 1 out of 5by Firefox user 16994290, 10 months agoIf your browser is sandboxed with Snap or Flatpak, this extension does not work. It's not fixable as the required integration breaks the sandbox and so won't be allowed. If you have a browser installed on your host computer (i.e. native, not sandboxed) then there is no problem with this extension. But since Firefox is now ONLY supplied as Flatpak or Snaps on Ubuntu, this effectively locks out all Linux users from using KeepassXC.
> his has nothing to do with the extension itself, but Snap/Flatpak implementation of the browser itself.
But it has everything to do with the extension. It is designed in a way that is simply incompatible with the security model of a sandboxed browser. Nothing about the sandbox is "broken", the kind of code execution required by the extension and the server is what a sandbox is designed to prevent. This is exactly what a malicious extension would do to break out of the sandbox. The team should be working on this, or else users will just abandon the project. I'm certainly not going to try to convince Ubuntu that Snap is broken on your behalf, I'm just going to install something else that works.Developer response
posted 10 months agoThis has nothing to do with the extension itself, but Snap/Flatpak implementation of the browser itself. Ubuntu already added support for Native Messaging with Snap Firefox. If it's broken, Ubuntu's Snap team should be contacted. Sadly we cannot do anything about it. - Rated 5 out of 5by SnowCode, 10 months ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Firefox user 13375760, 10 months ago