Export pass(1), "the standard unix password manager", to CSV
Project description
pass2csv
Source is available at GitHub.
You can install it directly from PyPI with pip:
python3 -m pip install --user pass2csv
Usage
$ pass2csv --help
usage: pass2csv [-h] [-b path] [-g executable] [-a] [--encodings encodings]
[-o file] [-e pattern] [-f name pattern] [-l name pattern]
store_path
positional arguments:
store_path path to the password-store to export
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-b path, --base path path to use as base for grouping passwords
-g executable, --gpg executable
path to the gpg binary you wish to use (default 'gpg')
-a, --use-agent ask gpg to use its auth agent
--encodings encodings
comma-separated text encodings to try, in order, when
decoding gpg output (default 'utf-8')
-o file, --outfile file
file to write exported data to (default stdin)
-e pattern, --exclude pattern
regexp for lines which should not be exported, can be
specified multiple times
-f name pattern, --get-field name pattern
a name and a regexp, the part of the line matching the
regexp will be removed and the remaining line will be
added to a field with the chosen name. only one match
per password, matching stops after the first match
-l name pattern, --get-line name pattern
a name and a regexp for which all lines that match are
included in a field with the chosen name
Format
The output format is
Group(/),Title,Password,[custom fields...],Notes
You may add custom fields with --get-field
or --get-line
. You supply
a name for the field and a regexp pattern. The field name is used for
the header of the output CSV and to group multiple patterns for the same
field; you may specify multiple patterns for the same field by
specifying --get-field
or--get-line
multiple times with the same
name. Regexp patterns are case-insensitive.
Examples
- Password entry (
~/.password-store/sites/example/login.gpg
):
password123
---
username: user_name
email user@example.com
url:example.com
Some note
- Command
pass2csv ~/.password-store \
--exclude '^---$' \
--get-field Username '(username|email):?' \
--get-field URL 'url:?'
- Output
Group(/),Title,Password,URL,Username,Notes
sites/example,login,password123,example.com,user_name,"email user@example.com\nSome note"
Grouping
The group is relative to the path, or the --base
if given.
Given the password ~/.password-store/sites/example/login.gpg
:
$ pass2csv ~/.password-store/sites
# Password will have group "example"
$ pass2csv ~/.password-store/sites --base ~/.password-store
# Password will have group "sites/example"
gpg-agent password timeout
If your private key is protected by a password, gpg
will ask for it
with the pinentry
program if you haven't set it to something else. If
using gpg2
or the -a
option with gpg
, by default, the password is
cached for 10 minutes but the timer is reset when using a key. After 2
hours the cache will be cleared even if it has been accessed recently.
You can set these values in your ~/.gnupg/gpg-agent.conf
:
default-cache-ttl 600
max-cache-ttl 7200
Development
Create a virtual environment:
python3 -m venv venv
Activate the environment:
. venv/bin/activate
Now you may either use pip
directly to install the dependencies, or
you can install pip-tools
. The latter is recommended.
pip
pip install -r requirements.txt
pip-tools
pip-tools can keep your virtual
environment in sync with the requirements.txt
file, as well as
compiling a new requirements.txt
when adding/removing a dependency in
requirements.in
.
It is recommended that pip-tools is installed within the virtual environment.
pip install pip-tools
pip-compile # only necessary when adding/removing a dependency
pip-sync
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