


are not better in this point), so you might restore every version of you DB file, BUT in these use case scenario you first have to realize that you maybe have created some mistakes at all.) (Seafile has very good file versioning and okeyish conflict handling (Dropbox and Co. So, there is always just one version of your keepass database at the same time available.Ĭonclusion: If you sync your Keepass database (remember: just one single file) over different devices (maybe not always in sync because of not always online simultanious use worst: more than one Keepass database user, …), you can/will very likely end up with different versions/file conflicts/overwrites and so for the worst case with password loss. and the way they work, you will see, that even if they support delta sync (Seafile does, when using the desktop clients) the smallest entity for the user to see and for apps like Keepass to use is the file. Second: When you now look closer to file services like Seafile, Dropbox, etc. Of course there is a database in it, but you don’t access just a database, you access and change one single file, its time stamp, … On Android I’m using Keepass2Android, which is a very good app.įirst things first: If you use Keepass (and derivates) everything is saved in one single file! And that is the the crux. I’ve used Keepass for some years and switched reacently to KeepassXC 2.2.0, because of their community effort and because it is running much smoother on my Linux machines, than Keepass on Mono.
