



Note: when I installed it on Ubuntu - (sudo dpkg -i keepassxc_2.4.3+dfsg.1-1build1_b) I had to immediately afterwards run “sudo apt install -f” to grab the dependancies it needs… Will report back in a few hours as to whether I run into any issues on debian (raspbian) buster… KeepAssXC seems to work okay on my Ubuntu 20.04 machine, can’t really tell the difference between KeepAss2 and KeepAssXC… is there a difference? anyone know? They update automatically and roll back gracefully.I’m going to give it a try - at the moment I’m using both KeepAss2 and KeepAssX - fortunately both can read the same database… neither of them are ideal - and have a look and feel of something written for Windows 95… KeepAssX looks slightly more modern and feels a bit snappier, but they’ve hidden the find option from the interface (have to Ctrl+F or Edit Find, which is a PITA)…Ĭurrently downloading binaries (deb files for ubuntu and debian buster) - installing it on my work Ubuntu 20.04 laptop - will install it and try to use it on buster on my RPi 4B when I get home from work… So, Snaps are applications packaged with all their dependencies to run on all popular Linux distributions from a single build. Snaps are self-contained applications running in a sandbox with mediated access to the host system. The packages, called snaps, and the tool for using them, snapd, work across a range of Linux distributions and allow upstream software developers to distribute their applications directly to users.

Snap is a software packaging and deployment system developed by Canonical for operating systems that use the Linux kernel. you can install KeePassXC with snapd manager:.Update your Ubuntu system packages with running the below command:.Follow the steps below to get started with KeePassXC:
