3 projects for "gnu/linux" with 2 filters applied:

  • Fully Managed MySQL, PostgreSQL, and SQL Server Icon
    Fully Managed MySQL, PostgreSQL, and SQL Server

    Automatic backups, patching, replication, and failover. Focus on your app, not your database.

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  • Streamline Azure Security with Palo Alto Networks VM-Series Icon
    Streamline Azure Security with Palo Alto Networks VM-Series

    Centrally manage physical and virtualized firewalls with Panorama

    Improve your security posture and reduce incident response time. Use the VM-Series to natively analyze Azure traffic and dynamically drive policy updates based on workload changes.
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  • 1
    KeePass

    KeePass

    A lightweight and easy-to-use password manager

    KeePass Password Safe is a free, open source, lightweight, and easy-to-use password manager for Windows, Linux and Mac OS X, with ports for Android, iPhone/iPad and other mobile devices. With so many passwords to remember and the need to vary passwords to protect your valuable data, it’s nice to have KeePass to manage your passwords in a secure way. KeePass puts all your passwords in a highly encrypted database and locks them with one master key or a key file.
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    Downloads: 559,677 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 2
    yagodu

    yagodu

    password safe / manager for linux and windows (and mac ?) via qt

    Password safe for Windows and Linux. If you want to manage your passwords (or other information) in one file and access that file with Windows and with Linux, this could be your choice. You create trees where each knot and leaf contains as many key/value pairs as you like. Then the whole thing is written encrypted to one file. Windows binaries and Debian32/64 binaries are downloadable.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 3
    A pronounceable password generator plugin for KeePass. NOTE: This project has been discontinued. It hasn't been worth it to maintain the project for a while now, so no more updates will be made to the plugin. The algorithm this plugin uses is based off FIPS-181 which was withdrawn by NIST a while back. The proliferation of password managers that seamlessly run on multiple platforms (some of which are free) has also removed almost all advantages of using randomly generated pronounceable...
    Downloads: 16 This Week
    Last Update:
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