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2FAS Pass Android is the open-source Android implementation of the 2FAS password-protected authenticator and secure vault project, which blends two-factor authentication (2FA) token generation with a secure vault for managing verification codes and potentially other sensitive credentials. While specific repo details vary by the community project, in the broader 2FAS ecosystem the Android clients are designed to generate TOTP (time-based one-time passwords) and HOTP codes for users’ accounts,...
...I've taken the work of NERD a step further and used the input-confusion-diffusion paradigm in conjunction with SHA/256 encryption to generate randomized passwords that cannot be decoded (yet - quantum computers will change this eventually!) The software generates sufficiently random passwords to allow the same plaintext password to be used multiple times without generating the same output. There's probably no real reason to be developing this, but I wanted to use the NERD code in a new way and practice my C++ skills at the same time.
CloudSafe is a credential manager that can store all your access informations (applications, sites, gadgets, ...), in your Google Drive account: all data are encrypted with a master password (AES-128) and all netowork operations are protected by your Google Account and HTTPS connections.
The source code is open and you are free to check the security solution.
Change system password web based.
This quite simple web form provides a possibility to end users to change their own *NIX account passwords even if interactive logins are not possible, e.g. pure SFTP accounts.
Currently this is realized by a bash script with embedded expect code (need expect to be installed) and is also rewritten in python using pyexpect, so that there are no more dependencies, except for a http server.
Both versions can be used equally.