Keeper’s desktop client won’t win prizes for interface design, but it’s functional - and the mobile client is excellent. However, a little search-and-replace made all well. A CSV I exported from KeePass was rejected because it had line breaks in the imported notes column. ![]() If you’re importing data from another password manager, Keeper is quite strict about the format you use. Some of this may be by design to deliberately reduce the application’s potential bug count or attack surface. For instance, while there’s a random password generator, there doesn’t appear to be a way to customize it to meet your organization’s password length or complexity requirements. The app is basic and straightforward, but not very flexible. ![]() Installing the desktop client automatically sets up browser plug-ins that perform automated sign-ins on websites. User/password pairs can be stored in a folder hierarchy, and password entries can include user-specified fields or file attachments. The core functionality for Keeper is in line with that of the competition. It also has a few smart features I haven’t seen anywhere else, such as the self-destruct function. Good luck! updates are a bit slow to hit the linux distros, so I'll just cross my fingers that it gets repaired sooner than later.Keeper Password Manager may not be as impressive to look at as others in this roundup, and it doesn’t sport as broad a range of functionality, but it gets the job done. It will still repeat the behavior on reboot though, so currently I'm just going to leave it in the task bar. indicicator(?) appears in the task bar where it belongs.Īt that point I CAN re-enable 'Show a system tray icon' to minimize the window to the tray. Then I go in to the KeePassXC settings, disable the 'Show a system tray icon' option, and THEN the window er. If I open it from the menu, it opens the already existing window (instance) that was invisible. After I login (or not) instead of hiding to the tray, the last couple of versions of KeePassXC don't correctly hide the window. I've set KeePassXC to automatically open on boot. I'm not real sure which thread to post this on, but I hope it helps. you guys have like 10 issues on 'disappearing window', currently. Hope that helps, got to continue with my jobs, Seen similar but not the same ill behaviour in LibreOffice long time ago (for it, it is related to the erroneous position of the windows previews) - so it really might be a matter of playing nicely with the Windows UI environment) Therefore, defect is narrowed to app framework - QT, OR the app, regarding window definition - Might be flags that describe the underlying Windows OS that concern window dispay and definition, including jumplists displaying are defective Important for diagnosing further: When it appears, try to right click at the icon in the taskbar to check if taskbar functions like right-click menu options and jumplists work - it does not, fully borken. ![]() Workaround: try to start KeepassXC one more time from the taskbar. will stick to what is more relevant describing the behaviours, ant then it may be narrowed down to App or the QT framework config or a bug. Latest windows 20H2, 64 bit, KpXC 2.6.3 release etc blabla. Dear, I confirm this behavior is still present in the most recent 2.6.3 release, and that is why I write into this thread and not to QT ticket issue thread as it related to this behaviour exactly as described here.Īsof breaking my production machine workflow to send debug data etc just for this simple observation - I can not do that, noticing is ienough, and full belief it is the truth.
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