-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 1
/
intro.json
1 lines (1 loc) · 1.71 KB
/
intro.json
1
{"content":"<p>KBSecret is a command line utility and library for managing <em>secrets</em>.</p>\n<p>Secrets can be structured (like login pairs and environment keys), or unstructured (like raw\ntext or blobs of data). They can also be shared between multiple individuals or entire teams via\nthe Keybase platform.</p>\n<h3 id=\"benefits-over-other-password-managers\">Benefits over other password managers</h3>\n<ul>\n<li><p>Easy secret sharing with multiple users</p>\n<p> KBSecret shares collections of secrets inside of a session, which multiple users\n can belong to, read from, and modify.</p>\n<p> For example, to print the <code>github</code> login in the <code>dev-team</code> session:</p>\n<pre><code class=\"language-bash\"> $ kbsecret login -s dev-team github</code></pre>\n</li>\n<li><p>No PGP setup or management required</p>\n<p> KBSecret uses <a href=\"https://keybase.io/docs/kbfs\">KBFS</a> to store secrets, meaning that\n you can use your existing Keybase account and key.</p>\n<p> As long as <code>keybase</code> and <code>kbfs</code> are running on your system, your records are available.</p>\n</li>\n<li><p>Records are files, sessions are directories</p>\n<p> KBSecret has no opaque databases or caches — records are JSON-structured files, and\n sessions are directories containing those files.</p>\n<p> KBSecret's sessions and records can be manipulated with standard Unix tools (although\n we recommend using the <a href=\"/man/kbsecret.1\"><code>kbsecret</code> commands</a>)</p>\n</li>\n</ul>\n<p>Interested? Check out <a href=\"/#/install/\">the installation</a> and <a href=\"/#/quickstart/\">quick start</a> guides.</p>\n","data":{"comments":"kbsecret main page markdown"},"isEmpty":false,"excerpt":""}