Usage: wofi-pass [options]
-a, --autotype autotype whatever entry is chosen
-c, --copy [cmd] copy to clipboard. Defaults to wl-copy if no cmd is given.
-f, --fileisuser use the name of the password file as username
-h, --help show this help message
-s, --squash don't show field choice if password file only contains password
-t, --type [cmd] type the selection instead of copying to clipboard.
Defaults to wtype if no cmd is given.
Since wofi
isn't a drop-in replacement for rofi
,
I couldn't use rofi-pass anymore.
So, Joel Beckmeyer and me just made
a version of passmenu
that accomplishes everything we needed from rofi-pass
.
However, suggestions are always welcome best in the form of a PR.
This script uses wofi,
wcopy and
wtype to provide a completely
Wayland-native way to conveniently use pass.
It provides the same search that passmenu
does, but shows a second dialogue
that lets the user choose which field to copy/print.
It also assumes that pass-otp is
installed if an otpauth://...
string is present in a password file.
The script assumes password files are formatted like the following:
Th3Gr3at3stPassw0rd
username: JohnDoe
email: john@example.com
otpauth://totp/example?secret=ABCDCBABCDCBABCD
pin: 1234
Note that the password is ALWAYS on the first line.
The -s | --squash
flag tells wofi-pass
to "intelligently" skip
the field choice dialogue when there is only a password in the file.
The -t | --type
flag tells wofi-pass
to type the choice
instead of copying to clipboard.
An entry can be marked with autotype_always
and
is thus always automatically output as autotype.
wofi-pass
can read its configuration values from various locations
in the following order:
${WOFI_PASS_CONFIG}
${XDG_CONFIG_HOME}/wofi-pass/config
/etc/wofi-pass.conf
If ${XDG_CONFIG_HOME}
environment variable is not set,
${HOME}/.config
will be used.
wofi-pass
loads only the first existing file.
If no configuration file exists, wofi-pass
uses its internal defaults.
An example configuration file can be found in the supplied wofi-pass.conf
file.