From 937a88ad9dafa06a3d7d27027cecb3cb8a7d25f7 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: 8go Date: Wed, 10 Apr 2019 10:42:27 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] readme --- README.md | 83 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++- 1 file changed, 82 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 9b0af5d..813baa5 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -1,2 +1,83 @@ # pass-backup -An extension for pass (the standard Unix password manager) to easily create backups of the password store +An extension for [pass](https://www.passwordstore.org/) (the standard Unix password manager) to easily create backups of the password store. + + +## Usage + +``` +Usage: + + pass backup [backuplocation] + On the first run it creates a directory ".backups" in \$PASSWORD_STORE_DIR. + By default this is ~/.password-store/.backups". + It creates a backup of the complete password store by creating a + compressed tar-file with extension .tar.bz2. + Backups themselves are excluded from the backup. + Without argument the backup file will receive the default name "passwordstore.DATE.TIME.tar.bz2" + where DATE and TIME are the current date and time. + If an argument is given and it is a directory, the backup file will be placed + into the specified directory instead of the default ".backups" directory. + If an argument is given and it is not a directory, it is used as a file + name and the backup is stored with this filename with .at.gz2 appended. + pass backup help + Prints this help message. + pass backup version + Prints the version number. +``` + +## Examples + +## Example 1: Using defaults, standard use +``` +$ pass backup +``` +This is the typical usage. This creates a backup and places it into ```$PASSWORD_STORE_DIR/.backups``` + e.g. ```~/.password-store/.backups/passwordstore.190407.122034.tar.gz2```. + +## Example 2: Specifying a destination directory +``` +$ pass backup Documents/Backups/ +``` +This creates a backup and places it into ```Documents/Backups/``` + i.e. ```Documents/Backups/passwordstore.190407.122034.tar.gz2```. + +## Example 3: Specifying a destination file +``` +$ pass backup Documents/Backups/mypassbackup +``` +This creates a backup and places it into ```Documents/Backups/mypassbackup.tar.gz2```. + +## Installaion + +For installation download and place this bash script file ```backup.bash``` into +the passwordstore extension directory specified with ```$PASSWORD_STORE_EXTENSIONS_DIR```. +By default this is ```~/.password-store/.extensions```. +``` +$ cp backup.bash ~/.password-store/.extensions +``` +Give the file execution permissions: +``` +$ chmod 700 ~/.password-store/.extensions/backup.bash +``` +Set the variable ```PASSWORD_STORE_ENABLE_EXTENSIONS``` to true to enable extensions. +``` +$ export PASSWORD_STORE_ENABLE_EXTENSIONS=true +``` +Download and source the bash completion file ```pass-backup.bash.completion``` for bash completion. +``` +$ source ~/.password-store/.bash-completions/pass-backup.bash.completion +``` +Type ```pass backup``` to create your first backup. +``` +$ pass backup +``` + +## Requirements + +- `pass` from [https://www.passwordstore.org/](https://www.passwordstore.org/) +- `tar` to be installed for zipping and compression. + + +## Notes + +Both files are tiny: 142 lines (script) and 17 lines (autocompletion) respectively. You can check them yourself quickly. No need to trust anyone.