Bitwarden - Self-hosted password manager
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thanks @iamthefij
For those looking to install this:
$ git clone ssh://git@git.cloudron.io:6000/iamthefij/bitwardenrs-app.git $ cd bitwardenrs-app $ cloudron install --image iamthefij/cloudron-app-bitwarden:0.3.0
Aaaannd it's running:
After installing, both my users got an invite to join bitwarden. Very cool.
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@jdaviescoates Yes, tests plus making sure we can actually maintain it in the long run (for example, if everything is pinned properly in the docker file, things like that). Usually, @nebulon and also do a round of manual testing and put some basic docs before putting it in unstable.
@yusf yes, both users got the invite automatically.
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@girish said in Bitwarden - Self-hosted password manager:
@yusf yes, both users got the invite automatically.
I'm guessing perhaps @yusf was asking because what if you don't want to invite all users automatically?
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@jdaviescoates Namesake reads my mind.
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@yusf Yea, the Readme describe the reasoning.
There is no way to actually do true SSO without breaking the model for Bitwarden. The only thing that we can do is automatically invite users to sign up.
The Bitwarden_rs project doesn't have a way to invite without sending an email as when an SMTP server is configured, it will generate unique invite links for each user.
If you disable SSO, you only disable the auto-invite feature. You will then need to invite yourself via the Admin panel (admin token is echoed in the logs and in
/app/data/admin_token
). You can then invite anyone else you wish manually. -
Is there a reliable way to move from Bitwarden SQLite (fbartels build) to Bitwarden MySQL (iamthefij build) including all attachments?
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Just to inform everyone here, today I've created a new gitlab project for this app package repo wise, based on @iamthefij version, however without relying on external dockerimages being mounted during app image building. The repo is at https://git.cloudron.io/cloudron/bitwardenrs
One thing I wanted to ask here is, how to deal with ldap sync. Generally this works currently by a cron job running every now and then, checking availalbe users on ldap and then will invite all users, which are not yet invited to the app instance. This has the current annoying thing, where if an admin wants to first try bitwarden on the Cloudron and does not restrict access during installation, the app will send out invites to all users. Since this is the default flow, I don't want to publish the app package like that. On the other hand I do see value in those invites being sent out at the point where the admin decides this app is good to be used.
To not delay any package release further, we could avoid this topic by packaging it first without ldap, but I wanted to collect some feedback on this here in the thread first. It would be great if you all could share your ideal flow regarding this and maybe explain the use-cases briefly.Thanks! And even more thanks to @iamthefij for all the work done on the package already!
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@nebulon yea, the best for Cloudron would be a way to silently invite so only ldap users could sign up. Maybe I’ll make that suggestion over at the main project.
I feel that would make a much better experience for users and admins here.
What I did was install it scoped to only my user and then expanded the users to a group later.