I can’t speak to your skill level but there’s no doubt that Strongbox has many knobs for you to twiddle with. I like options, and although it’s certainly quite approachable (especially with the excellent documentation in hand), I think it’s fair to say that you’ll be investing time into your setup, at least initially, particularly with regard to syncing. Crucially, you have to arrange it such that your iOS device can always access the storage you’ll use for your databases, and that KeePass on Windows will read and write the same databases. KeePass just treats the database files as any other file on your disk, so much as with any other app that accesses network storage, you just need to make sure it’s available when you need it. Strongbox, being a mobile app, is very resilient to being offline, maintaining local cached copies of files and seamlessly synchronising changes, but if you want to see those changes synchronise in near real-time, you will want to make sure the network and server are available whenever you need them to get changes from one device to the other. Strongbox will try to cover for failures, but ultimately this is your responsibility.
And speaking of syncing, Strongbox natively supports Dropbox, Google Drive, OneDrive, and any SFTP or WebDAV server, in addition to its own Internet and local network syncing between Strongbox apps. If you only use Windows with Strongbox and you want the simplest possible setup, you’d go with one of the public clouds on the list, installing the corresponding app on Windows and just using the file in the local syncing directory in KeePass; a bit more work, and you can use your own server with SFTP (very common on any device with SSH enabled) or WebDAV (some NAS devices). If you run a server and want to reach it from the Internet, you arrange it so that this is possible from outside your LAN: you set up the (probably dynamic) DNS so it resolves the hostname to your public IP address, you forward the necessary ports to your server, and so on. Or, as I do, you use a VPN to reach into your network, which is easier in some ways because once it’s set up you access your entire network using the same internal addresses irrespective of whether you’re home or not, but it does mean you need to route your internal home addresses to a VPN server that you either run yourself or have someone else host, which adds some complexity but does mean you have much more secure access because you don’t need to open holes in your firewall for specific servers and can reach your whole network. So yes, possible, but the point is that you get to assume responsibilities that just using 1Password or even BitWarden frees you from by virtue of being completely hosted. No shame if you’d rather not, but I do think the payoff is well worth it. Glad you find my comments interesting! -- The following information is important for all members of the Mac Visionaries list. If you have any questions or concerns about the running of this list, or if you feel that a member's post is inappropriate, please contact the owners or moderators directly rather than posting on the list itself. Your Mac Visionaries list moderator is Mark Taylor. You can reach mark at: mk...@ucla.edu and your owner is Cara Quinn - you can reach Cara at caraqu...@caraquinn.com The archives for this list can be searched at: http://www.mail-archive.com/macvisionaries@googlegroups.com/ --- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "MacVisionaries" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to macvisionaries+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/macvisionaries/9BDFCABD-377B-43AE-9E58-FABDE50642CA%40me.com.