I've not ran into any issues with it yet. Perhaps the trick is having a repo with just submodules for my system and then a separate personal and work repository. What can/should be done to have `pass git` notice the submodules more effectively?
Christoph Egger writes: > Hi! > > George Angelopoulos <[email protected]> writes: >> The only disadvantage I see in this is that it requires git, which is >> otherwise optional. But if you're doing collaborative management, you're >> probably using git. >> >> On 10/21/2014 06:50 AM, Kyle Marek-Spartz wrote: >>> I saw the recent/ongoing thread about multiple password stores and >>> wanted to share how I just set mine up. I have a separate gpg key and >>> git repositories for my work and my personal accounts. I pull them in as >>> submodules of my git repository for this computer's password-store. I >>> could theoretically create a shared password store by creating a shared >>> gpg key and setting a .gpg-id key for another submodule. The only >>> drawback is the prefix for the password lookup, e.g. `pass my/password` >>> and `pass work/password`. I think I prefer this approach to the >>> switching multiple accounts since it is not modal. Are other people >>> using submodules to manage multiple password stores or shared >>> repositories? > > Jah, we're using it that way as well (several people here sharing a > 'work' pass and having private ones next to it. > > Unfortunately `pass git` doesn't really work for submodule operations -- > seems you need to be in ~/.password-store for git to do submodule > operations. > > Christoph -- Kyle Marek-Spartz _______________________________________________ Password-Store mailing list [email protected] http://lists.zx2c4.com/mailman/listinfo/password-store
