Hello Lester,

Thank you for your guidance. I tried renaming the kdbx file to end with
a kdb extension instead. I then used kpcli to try opening the kdb file
with the same key file, but I still encountered the same error: Couldn't
load the file kpstuff2.kdb: The database key appears invalid or else the
database is corrupt.

Is there another way to test if the file is a v1 or v2 Keepass file?

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1874161

Title:
  kpcli is unable to open a kdbx file if the file is locked by both a
  password and a key file

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