@Florian Ludewig Great video and super awesome to include the gcrypt part. You don't happend to use pass on an Android phone as well, this setup would be a super interesting tutorial, since you don't really find a lot of info about it.
Great to hear, that the video helped you! And yes, pass on Android is definitely interesting. You can use: github.com/android-password-store/Android-Password-Store. But I don't use it on Android since I'm not comfortable putting such sensible data on my phone.
git-remote-gcrypt will always do a force push. Hence it will always replace the entire branch. So yes, it can be done after the repo has been published. But it would make more sense to encrypt it from the beginning.
Very helpful, especially the part about syncing to other machines. Thanks!
Most accurate and well explained video on this topic, thanks man!
I revisit this video whenever I forget how to do X thing in Pass. The best tutorial for it out there.
I'm very glad to hear that. Thanks for your feedback!
This was exactly what I needed to know, thank you!
@Florian Ludewig Great video and super awesome to include the gcrypt part.
You don't happend to use pass on an Android phone as well, this setup would be a super interesting tutorial, since you don't really find a lot of info about it.
Great to hear, that the video helped you!
And yes, pass on Android is definitely interesting. You can use: github.com/android-password-store/Android-Password-Store. But I don't use it on Android since I'm not comfortable putting such sensible data on my phone.
Can it still be encrypted after it has been push up to git?
git-remote-gcrypt will always do a force push. Hence it will always replace the entire branch. So yes, it can be done after the repo has been published. But it would make more sense to encrypt it from the beginning.
Great stuff thanks
Glad you enjoyed it
You look so cute!
Great vid man, thanks
Glad that I could help!