[arch-general] Gringotts, alternatives?
Gringotts has stopped working with a not completely uncommon error: ***MEMORY-ERROR***: [10817]: GSlice: failed to allocate 1008 bytes (alignment: 1024): Cannot allocate memory Given the time since the last release I'd be surprised if it's fixed any time soon. Also, I've never been extremely impressed with it so maybe this is a good time to look for an alternative. This means I now have two problems to solve, and any help on either would be appreciated: 1. How do I get the data out of the gringotts vault? Is there any other application that can read it and help me pull everything out? (I suppose I can always move the vault over to a Ubuntu box and extract it there, but I'd rather avoid that if possible ;-) 2. What alternatives to gringotts exist? What do other ArchLinux users keep their secret notes save? /M -- Magnus Therning OpenPGP: 0xAB4DFBA4 email: magnus@therning.org jabber: magnus@therning.org twitter: magthe http://therning.org/magnus
On 2 March 2012 11:17, Magnus Therning <magnus@therning.org> wrote:
1. How do I get the data out of the gringotts vault? Is there any other application that can read it and help me pull everything out? (I suppose I can always move the vault over to a Ubuntu box and extract it there, but I'd rather avoid that if possible ;-) 2. What alternatives to gringotts exist? What do other ArchLinux users keep their secret notes save?
Have you tried rebuilding it? I use lastpass for secret notes and such
On Fri, Mar 2, 2012 at 11:28, Alexandre Ferrando <alferpal@gmail.com> wrote:
On 2 March 2012 11:17, Magnus Therning <magnus@therning.org> wrote:
1. How do I get the data out of the gringotts vault? Is there any other application that can read it and help me pull everything out? (I suppose I can always move the vault over to a Ubuntu box and extract it there, but I'd rather avoid that if possible ;-) 2. What alternatives to gringotts exist? What do other ArchLinux users keep their secret notes save?
Have you tried rebuilding it?
Yupp, but no luck :( It could be the result of anything happening inside a library using glib, which in a gtk2 application tends to be a long list.
I use lastpass for secret notes and such
Looks interesting indeed. I'll have to look closer at it :) /M -- Magnus Therning OpenPGP: 0xAB4DFBA4 email: magnus@therning.org jabber: magnus@therning.org twitter: magthe http://therning.org/magnus
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 I use LastPass to store passwords and combination of EncFS ( https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/EncFS ) and Dropbox to store rest of secure stuff (and keep it synchronized across computers) - -- Maciej Mazur -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.12 (GNU/Linux) iQIcBAEBAgAGBQJPULB2AAoJEAq7IQBeYgXLoNMQAKkqPMga0ET8A2sZr1ngqRYo isudVItXL1H2z4gHgpfAgcMGgdMHD7+sA/XkyBTUzeu9RukREmQAxxyejqkQeWj6 lrfn6boNVi/kBMVIl2juAsE9sddPf7FMvElDOxlCFLf+Vv1MB/MFgMCOdz5ud9Ua AhFzrqfzuFUEX8/ZiWEd8RWUM5jtVvmOL1Tt/J/xyK7Tdp0lCIDzNOuyaQlWRi4B 45E5qD2ehSuHPufPRMtwNvv2iKeeUt9+pjz4WGyp0+rSASPy31HHkzVNaNuSTMNE N2DqxA553XchUY1HNyBM0nGhqRvc4690wfPptkThvBH0ZQGii8M1YxkN4gJfksso d3A9SqMlH9gXA0PnYSHMuh+LQ9zQQTDxUht8ak3RekdQanBBq6wbTk9hsnuu237D uu0v6eaOZiIBrG3z+k6Uh2+/bijJlPqCMWDLOk25tEUoNA0MFsspbs6ZJDQ1c4n9 qEP/C9ne1gau3eatY5iAi4sEVZzjmq9FaqgUuqC+mQeefVL0tSd6RSLiV3aoQ0VU w0ZnCMsjsYpNd7/MzJJjZz+4Z7o9NbDeA+kv1Rgn8tMydhSLgqKZ5iAD77198vtY 0Vmn7eSXunkDfr4F6mnPQ6oW5+EB6DCdvb8BE0gNA4JUc/4O5GGp3wrE54LYtcY6 x9I3mt4ZzjOBnZLl6J2k =tMlK -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Nice, I didn't know encfs. With servicemenu-encfs-kde4 it works wonderfully. On Fri, Mar 2, 2012 at 08:35, Maciej Mazur <mamciek@gmail.com> wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1
I use LastPass to store passwords and combination of EncFS ( https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/EncFS ) and Dropbox to store rest of secure stuff (and keep it synchronized across computers)
- -- Maciej Mazur -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.12 (GNU/Linux)
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-- Martin No envíen archivos pesados por mail. Usen DropBox <https://www.dropbox.com/referrals/NTIwODk0MDk> (2GB + 250MB bonus) o SpiderOak<https://spideroak.com/download/referral/dd6b3051b5f1f10a5674d694f22dd3e8>(al registrarse usen el Promo Code "worldbackupday" --> *6GB*)
If all you need to store securely are text files, and you are a Vim user, you can use Vim's built-in Blowfish encryption support. :set cryptmethod=blowfish Then use the :X command to set a key and encrypt the current buffer.
On 03/02/12 at 10:00am, Taylor Hedberg wrote:
If all you need to store securely are text files, and you are a Vim user, you can use Vim's built-in Blowfish encryption support.
:set cryptmethod=blowfish
Then use the :X command to set a key and encrypt the current buffer.
I didn't know about that. That's interesting, thanks. --
On Fri, Mar 2, 2012 at 9:00 AM, Taylor Hedberg <tmhedberg@gmail.com> wrote:
If all you need to store securely are text files, and you are a Vim user, you can use Vim's built-in Blowfish encryption support.
:set cryptmethod=blowfish
Then use the :X command to set a key and encrypt the current buffer.
neat! that's a pretty cool tip, thanks! now i just wish i had lvl10 secrets i needed to keep ... so i could thwart my enemies ... muah hahaha! all superheros need a nemesis :-( -- C Anthony
On Fri, Mar 02, 2012 at 10:00:27AM -0500, Taylor Hedberg wrote:
If all you need to store securely are text files, and you are a Vim user, you can use Vim's built-in Blowfish encryption support.
:set cryptmethod=blowfish
Then use the :X command to set a key and encrypt the current buffer.
Yes, I'm a vim user and have considered using it to encrypt the notes... but then it becomes a question of organisation, but maybe multiple files actually is a good thing. I'll have to think about that a little while. I wasn't aware there was built-in encryption in vim, I've always used the gnupg plugin[1]. /M [1]: http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=661 -- Magnus Therning OpenPGP: 0xAB4DFBA4 email: magnus@therning.org jabber: magnus@therning.org twitter: magthe http://therning.org/magnus Most software today is very much like an Egyptian pyramid with millions of bricks piled on top of each other, with no structural integrity, but just done by brute force and thousands of slaves. -- Alan Kay
participants (7)
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Alexandre Ferrando
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C Anthony Risinger
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Maciej Mazur
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Magnus Therning
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Manolo Martínez
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Martin Zecher
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Taylor Hedberg