Gnome-keyring is a program that keep password and other secrets for
users. It is run as a damon in the session, similar to ssh-agent, and
other applications can locate it by an environment variable.
The program can manage several keyrings, each with its own master
password, and there is also a session keyring which is never stored to
disk, but forgotten when the session ends.
The library libgnome-keyring is used by applications to integrate with
the gnome keyring system. However, at this point the library hasn't been
tested and used enought to consider the API to be publically
exposed. Therefore use of libgnome-keyring is at the moment limited to
internal use in the gnome desktop. However, we hope that the
gnome-keyring API will turn out useful and good, so that later it
can be made public for any application to use.
-- Gnome-keyring README
gnoMint is an X.509 Certificate Authority (CA) management tool with both a GTK
and command-line interface. It allows anyone to create and manage a CA without
having to write configuration files or remember long command-line arguments.
GnuPG is a complete and free replacement for PGP.
Because it does not use the patented IDEA algorithm, it can be used
without any restrictions. GnuPG is an RFC2440 (OpenPGP) compliant
application.
GnuPG is a complete and free replacement for PGP.
Because it does not use the patented IDEA algorithm, it can be used
without any restrictions. GnuPG is an RFC2440 (OpenPGP) compliant
application.
go.crypto contains additional packages dealing with cryptography for Go, such
as bcrypt, blowfish, openpgp and ssh.
goptlib is a library for writing Tor pluggable transports in Go.
create-cert is a script that uses openssl(1) to create self-signed host
certificates and private keys for fully qualified domain names (FQDNs).
Password Gorilla is cross-platform Password Manager. It is
compatible with "Password Safe" from Windows.
It uses TCL/Tk and runs on most platforms supported by Tcl/Tk.
The GNU Privacy Assistant is a graphical frontend to GnuPG and may be
used to manage the keys and encrypt/decrypt/sign/check files. It is much
like Seahorse.
The GNOME Password Manager - GPass for short - is a simple
application, written for the GNOME 2 desktop, that lets you manage a
collection of passwords. The password collection is stored in an
encrypted file, protected by a master-password.
GPass is released under the GNU GPL2 licence.
Features:
* Clean and easy-to-use user interface.
* Quick-search facility.
* Username and password may easily be copied to the clipboard.
* Encryption is done using the OpenSSL cryptographics library.
* The built-in password generator helps you generate secure passwords.
* You can launch a website and the associated username/passwords
direct from GPass