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Export pass(1), "the standard unix password manager", to CSV.

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pass2csv

pass2csv is a tool that exports a pass(1) password store to a CSV. It can export whole stores, subdirectories of a store, and single password files. It can use regexp patterns to find and group data after the first line of each password into additional CSV columns, as well as exclude data from the export.

Source is available at GitHub, and the package is published to the Python Package Index.

You can install the package with pipx (recommended):

pipx install pass2csv

or with pip:

python3 -m pip install --user pass2csv

Usage

$ pass2csv --help
usage: pass2csv [-h] [-b path] [-g executable] [-a]
                [--encodings encodings] [-e pattern] [-f name pattern]
                [-l name pattern] [--version]
                STOREPATH OUTFILE

positional arguments:
  STOREPATH             path to the password-store to export
  OUTFILE               file to write exported data to, use - for stdout

options:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -b path, --base path  path to use as base for grouping passwords
  -g executable, --gpg executable
                        path to the gpg binary you wish to use (default:
                        'gpg')
  -a, --use-agent       ask gpg to use its auth agent
  --encodings encodings
                        comma-separated text encodings to try, in order,
                        when decoding gpg output (default: 'utf-8')
  -e pattern, --exclude pattern
                        regexp for lines which should not be exported, can
                        be specified multiple times
  -f name pattern, --get-field name pattern
                        a name and a regexp, the part of the line matching
                        the regexp will be removed and the remaining line
                        will be added to a field with the chosen name.
                        only one match per password, matching stops after
                        the first match
  -l name pattern, --get-line name pattern
                        a name and a regexp for which all lines that match
                        are included in a field with the chosen name
  --version             show program's version number and exit

Format

The output format is

Group(/),Title,Password,[custom fields...],Notes

You may add custom fields with --get-field or --get-line. You supply a name for the field and a regexp pattern. The field name is used for the header of the output CSV and to group multiple patterns for the same field; you may specify multiple patterns for the same field by specifying --get-field or--get-line multiple times with the same name. Regexp patterns are case-insensitive.

Example usage

$ gpg -d ~/.password-store/sites/example/login.gpg
password123
---
username: user_name
email [email protected]
url:example.com
Some note

$ pass2csv ~/.password-store - \
    --exclude '^---$' \
    --get-field Username '(username|email):?' \
    --get-field URL 'url:?'

"Group(/)","Title","Password","URL","Username","Notes"
"sites/example","login","password123","example.com","user_name","email [email protected]

Some note"

Grouping

The group is relative to the path, or the --base if given. Given the password ~/.password-store/sites/example/login.gpg:

$ pass2csv ~/.password-store/sites
    # Password will have group "example"

$ pass2csv ~/.password-store/sites --base ~/.password-store
    # Password will have group "sites/example"

gpg-agent password timeout

If your private key is protected by a password, gpg will ask for it with the pinentry program if you haven't set it to something else. If using gpg2 or the -a option with gpg, by default, the password is cached for 10 minutes but the timer is reset when using a key. After 2 hours the cache will be cleared even if it has been accessed recently.

You can set these values in your ~/.gnupg/gpg-agent.conf:

default-cache-ttl 600
max-cache-ttl 7200

Development

Create a virtual environment:

python3 -m venv venv

Activate the environment:

. venv/bin/activate

Now you may either use pip directly to install the dependencies, or you can install pip-tools. The latter is recommended.

pip

pip install -r requirements.txt

pip-tools

pip-tools can keep your virtual environment in sync with the requirements.txt file, as well as compiling a new requirements.txt when adding/removing a dependency in requirements.in.

It is recommended that pip-tools is installed within the virtual environment.

pip install pip-tools
pip-compile  # only necessary when adding/removing a dependency
pip-sync

Packaging

See Python Packaging User Guide for detailed info.

  1. pip-sync requirements.txt dev-requirements.txt
  2. Increment __version__ in pass2csv.py.
  3. rm -rf dist/* && python3 -m build
  4. python3 -m twine upload dist/*