So, you could install wine on Fedora and use KeePass within that. The developers state that it should work within wine ( wine is in Fedora’s repo). See the download section: Downloads - KeePass With the windows KeePass, the file can still be opened.This is a Windows-only tool, not intended to natively run on Linux. The correct combination of password and key response still results in "wrong key or file damaged". But not, when running KeePassX from the start menu. Update: When running keepassx from the console, the "challenge response" option is available. My second question: Any idea why the option is disabled and how to enable it? I am quite sure that keepassx was installed from the right repository. ![]() Now, after some restarting and updating, the "challenge response" option is disabled (gray) and I lack any idea why.Therefore, my first question is: Is the encryption of KeePassX incompatible with that from KeePass, when using a challenge response as second factor? The challenge response option was available after the first startup, but the (definitively correct) password together with the YubiKey response did not work to open a KeePass database created under Windows.Now I face two issues, and have no more idea how to solve them: ![]() The repository ppa:hda-me/keepassx2-yubico for eoan is not yet available, but using bionic instead seems to work quite fine. I followed this comprehensive manual to install KeePassX with challenge response 2-factor support for linux (ubuntu/lubuntu). No problem, I thought: Let's use keepassx. In earlier versions of Ubuntu and KeePass I used to run KeePass with wine, but in the latest versions, the YubiKey is not detected in the wineenvironment ("error connecting to yubikey").
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