You dont need a second computer, just replace the drive with an empty one.
Keyoxide proof: $argon2id$v=19$m=64,t=512,p=2$GqANIZlip4069AD6refZlQ$ih86piuoJJDrbRmKV9dhzA
You dont need a second computer, just replace the drive with an empty one.
It does (they of course use their Azure Blob storage under the hood). Forgejo however does not (even though it supports it for releases and packages and Golang has this in their standard library).
I’ll keep the idea in mind.
Technically unlimited, but you obviously need to have enough storage to cache the zip files (and RAM to cache the file index). My server is very small, so I needed to set the limit low.
Pin codes are great for quick access if you have a lockout mechanism after 3 failed attempts and it is impossible for an attacker to get the hashed code. It is only secure if you pick a pin that cannot be guessed in 3 attempts like your birthdate but that applies to any password.
Thats why they are used for credit cards, SIM cards or Bitlocker drive encryption. The hashed code never leaves the secure hardware so you cannot circumvent the lockout.
Even a 16digit numeric code, which I guess is the upper limit of what you can remember and quickly input, would take just a couple of days to brute force if the attacker does get hold of the hash.
Yes: https://github.com/beacondb/beacondb-unifiednlp