A keychain is an encrypted container that securely stores your account names and passwords for your Mac, apps, servers, and websites, and confidential information, such as credit card numbers or bank account PIN numbers.

Each user on a Mac has a login keychain. The password for your login keychain matches the password you use to log in to your Mac. If an administrator on your Mac resets your login password, you need to reset your login keychain password.


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Perhaps I am missing something, but after looking extensively on forums, online docs, etc... I can't find an easy "How to" document that details how to simply take already existing Keychain passwords on your iPhone and transfer them to 1Password.

Your Macs and iOS devices have a "keychain," which is an encrypted file that stores your logins, passwords, and some other information. This file syncs via iCloud, so you can use the same passwords on all your devices.

Safari also allows you to access passwords in its Preferences. A Passwords tab lets you view and edit passwords for websites you can access in the browser. As in the Settings app, you need to authenticate to view these passwords.

The Keychain Access app has been around on the Mac since the launch of Mac OS X. It provides access to your encrypted passwords, as well as other items such as certificates that ensure the security of websites and services. It stores passwords not just for the Safari web browser, but also for applications that store passwords to access websites or services. When you sign into apps like Twitter, Slack, or Skype, the passwords you use are stored in your keychain, and you can view and edit them in Keychain Access.

I use a native apple password manager and moving to a different browser was very sketchy with importing passwords as CSV. I tried to use a 3rd party software but I find password autofill very annoying (way worse than safari or built-in chrominium implementation).

Immediately after this disable/enable activity, as a quick check on my iPhone I browsed through my Safari passwords to find login and passwords for a couple of websites I frequently visit were missing.

Thats when I opened my Macbook pro to see if the passwords were available in the keychain. The websites for which passwords were missing on my iPhone were autofilling on my Macbook. I thought my Macbook saved me. I closed the websites and when I came back to access the websites on my Macbook I am finding the websites dont remember the login and passwords anymore. However the auto fill function is working on other sites for which the passwords were not lost. Can somebody help me/guide me to understand what might be happening here?

- How can I restore my previous keychain (from the time immediately before my phones Keychain disable)? I was thinking, even if I disable iCloud keychain on my phone the password items would be on cloud and be available on other devices...I am a little worried.

If you have iCloud Keychain enabled, you may have passwords saved in either your iCloud Keychain or your local keychain. If you disable the iCloud Keychain it won't loses passwords saved in your local keychain.

That's exactly what I was relying on when I disabled iCloud Keychain on my phone, thinking my MacBook would still have ALL the passwords...It seemed to be true for a short while, when I opened my MacBook to check if the passwords I had seen missing in my phone are available in MacBook or not. They were available in my MacBook, however I closed the browsing session and log back again to find that MacBook doesn't have it anymore...This was a wierd experience to me.

How do I access my Local keychain on my Mac? I have opened the Keychain access app and I find the Passwords which are now listing only those which are on the iCloud (which are still missing few passwords). When I go to the sites that my Macbook was autofilling the passwords for, shows the login and passwords as blank now...

iCloud Keychain is Apple's password management system. It is designed to securely store and automatically fill in passwords, credit card and shipping information, and other sensitive data across all of a user's Apple devices.

When using the Safari browser, iCloud Keychain will prompt you to save passwords for easy access down the road. Keychain also remembers your "autofill" shipping and credit card information, and your Wi-Fi password.

iCloud Keychain allows you to share usernames and passwords, credit card information, Wi-Fi passwords, and other account information across all of your Apple devices. That way, it is always up to date.

Modern computing can require hundreds of passwords to gain access to all of the apps and websites you need to get work accomplished. All of these passwords need to be unique, complex, and long to keep you safe from brute force or dictionary attacks.

However, this is impractical in reality, and users often reuse passwords, which puts your entire network at risk. Password managers, including iCloud Keychain, can suggest pseudo-random passwords every time you need to create a new login or update a current one.

iCloud Keychain makes it easy to share your passwords across Apple devices. However, most of us use other devices as well. Unlike TeamPassword, which lets you easily and securely share passwords across all of your devices and browsers, you may need to manually find your passwords in iCloud Keychain to use them on other devices.

If someone is able to get the passcode you use to unlock your device, they can use that same code to access Passwords in settings and see all your saved passwords! However, biometric identification is standard on new Apple devices, so this is becoming less of an issue.

You can securely share passwords from Keychain with other Apple users. However, you can only do this one at a time, and only if they have an Apple device. If you want to share outside those parameters, you'll have to send passwords over text or email or share a spreadsheet - huge liabilities all. Please don't do it.

Dedicated password managers let you divide passwords into folders or groups. This keeps things organized for projects and makes it easy to give people access to only those logins relevant to their work.

If you need to share passwords, you'll definitely want a dedicated password solution. TeamPassword is particularly good at sharing. Passwords are divided among an unlimited number of custom Groups. You can then add and remove team members from these Groups at will. TeamPassword has extensions for all major browsers and apps for iOS and Android.

Not the sharpest tool in the box with computers so please be patient.


Trying to import passwords for IPad Pro to Last pass but still keep them on my IPad. Where I have to send them from on my IPad it has Chrome, iCloud chain and Last pass. Some are ticked and I need to untick then it is supposed to be simple according to Last Pass.

Due to Apple restrictions, there is currently not a quick and straightforward way to export all saved passwords from the iCloud Keychain where your passwords are presumably being stored currently. However, third party instructions for creating a simple .csv text file containing all passwords in the Keychain can be found here although they are somewhat technical and may not be beginner-friendly. Please note, we cannot provide support or assistance for this method or any other method as this is due to Apple's restrictions and outside of LastPass' control.

I believe I now better understand your terminal command script to deliver an internet password. However, the difficulty I'm having is with a "Web form password". Reading through the man security command information, I don't see any reference or commands to display these passwords.

This is my first time using a 3rd party password management software, because I've been on all apple devices before (so Keychain served my purposes quite well) but I'm migrating from OS X to W10 (staying on iOS) and I would like to import my data from my keychain (on my iPhone) to enpass (iOS so I can sync it to my enPass desktop).

First of all, the Enpass user manual has a section on Importing data from other softwares. Unfortunately, Apple Keychain is not mentioned. The reason seems that it is non-trivial to export data from the Keychain. Other password managers, like 1Password, also don't have a recipe for migrating passwords from the Keychain to their application. That said, there are ways to export data from the Keychain. The best on is a bit technical, at -keychains. After you have made the export, you can import with the methods described in the Enpass user manual. Feel free to report here if this is successful for you.

I wanted to move my passwords to a secure, easy to use and technically simple alternative that provides me with all the capabilities I loved from iCloudKeychain but that gives back control into my hands to be able to decide when and what to synchronize. This article is part of thebyeCloud series in which I try to replace iCloud with self-hosted services.

Migrating my data from iCloud Keychain to KeePass was probably the hardest thing to to here. I looked for different ways to achieve this but I found nothing that was easierthan just copying the passwords manually. This is basically because of the API limitations of the Keychain framework in macOS. If you want to get your data out, you basically haveto script the user interface to do the copy-pasting of your passwords to a CSV file. KeePass on the other side has no problem with this. Almost all clients provideimport and export functionality to either CSV or XML files. 2351a5e196

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