Mitigation: PTE Inversion VMX: conditional cache flushes, SMT vulnerable Type: itlb_multihit status: KVM: VMX disabled Speed (MHz): avg: 833 high: 940 min/max: 800/3000 scaling:ĭriver: intel_cpufreq governor: schedutil cores: 1: 940 2: 798 3: 798įlags: avx ht lm nx pae sse sse2 sse3 sse4_1 sse4_2 ssse3 vmx Topology: cpus: 1x cores: 2 tpc: 2 threads: 4 smt: enabled cache:
Info: model: Intel Core i5-2435M bits: 64 type: MT MCP arch: Sandy Bridgeįamily: 6 model-id: 0x2A (42) stepping: 7 microcode: 0x2F Volts: 12.0 min: 10.9 model: SMP bq20z451 type: Li-ion serial: N/A Type: Laptop System: Apple product: MacBookPro8,1 v: 1.0 Wm: kwin_x11 vt: 1 dm: SDDM Distro: Garuda Linux base: Arch Linux Rd.udev.log_priority=3 vt.global_cursor_default=0 It's like FireDragon can't access things outside of itself? The extension doesn't know the version of KeePassXC that I'm running. Latest available version of KeePassXC: 2.7.1 You are running KeePassXC version: unknown You can download the latest stable version from However in this case, using FireDragon, it does not.įurthermore, when looking at the general preferences for the extension in FireDragon, I see this: KeePassXC-Browser needs KeePassXC to retrieve credentials. Usually, pressing that brings me over to my local KeepassXC installed application that presents me with a dialog box asking to name the database connection. I installed the extension to Firefox and that works fine.īrowser integration enabled, I bring up the settings in the extension, press settings, then connected databases and I see the button "connect". It seems that the KeepassXC extension isn't "seeing" my KeepassXC data base from FireDragon.