sonicaj 0cc0a7595d Publish new changes in catalog 1 year ago
..
charts 0cc0a7595d Publish new changes in catalog 1 year ago
ci 0cc0a7595d Publish new changes in catalog 1 year ago
migrations 0cc0a7595d Publish new changes in catalog 1 year ago
templates 0cc0a7595d Publish new changes in catalog 1 year ago
Chart.lock 0cc0a7595d Publish new changes in catalog 1 year ago
Chart.yaml 0cc0a7595d Publish new changes in catalog 1 year ago
README.md 0cc0a7595d Publish new changes in catalog 1 year ago
app-readme.md 0cc0a7595d Publish new changes in catalog 1 year ago
ix_values.yaml 0cc0a7595d Publish new changes in catalog 1 year ago
metadata.yaml 0cc0a7595d Publish new changes in catalog 1 year ago
questions.yaml 0cc0a7595d Publish new changes in catalog 1 year ago

README.md

Vaultwarden

Vaultwarden Alternative implementation of the Bitwarden server API written in Rust and compatible with upstream Bitwarden clients

During the installation process, a container will be launched with root privileges. This is required in order to apply the correct permissions to the Vaultwarden data directory. Afterward, the Vaultwarden container will run as a non-root user (default 568). Same applies to the postgres container. This will run afterwards as a non-root user (999). On each upgrade, a container will be launched with root privileges in order to apply the correct permissions to the postgres backups directory. Container that performs the backup will run as a non-root user (999) afterwards. Keep in mind the permissions on the backup directory will be changed to 999:999 on every update. But will only be changed once for the Vaultwarden and postgres data directories.

While the option to use Rocket for TLS is there, it is not recommended. Instead, use a reverse proxy to handle TLS termination.

Using HTTPS is required for the most of the features to work (correctly).