![]() It would have been quicker to forgo BW and just enter the credentials manually. I then get an option to view the item or autofill. The next thing I can do is pull down the BW notification at the top of the screen and search for the login and touch it. When I finally find the correct login and touch it, I am taken back to the webpage but 50% of the time, no login fields are filled in. No matter what I have set for global URI match, it displays a list of all logins that have the same base domain name. Once BW opens, I have to scroll through all of the logins that match the same base domain name. If it does stay on screen long enough for me to touch it, I am prompted to scan my fingerprint so BW can be unlocked. It does this disappearing act about 85% of the time. It does not stay on the screen long enough to touch it. I can touch the password field in the webpage and see the autofill pop-up flash on the screen for a millisecond. Now I have a couple of choices on how to proceed. I have both Autofill and Accessibility enabled so that should be all that is required. Once I touch the Firefox shortcut, the webpage opens but the fields remain empty. With BW, I have to create/save a Firefox bookmark of a login page to the phone’s home screen. ![]() Or I could open the RF app, scan my fingerprint and search for or select a login from the list (which displays instantly unlike BW) and have it open the webpage with the login fields auto-filled, every time. ![]() To use them, all I had to do was touch the shortcut icon, scan my fingerprint and the webpage would open with the fields populated, every time. With RF, I could create shortcuts on my phone’s home screen for commonly used logins. I created a new Linux VM on my vSphere server (just for BW) and imported my hundreds of logins from Roboform (RF).Īdjusting to the switch from RF to the BW client on Windows is not too painful but Android is a different story. After installing BW server numerous times in both Windows and Linux VM’s that I spun up in VMWare Workstation, I finally decided to go for it. Over the past week, I’ve spent most of my time researching, installing and testing self-hosted Bitwarden (BW).
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