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SafeInCloud to LastPass Conversion Tool

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GoDoc Build Status MIT License

sic2lp Package main is an executable to import SafeInCloud into LastPass.

A simple utility to take an export from SafeInCloud and convert the cards to LastPass sites and secure notes.

This is an opinionated tool as there are a number of assumptions made to how the cards are organized, labelled and filled out.

This tool uses my abstracted SafeInCloud golang package, which can used for other conversation projects. https://github.com/eduncan911/safeincloud

Features

Finally, a SafeInCloud conversion tool that works - including attachment decoding.

  • Converts SafeInCloud to LastPass CSV format
  • Creates LastPass Sites if all required fields are present: title, website, username, password.
  • Creates LastPass Secure Notes if not all of Sites required fields are found.
  • Creates LastPass specialized Secure Notes if certain labels were used (Credit Cards, Banking, Insurance, etc). See below.
  • Creates multiple LastPass Sites if multiple logins are specified on a single card.
  • Extracts all file and image attachments. LastPass CSV imports do not support file imports. Will have to import manually.
  • Flattens SafeInClouds' Labels, with logic, to LastPass' Folder structure.
  • Ability to override/select/prioritize what Folder you want the cards imported into.

And more features. The source code, specifically the main.go file, has a lot more comments and details.

Installation

You can download a pre-compiled binary from the releases:

https://github.com/eduncan911/sic2lp/releases

Or, you can install from source:

go install github.com/eduncan911/sic2lp

How to Use

Use the binary at a command prompt to execute. When completed, you will end up with one or two CSV files in the same directory you executed from, as well as possibly an attachments/ folder that holds any secure attachments you had.

$ sic2lp -h
Usage of sic2lp:
  sic2lp -db /path/to/SafeInCloud_Export.xml [options]

Examples:
  sic2lp -db SafeInCloud_2017-03-19.xml -p "Credit Cards,Banking,Insurance" -logtostderr -v 5
  sic2lp -db SafeInCloud_2017-03-19.xml -d "Untagged" -p "Credit Cards,Banking,Insurance"
  sic2lp -db SafeInCloud_2017-03-19.xml -d "Imported (SafeInCloud)" -logtostderr -v 5
  sic2lp -db SafeInCloud_2017-03-19.xml -p "Accounting,Software,Inventor" -logtostderr -v 3

Available flags:
  -db string
        An Exported SafeInCloud.xml path and filename.
  -f string
        Default folder of unlabelled cards. (default "Imported")
  -p string
        Priority folder of labels to assign in order (comma delimited).

Logging Options:
  -logtostderr
        log to standard error instead of files
  -v value
        log level for V logs

See below for tips on how to prepare your SafeInCloud for the best possible import.

Preparation

Below is a list of recommendations to prepare your SafeInCloud database for the best possible import.

  • Sites

Note that all SafeInCloud cards are 'tested' to see if they are a "Site", and if so are treated that way at LastPass. This means auto-login, form-fills, etc. In order for Sites to be used, all of the following are required for each specific card you want to login with:

Card's Title (will use the card's Website if blank)
Login (must be of type "login")
Password (must be of type "password")
Website (must be of type "website")

As long as the SafeInCloud field names and types match above, it will designated as a Site for auto-login at LastPass.

Otherwise, the card will be created as a SecureNote (see below).

  • Card Labels

LastPass does not have a concept of Labels or Tags. Instead, they have a hierical structure of "Folders" with sub folders. (note: as of time of writing, LastPass does not support sub-folders on import). Therefore, we must convert SafeInCloud's Labels to some structured form of Folders.

SafeInCloud's Card Labels are used for two things: What folder to import into, and if the card is to be treated as a SecureNote what NoteType to use.

Overall, you can only import into a single Folder at LastPass. To determine what that LastPass folder is to import into, we use some opinionated logic.

The code looks at the CLI flag option of "-p" to determine what label will be assigned the primary folder. It does this in order assigned to this param by iterating the primary folder list to see if the Card is assigned one of the labels. The first match wins.

You most likely want to set the preferred "Google" first and leave more generic labels "Banking,Personal" last. That way, your preferred label is used first.

Let's take an example: You have a card labelled with Banking, Personal and Google. You want cards labelled like this to be imported into Google and then Banking, but nothing in a Personal folder at LastPass (everything is Personal, right?). Therefore, your flag to pass on the CLI would be:

sic2lp ... -p "Google,Banking"

This would import any cards that are labelled Google into the "Google" folder at LastPass, regardless of any other labels they may have.

Lastly, if the card's label is not in the PriorityFolders slice then we'll just use the first one we find - prefixed with the specified "DefaultFolder - " to make it easier to sort. Taking our earlier example, any cards labelled Personal would be imported into the "Imported - Personal" generic folder as "Imported" is the default folder name used (see CLI options to change).

Therefore, set your SafeInCloud card labels ahead of time so that this tool can import them into the proper Folder at LastPass, as well as the proper SecureNote NoteType if it is not a site.

  • SecureNotes

Below are the current labels this tool recognizes and what SecureNote NoteType it will use.

SafeInCloud Label -> LastPass SecureNote Type
-----------------    ------------------------
"Credit Cards"    -> "NoteType:Credit Card"
"Banking"         -> "NoteType:Bank Account"
"Databases"       -> "NoteType:Database"
"Licenses"        -> "NoteType:Driver's License"
"Insurance"       -> "NoteType:Insurance"
"Membership"      -> "NoteType:Membership"
"Passport"        -> "NoteType:Passport"
"Servers"         -> "NoteType:Server"
"Software"        -> "NoteType:Software License"

There are also more Secure Note types and they can be added by customizing the code. Or, just open an issue and I'll try to add it for you.

To reap the full benefits of these matches, a more indepth update would be to go into each Card and change their Field names to what LastPass expects. See below for "Card Fields."

  • Card Fields

LastPass does not have the concept of "Field Names" or custom name/value items that we can add at SafeInCloud. Instead, LastPass SecureNotes uses plain text entries prefixed with specific names for certain SecureNote types.

Start by downloading a list of LastPass's SecureNote Types (this is not all of them!):

https://helpdesk.lastpass.com/wp-content/uploads/Import_format_Secure_Note1.zip

For a complete list, log into your LastPass account and review the Secure Note types.

For example, the Bank_Account example uses the format of:

NoteType:Bank Account
Bank Name:
Account Type:
Routing Number:
Account Number:

This tool handles the first one, NoteType:Bank Account, for you. But the other fields are clear text.

During importing, we have the opportunity to fill these out properly so that our SafeInCloud data does not end up in a blob in the Extra section of all notes.

To do this, we have to change each card's fields to match the expected Field Name.

For example, in my SafeInCloud I created a Banking label and had the following addition fields: Account #, Routing, Checking #, Saving #, etc. To convert these to LastPass, I had to rename these fields:

"Account #"  -> "Login"
"Routing"    -> "Routing Number"
"Checking #" -> "Account Number"
"Saving #    -> "Savings Number"

Even though only two of these four fields would match, the Extras section at LastPass will neatly show the other two in a common format.

Note: SafeInCloud's "Template" feature is only good for creating new cards, not for renaming fields of existing cards. I know, that would have been much easier if it did follow a relational model.

Customization

You can modify the behavior by editing the source code and running the tool on your location machine. All source is located in a single file to make it easy for newcomers (not my typical code arrangement; but, it is easy to follow).

1 - Download and install GoLang: https://golang.org/dl/

2 - Checkout the sourcecode with GoLang:

go get github.com/eduncan911/sic2lp.git

3 - Change directory and open the main.go script with your favorite editor:

cd $HOME/go/src/github.com/eduncan911/sic2lp
open main.go

cd %USERPROFILE%\go\src\github.com\eduncan911\sic2lp
notepad main.go

4 - Modify the source as needed.

5 - Run the code with your changes:

go run main.go -db <SafeInCloud_Export.xml> -p "Label1,Label2" -logtostderr -v 5

This is a verbose output command to help with debugging.

Release Notes

1.0.0

- Initial release.

Generated by godoc2ghmd

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