
See this LastPass FAQ on locating your Chrome extension database. Use the LastPass extension for Chrome, and the extension database file is your vault file. What is "vault file" and how do I find/get it? Option 1: Chrome extension database ( Recommended) LastPass does not encrypt everything in your vault.īy not entering your master password, you can see what is unencrypted, and make sure no private data is unintentionally leaked. !ztYeRZRUvd/nRq9IuNn8ug=|G7ikJAmh/maa+PR3sQg+NL8ixNR0LKr73/xfKU6wV6Q=, orį3TQMseR/by+2fMJmgIJjjF+2QLmWXsHLeO4Z3Fd5OY= Then any encrypted data would be exported in the format of

You may opt to not enter your master password. Sensitive data should never be saved on disk unencrypted. Ideally, the output directory should be a new or empty directory residing on an encrypted drive or a RAM disk. Lpparser works 100% locally and makes absolutely no use of Internet connections. It will prompt you to enter the path of your vault file, path of the output directory, LastPass account e-mail, (potentially) password iterations, and master password.

Abridged form fields are already included in Sites_and_SecureNotes.csv.

This script does NOT follow secure coding practices, and is NOT meant to withstand ANY kind of attacks.ĭo NOT use this script if you're paranoid. Only use this script on a trusted / secure computer!
