Motus is a command-line application that makes generating secure passwords a breeze.
Inspired by the user experience of the 1Password password generator, motus focuses on providing a simple and elegant user interface with sane defaults and comprehensive options. By default, motus copies the generated password to your clipboard, making it even more convenient to use.
- Simple and elegant user interface: motus is designed to be easy to use and understand, and makes it difficult to generate insecure passwords.
- Generate secure memorable passwords: motus uses the EFF's wordlist to generate secure and memorable passwords
- Generate random passwords with optional number and symbol inclusion
- Generate PINs with customizable length
- Security analysis: the
--analyze
option provides a security analysis of the generated password, ensuring optimal password strength. - Sane defaults
- Clipboard integration for easy password usage
- Flexible customization options
Using Homebrew:
brew tap oleiade/tap
brew install motus
Add the repository and install motus:
# Download and install the repository's GPG key
curl -fsSL https://oleiade.github.io/deb/oleiade-archive-keyring.gpg | \
gpg --dearmor | \
sudo tee /usr/share/keyrings/oleiade-archive-keyring.gpg > /dev/null
# Add the repository to your system's sources
echo "deb [signed-by=/usr/share/keyrings/oleiade-archive-keyring.gpg] https://oleiade.github.io/deb stable main" \
sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/oleiade.list > /dev/null
# Update your sources
apt update
# Install motus
apt install motus
Alternatively, you can install using Cargo:
cargo install motus
> motus --help
Motus is a command-line tool for generating secure, random, and memorable passwords as well as PIN codes.
Usage: motus [OPTIONS] <COMMAND>
Commands:
memorable
Generate a human-friendly memorable password
random
Generate a random password with specified complexity
pin
Generate a random numeric PIN code
help
Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)
Options:
--no-clipboard
Disable automatic copying of generated password to clipboard
-o, --output <OUTPUT>
Output the generated password in a specified format
[default: text]
[possible values: text, json]
--analyze
Display a safety analysis along the generated password
--seed <SEED>
Seed value for deterministic password generation (for testing purposes)
-h, --help
Print help (see a summary with '-h')
-V, --version
Print version
> motus memorable
fossil abreast overplant commute dish
# Or customize the password generation
> motus memorable --words 7 --separator numbers-and-symbols --capitalize
Goes$Stood3Paving(Tipoff$Settle*Flip3Scone
> motus random
UDrZrJJTYElWeOFHZmfp
# Or customize the password generation
> motus random --characters 42 --numbers --symbols
6HdwMjKQPYE3scIBlCps&1Ir5R8lQ85eIVtF!fpUSD
> motus pin
1234421
# Or customize the size of the PIN
> motus pin --numbers 9
347751411
> motus --output json random
{"kind": "memorable", "password": "6HdwMjKQPYE3scIBlCps&1Ir5R8lQ85eIVtF!fpUSD"}
We welcome contributions to the project. Feel free to submit issues, suggest new features, or create pull requests to help improve motus.
motus is distributed under the AGPL-3.0 license.
motus used to be a tv game that I would call the ancestor of Wordle. Players had to guess words of a given size, and would pick up balls from a cup to decide how each round would move along. They would make that very distinct move to scramble the balls around every time, with a very distinct sound. When starting this project, I thought of the process of generating passwords as this comforting and satisfying act of diving into a huge cup full of numbered balls, and the childish feeling of it. This project is named in memory of Motus.