
If I can and if it works, I'll update this issue. Except I didn't write down the command I used for others apps, so I'll have to find it back. Since it's not the only application which has had this issue after the policy change, I know there's a trick using an "adb" command to restore full file access to a specific application. So when I try to open the database again via the "CHANGE DATABASE" button, I can navigate to its parent folder, but it appears empty. The user interface is based on Keepassdroid (by Brian Pellin), ported from Java to Mono for Android. kdbx-files, the database format used by the popular KeePass 2.x Password Safe for Windows and other desktop operating systems. But password databases aren't media files. Aplikasi Teratas Seperti AES Inspector - Cipher Tool untuk Android, unduh aplikasi alternatif terbaik untuk AES Inspector termasuk BusyBox, OpenKeychain, FastHub, dan banyak lagi. Keepass2Android is an open source password manager application for Android. I suspect it is related to Google's change of policy regarding file access: looking at the permissions for Keepass2Android, I can see it has access to media files. I also get a hint that I can use the local backup, but that doesn't help, as the database has changed since the backup was done. The database is in a subfolder of the "Documents" folder in the phone's internal storage, and when trying to open it, I get a message "An error occured: access to path /storage/emulated/0/Documents/-/-.kdbx is denied". Using version 1.0e-r9, I can no more open my database shared among several devices via SyncThing.
