Vaultwarden’s readme says that it supports the Bitwarden Emergency Access feature. Why not use that?
[mətiːəs] he/him. Uninvited child of Whadjuk Noongar boodja. Gaming. Underwater photography. Sustainability. Self-hosted software. Occasionally knitting. FAIR research data. Metadata. Running from nothing.
Vaultwarden’s readme says that it supports the Bitwarden Emergency Access feature. Why not use that?
Sorry, you didn’t go into any detail about why you can’t automate the process of detecting changes in web pages, so I’m going to offer an automation suggestion anyway:
Like some others, I have separate storage and compute servers.
The data directory is an NFS share on my storage server and I run Nextcloud in docker on my compute server.
I have the NFS share defined as a volume of type nfs in the docker compose, mounted to /var/www/html/data. Nextcloud itself just treats it like a local directory.
I use it to synchronise RetroArch save states across my devices - desktop PC, Android TV, and Android handheld.
I’ve done a couple of host migrations since using Docker for all my services.
I don’t even bother with database dumps or anything like that, I copy my compose files and mapped directories, being sure to preserve permissions, and all my services come back up without any issues.
As a card-carrying librarian, I recommend using Zotero as a client with a WebDAV backend (I use Nextcloud).
If you’re studying or writing anything in which you need to cite your sources, Zotero is excellent and has integrations with many word processors. I’m pretty sure it can output your references as BibTeX if you’re in one of the disciplines that uses LaTeX.