Bitwarden has an “identity category” where you can fit many of those things, and many of your examples are literally fancy user and/or password combinations, which can be stored in the “standard” category (SSH or API credentials, crypto wallets 😅), and the fancier things can be stored as secure notes, which obviously do exist in Bitwarden too.
Not a feature that would make me avoid an open source security solution.
Maybe you should revisit Bitwarden… it’s really great.
Bitwarden has an “identity category” where you can fit many of those things, and many of your examples are literally fancy user and/or password combinations, which can be stored in the “standard” category (SSH or API credentials, crypto wallets 😅), and the fancier things can be stored as secure notes, which obviously do exist in Bitwarden too.
Not a feature that would make me avoid an open source security solution.
Maybe you should revisit Bitwarden… it’s really great.