Bitlocker alternative for puppy
Bitlocker alternative for puppy
Hi all,
is there any aplication that do what bitlocker in windows does, the lock the partitions or the whole hard disk. I know puppy can encrypt the OS partitions but how to do that for other partitions as well
regards,
memo
is there any aplication that do what bitlocker in windows does, the lock the partitions or the whole hard disk. I know puppy can encrypt the OS partitions but how to do that for other partitions as well
regards,
memo
Xanialpup 7.5 32 bit
IIRC, Xenial's devx packs cryptsetup, which may not be to your liking. Then there's GUI based VeraCrypt.
https://www.veracrypt.fr/en/Beginner%27 ... orial.html
https://www.thegeekstuff.com/2016/03/cr ... p-lukskey/
linux-hard-disk-encryption-with-luks-cryptsetup-command
Others may chime in....
https://www.veracrypt.fr/en/Beginner%27 ... orial.html
https://www.thegeekstuff.com/2016/03/cr ... p-lukskey/
linux-hard-disk-encryption-with-luks-cryptsetup-command
Others may chime in....
>>> Living with the immediacy of death helps you sort out your priorities. It helps you live a life less trivial <<<
- perdido
- Posts: 1528
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LUKS is in puppy and easy to use thanks to forum member jafdminSemme wrote: Others may chime in....
http://murga-linux.com/puppy/viewtopic.php?t=117984
Gui that has options to encrypt a disk, partition, or file and other stuff.
Ding Dong
PS - If you live somewhere the locals don't respect privacy, GET OUT! Seriously.
And careful play'in around with these things, you're liable to LOCK YOURSELF OUT!
And careful play'in around with these things, you're liable to LOCK YOURSELF OUT!
Can somebody explain to me what the point of all this encryption is? From what I understand, encryption makes system recovery much, much harder, so, er......???
>>> Living with the immediacy of death helps you sort out your priorities. It helps you live a life less trivial <<<
thanks for the suggesiton, I am reading the attached pdf and I have a couple of questions;perdido wrote:LUKS is in puppy and easy to use thanks to forum member jafdminSemme wrote: Others may chime in....
http://murga-linux.com/puppy/viewtopic.php?t=117984
Gui that has options to encrypt a disk, partition, or file and other stuff.
Ding Dong
*what a loop device mean
*does it formate the partition before locking the partiiotn, if that is the case what if the partition has already data on it?
regards,
Xanialpup 7.5 32 bit
I did not get it, would you elaborate?Semme wrote:PS - If you live somewhere the locals don't respect privacy, GET OUT! Seriously.
And careful play'in around with these things, you're liable to LOCK YOURSELF OUT!Can somebody explain to me what the point of all this encryption is? From what I understand, encryption makes system recovery much, much harder, so, er......???
Xanialpup 7.5 32 bit
@memo
"Bitlocker" is the Microsoft brand name for their hard disk encryption system. It doesn't really "lock" anything, it just encrypts it.
In Linux, a loop device is a pseudo-device that makes a file accessible as a block device (like a disk).
When LUKS first creates an encrypted object, it overwrites it's contents creating the encrypted container. That encrypted container is then formatted with the desired filesystem (fat32, EXT, etc ..) producing a shiny new empty encrypted volume.
Soo ... Encrypting a volume is a DESTRUCTIVE process. If you are encrypting a disk, it overwrites the partition table and all partitions. If you are encrypting a partition, it wipes out the existing partition information and contents.
@Semme was pointing out that the intended nature of encrypted volumes is that they are inherently resistant to recovery efforts. DON'T lose your password, and ALWAYS back up the headers!
And last of all .. Peoples, please remember to back up your data, Ok?
.
"Bitlocker" is the Microsoft brand name for their hard disk encryption system. It doesn't really "lock" anything, it just encrypts it.
In Linux, a loop device is a pseudo-device that makes a file accessible as a block device (like a disk).
When LUKS first creates an encrypted object, it overwrites it's contents creating the encrypted container. That encrypted container is then formatted with the desired filesystem (fat32, EXT, etc ..) producing a shiny new empty encrypted volume.
Soo ... Encrypting a volume is a DESTRUCTIVE process. If you are encrypting a disk, it overwrites the partition table and all partitions. If you are encrypting a partition, it wipes out the existing partition information and contents.
@Semme was pointing out that the intended nature of encrypted volumes is that they are inherently resistant to recovery efforts. DON'T lose your password, and ALWAYS back up the headers!
And last of all .. Peoples, please remember to back up your data, Ok?
.
Works well if you pay attention: Create a private encrypted folder with eCryptfsAs mentioned in the summary eCryptfs does not require special on-disk storage allocation effort, such as a separate partition or pre-allocated space. Instead, you can mount eCryptfs on top of any single directory to protect it. That includes, for example, a user's entire home directory or single dedicated directories within it. All cryptographic metadata is stored in the headers of files, so encrypted data can be easily moved, stored for backup and recovered. There are other advantages, but there are also drawbacks, for instance eCryptfs is not suitable for encrypting complete partitions which also means you cannot protect swap space with it (but you can, of course, combine it with Dm-crypt / Swap encryption). If you are just starting to set up disk encryption, swap encryption and other points to consider are covered in Data-at-rest encryption#Preparation.
Ref.
With a little [effort]creativity[/effort] you could script yourself a launcher.
>>> Living with the immediacy of death helps you sort out your priorities. It helps you live a life less trivial <<<