from small one page howto to huge articles all in one place
 

search text in:





Poll
Which filesystem do you use?






poll results

Last additions:
using iotop to find disk usage hogs

using iotop to find disk usage hogs

words:

887

views:

187330

userrating:

average rating: 1.7 (102 votes) (1=very good 6=terrible)


May 25th. 2007:
Words

486

Views

250577

why adblockers are bad


Workaround and fixes for the current Core Dump Handling vulnerability affected kernels

Workaround and fixes for the current Core Dump Handling vulnerability affected kernels

words:

161

views:

137936

userrating:

average rating: 1.4 (42 votes) (1=very good 6=terrible)


April, 26th. 2006:

Druckversion . pdf icon
You are here: System->Security

Howto encrypt your filesystems


by xiando (DrEvil)

A loopback device is a quick nice way to make a encrypted filesystem.

If you have compiled loopback and cryptoloop support as a module, you need to load these first:

modprobe loop;modprobe cryptoloop;modprobe cipher-aes

Basically you run:

  losetup -e aes /dev/loop0 /dev/partition

You will be asked for a password. Then
  mkfs -t ext3 /dev/loop0
mount /dev/loop0 /path/to/mount

thanks to
<|DrEvil|>
alternatively, you can use a file instead of a whole partition:
  dd if=/dev/zero of=/file bs=1k count=100
losetup -e aes /dev/loop0 /file
mkfs -t ext3 /dev/loop0
mount /dev/loop0 /path/to/mount


rate this article:
current rating: average rating: 1.5 (36 votes) (1=very good 6=terrible)
Your rating:
Very good (1) Good (2) ok (3) average (4) bad (5) terrible (6)

back





Support us on Content Nation
rdf newsfeed | rss newsfeed | Atom newsfeed
- Powered by LeopardCMS - Running on Gentoo -
Copyright 2004-2020 Sascha Nitsch Unternehmensberatung GmbH
Valid XHTML1.1 : Valid CSS : buttonmaker
- Level Triple-A Conformance to Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 -
- Copyright and legal notices -
Time to create this page: 65.8 ms