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    Mystery Encrypted Files

    In my /home directory is a link entry, ".Private". It points to a directory containing files whose names begin with, "ENCRYPTFS_FNEK_ENCRYPTED... Some of these files bear very recent time stamps, like today's date. I don't remember ever setting up an encrypted file system, much less adding entries today. The OS (Lucid) seems to operate flawlessly. What's going on

    #2
    Re: Mystery Encrypted Files

    I can find no .Private link in my /home..........what is the path to the DIR contaning the ENCRYPTFS_FNEK_ENCRYPTED files?



    VINNY
    i7 4core HT 8MB L3 2.9GHz
    16GB RAM
    Nvidia GTX 860M 4GB RAM 1152 cuda cores

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      #3
      Re: Mystery Encrypted Files

      did you install with an encrypted /home ?

      VINNY
      i7 4core HT 8MB L3 2.9GHz
      16GB RAM
      Nvidia GTX 860M 4GB RAM 1152 cuda cores

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        #4
        Re: Mystery Encrypted Files

        Path is /home/.Private. Did not install encrypted /home directory.

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          #5
          Re: Mystery Encrypted Files

          I think this is related to an encrypted directory, but just not being used. This page has related information including the following:

          How to Remove an Encrypted Private Directory Setup

          Perhaps an Encrypted Private Directory is not for you. To remove this setup:

          Ensure that you have moved all relevant data out of your ~/Private directory
          Unmount your encrypted private directory

          $ ecryptfs-umount-private
          Make ~/Private writable again

          $ chmod 700 ~/Private

          Remove ~/Private, ~/.Private, ~/.ecryptfs (Note: THIS IS VERY PERMANENT)

          $ rm -rf ~/Private ~/.Private ~/.ecryptfs
          Uninstall the utilities

          $ sudo apt-get remove ecryptfs-utils libecryptfs0
          Please do not blame me if this is wrong or irrelevant here. I haven't encountered this situation for myself.

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            #6
            Re: Mystery Encrypted Files

            Here is a partial screenshot of what I'm seeing in /home/paul/.Private --
            Attached Files

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              #7
              Re: Mystery Encrypted Files

              Be careful, if the drive IS encrypted, and I believe it is, you (in theory) could loose access to your data. If you want to try and undo this, be sure to first back up EVERYTHING in your home dir first, while your files are accessible to you.

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                #8
                Re: Mystery Encrypted Files

                This is a dual-boot (Win7/Lucid) machine. My Win7 half of the installation has no trouble reading my data files, which are shared with Lucid. So I don't think the drive is encrypted.

                One further bit of info -- the largest FILE (not directory) which shows up in /home/paul/.Private always seems to be 7 MB in size, and its time stamp is updated EVERY MINUTE. Something (maybe connected with the SLEEP feature?) is continually writing to this file.

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                  #9
                  Re: Mystery Encrypted Files

                  those are your actual files from your $HOME, and as such there will be something updating, and I would imagine there has to be some syncing

                  I have my main laptop encrypted, and it looks and acts exactly as you describe, while the other 2 systems have never had encryption done at any point, and do not have these directories.

                  How are you accessing your $HOME dir from Windows? and can you see the hidden dirs in there? Such as .kde, etc.

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                    #10
                    Re: Mystery Encrypted Files

                    I said that my Win7 half of the installation has no trouble reading my data files, which are shared with Lucid. This is true, but I failed to realize that the shared data files are on an NTFS partition, which both OSs can read. So, you may be right in surmising that my EXT4 Lucid partition is encrypted. If this is so, the question becomes whether to 1) do nothing and live with it, or 2) Try to learn the encryption key, or 3) try to unencrypt the partition. Any advice?

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                      #11
                      Re: Mystery Encrypted Files

                      Originally posted by claydoh
                      Be careful, if the drive IS encrypted, and I believe it is, you (in theory) could loose access to your data. If you want to try and undo this, be sure to first back up EVERYTHING in your home dir first, while your files are accessible to you.
                      ^ This. No matter how this happened, even if you can discover the decryption key, you still need verified reliable backups of all your important data.
                      Welcome newbies!
                      Verify the ISO
                      Kubuntu's documentation

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                        #12
                        Re: Mystery Encrypted Files

                        IF your $HOME directory (/home/<your-username>) is encrypted, then by logging in, everything there has been decrypted already. So if you want to undo ,or wipe clean and start with a fresh $HOME, then all you need to do is copy everything just like you normally would. While you are logged in, everything acts like it normally would.

                        The page Ole Juul linked to lists methods to recover data, I believe the decryption passphrase is the login passphrase in Lucid.l Though I have never attempted to recover date this way, I DID once backup and wipe my $HOME to start fresh, but not deleting the .encryptfs folder as I use it for my dual boot with Maverick. I installed as usual, enabling encryption on my $HOME, using the same username and password as before, but with fresh $HOME. I logged in, and all my data was still there as I did not delete the /.encryptfs/claydoh folder.

                        So I think recovering data (if needed) can be done using the methods in that link, but it there is peace-of-mind in having an other set of readable files just in case

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