Hi,
I've recently tried to move to Kubuntu 16.04, and find there are issues with the encryption process.
1) the installer does not encrypt at all besides when using the whole disk setup. This option only provides the preset partition types and sizes, with no control other than just the passphrase. Secondly, when I have tried to mount an encrypted drive this way to merge data, it always fails, meaning that there is no way to recover any data if the main partitioning fails. I'm not a fan of this approach.
2) the manual method - notably for Kubuntu - does not actually work, and crashes the installer. The step where the passphrase is entered has been borked since 12.10 at least, and it doesn't seem like there is any desire to fix it [five years?]
3) if encryption is used in 16.04 - and possibly later - every *buntu flavor, installing proprietary Nvidia drivers causes boot crashes at the passphrase prompt.
I'm wondering how many people here have encountered problems trying to encrypt partitions when installing Kubuntu, as the installer seems to never allow this, and what the general sentiment is for encryption using Kubuntu, especially at install.
I like to use encrypted partitions just for the security and added protection. I also like having a separate /home partition for copying data from drive to drive as I upgrade along the way.
I've looked for info on how to do an encrypted install with partitions in *buntu, and either my hardware is just the wrong setup [tried on multiple machines - hp and dell] or the installer has issues. I finally managed to get an encrypted / partition without the whole drive by installing Ubuntu one one partition [creating 2 crypto partitions causes the installer to crash in at least Ubuntu and Xubuntu as I've tried both installers] and then going back and creating an encrypted partition by hand for /home. That works but is not ideal.
The last good version where several encrypted partitions could be created was 12.04 alternative. I don't know what happened after that, but it seems encryption just hasn't been a priority.
Thanks for listening and for any discussion
I've recently tried to move to Kubuntu 16.04, and find there are issues with the encryption process.
1) the installer does not encrypt at all besides when using the whole disk setup. This option only provides the preset partition types and sizes, with no control other than just the passphrase. Secondly, when I have tried to mount an encrypted drive this way to merge data, it always fails, meaning that there is no way to recover any data if the main partitioning fails. I'm not a fan of this approach.
2) the manual method - notably for Kubuntu - does not actually work, and crashes the installer. The step where the passphrase is entered has been borked since 12.10 at least, and it doesn't seem like there is any desire to fix it [five years?]
3) if encryption is used in 16.04 - and possibly later - every *buntu flavor, installing proprietary Nvidia drivers causes boot crashes at the passphrase prompt.
I'm wondering how many people here have encountered problems trying to encrypt partitions when installing Kubuntu, as the installer seems to never allow this, and what the general sentiment is for encryption using Kubuntu, especially at install.
I like to use encrypted partitions just for the security and added protection. I also like having a separate /home partition for copying data from drive to drive as I upgrade along the way.
I've looked for info on how to do an encrypted install with partitions in *buntu, and either my hardware is just the wrong setup [tried on multiple machines - hp and dell] or the installer has issues. I finally managed to get an encrypted / partition without the whole drive by installing Ubuntu one one partition [creating 2 crypto partitions causes the installer to crash in at least Ubuntu and Xubuntu as I've tried both installers] and then going back and creating an encrypted partition by hand for /home. That works but is not ideal.
The last good version where several encrypted partitions could be created was 12.04 alternative. I don't know what happened after that, but it seems encryption just hasn't been a priority.
Thanks for listening and for any discussion
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