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I recently tried adding a FIDO2-Device as an unlocking method to the LUKS2 partition containing my Fedora install. When trying to do this, I stumbled upon the here edited man files detailing how to do this. I however could not unlock my partition with my FIDO2-Device after editing /etc/crypttab and rebooting. As I found out after a while, I needed to regenerate / update my currently running / used initramfs (https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/705809). This would have most likely solved itself for me with the next kernel update install (as far as I understand). So I propose changing the files edited here to recommend or at least inform the user about this.
21 lines
914 B
Bash
21 lines
914 B
Bash
# SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT-0
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# Enroll the TPM2 security chip in the LUKS2 volume, and bind it to PCR 7
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# only. Replace /dev/sdXn by the partition to use (e.g. /dev/sda1).
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sudo systemd-cryptenroll --tpm2-device=auto --tpm2-pcrs=7 /dev/sdXn
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# Test: Let's run systemd-cryptsetup to test if this worked.
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sudo /usr/lib/systemd/systemd-cryptsetup attach mytest /dev/sdXn - tpm2-device=auto
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# If that worked, let's now add the same line persistently to /etc/crypttab,
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# for the future.
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sudo bash -c 'echo "mytest /dev/sdXn - tpm2-device=auto" >>/etc/crypttab'
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# Depending on your distribution and encryption setup, you may need
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# to manually regenerate your initramfs to be able to use
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# a TPM2 security chip to unlock the partition during early boot.
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# More information at https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/705809
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# On Fedora based systems:
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sudo dracut --force
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# On Debian based systems:
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sudo update-initramfs -u
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