Last updated on September 30, 2020 by Dan Nanni
Suppose you have a portable USB drive to use with your Linux system. If you are security conscious, you may want to encrypt your USB drive, so that no one else tamper with content in your USB drive. There are many options to protect the drive with encryption. For example, you can encrypt particular files or directories using eCryptFS. You can also turn to full disk encryption. In particular, you can use dm-crypt
and LUKS, which together provide transparent encryption of block devices based on device mapper subsystem.
In this tutorial, I will describe how to set up a disk partition encrypted by dm-crypt
+LUKS on Linux.
dm-crypt
on LinuxTo encrypt a partition using dm-crypt
+LUKS on Linux, install the following.
$ sudo apt-get install cryptsetup
$ sudo yum install cryptsetup
Using fdisk
, create a new partition to encrypt as follows. In this example, I assume that /dev/sdb
is mapped to your hard drive to encrypt.
A newly created partition to use with LUKS is mapped to /dev/sdb1
. Initialize this partition by using cryptsetup
command. This command will overwrite the partition with random data, and prompt you for an initial passphrase to use.
$ sudo cryptsetup --verbose --verify-passphrase luksFormat /dev/sdb1
You can check LUKS configuration of the partition by running the following command, which will dump LUKS header information.
$ sudo cryptsetup luksDump /dev/sdb1
LUKS header information for /dev/sdb1 Version: 1 Cipher name: aes Cipher mode: cbc-essiv:sha256 Hash spec: sha1 Payload offset: 4096 MK bits: 256 MK digest: 18 1d 6d 3e e9 44 2a fe bf 67 78 8f aa 02 7f 91 2a f4 f2 17 MK salt: 26 cc 29 9f 0b 7d ea ff 44 9f fe 34 91 40 6e 9b af 1e bd 8f d0 d2 1c 3a 70 30 35 5f 2d 49 9a 95 MK iterations: 222875 UUID: 5acc17e0-80be-40ba-beae-626e47b57379 Key Slot 0: ENABLED Iterations: 891733 Salt: 26 20 29 39 a5 1d 02 7b ca 8c bd 18 bc 29 64 7e 28 dc 06 65 78 0e 16 95 1a 67 14 66 12 2d a3 c1 Key material offset: 8 AF stripes: 4000 Key Slot 1: DISABLED Key Slot 2: DISABLED Key Slot 3: DISABLED Key Slot 4: DISABLED Key Slot 5: DISABLED Key Slot 6: DISABLED Key Slot 7: DISABLED
Next, open the LUKS partition as follows.
$ sudo cryptsetup luksOpen /dev/sdb1 sdb1
The above command will ask you to enter a passphrase. Once the LUKS partition is successfully opened with a correct passphrase, the encrypted partition will be mapped to /dev/mapper/sdb1
. To check if this block device is created successfully, use this command:
$ sudo fdisk -l
Disk /dev/mapper/sdb1: 1067 MB, 1067156992 bytes 255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 129 cylinders Units = cylinders of 16065 * 512 = 8225280 bytes Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes Disk identifier: 0x7b0402f6
Finally, you can create a new filesystem on /dev/mapper/sdb1
, and mount it on your Linux system:
$ sudo mkfs.ext3 /dev/mapper/sdb1 $ sudo mount /dev/mapper/sdb1 /mnt
If you want to have your LUKS-encrypted partition mounted automatically upon boot, follow this procedure.
First, create a randomly generated key file used to open the encrypted partition during boot sequence. Make this key file readable by the root only.
$ sudo dd if=/dev/urandom of=/root/key.sdb1 bs=1024 count=4 $ sudo chmod 400 /root/key.sdb1
Add the key file to LUKS configuration:
$ sudo cryptsetup luksAddKey /dev/sdb1 /root/key.sdb1
Verify that the key file has been successfully added:
$ sudo cryptsetup luksDump /dev/sdb1
Key Slot 0: ENABLED Iterations: 891733 Salt: 26 20 29 39 a5 1d 02 7b ca 8c bd 18 bc 29 64 7e 28 dc 06 65 78 0e 16 95 1a 67 14 66 12 2d a3 c1 Key material offset: 8 AF stripes: 4000 Key Slot 1: ENABLED Iterations: 404242 Salt: 9d b9 05 d4 06 be 8c db 74 bd cb 59 de 9a 95 8a 91 8c 09 5d 91 5f 0a e6 b5 86 3c 81 73 22 e1 db Key material offset: 264 AF stripes: 4000
As you can see above, the key slot 1 has been occupied with the key file.
Next, obtain the UUID of the encrypted block device.
$ sudo cryptsetup luksUUID /dev/sdb1
5acc17e0-80be-40ba-beae-626e47b57379
Now, edit /etc/crypttab
to add the following entry.
$ sudo vi /etc/crypttab
sdb1 /dev/disk/by-uuid/5acc17e0-80be-40ba-beae-626e47b57379 /root/key.sdb1 luks
The format of the entry in /etc/crypttab
is as follows.
<name of encrypted block device> /dev/disk/by-uuid/<UUID of block device> <location of key file> luks
Finally, create a mount point, and edit /etc/fstab
to add mount point information:
$ sudo mkdir /mnt_sdb1 $ sudo vi /etc/fstab
/dev/mapper/sdb1 /mnt_sdb1 ext3
Reboot now. The encrypted partition should be auto-mounted upon boot up.
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