| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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The GNU/Linux installation guides call 'cryptomount -a', which ignores
any SOURCE parameter given and mounts all encrypted volumes regardless.
To avoid confusion I removed the parameter and added a small note
regarding mounting only specific partitions.
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It was annoying me.
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These instructions were dangerous. I was provided with them by a
user who found them, and I thought that it would be safe to allow
access to boot the HDD so long as the OS was encrypted. However,
this is not the point. With that option unrestricted, anyone with
physical access could replace the HDD with another LUKS-encrypted
one with the same set up (just a different system, different key,
different passphrase, etc) and now they are able to run their own
code on that laptop. This *is* dangerous. There is a lot that an
attacker can do to the laptop if they are able to boot an OS on it!
Basically, Francis Rowe was being foolish to add these instructions.
Now he's wised up a bit.
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It just scared people, and wasn't very useful advice.
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It's useless. Get rid of it.
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While updating is a good practise when installing a new distro, it
is completely irrelevant for this tutorial. This tutorial is
using the net install method which installs the latest updates
automatically, anyway.
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Cleanup was long overdue. Old structure was messy and inefficient.
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