By the way, this can be triaged by doing the following on the next boot
(if you could get access, but it was just not the key you expected i.e.
in my case)
cryptsetup -y luksAddKey /dev/sda[x]
sudo cryptsetup luksRemoveKey /dev/sda[x] 0
Check with:
sudo cryptsetup luksDump /dev/sda5
--
You rec
On my system, I chose English UK keyboard. My account password was
successfully set to something with a @ in it. However, when I supplied
the same password to the boot encryption prompt, it read that key as a
", and vice versa (i.e. the boot encryption prompt was working on a US
layout).
--
You
On my system, I chose English UK keyboard. My account password was
successfully set to something with a @ in it. However, when I supplied
the same password to the boot encryption prompt, it read that key as a
", and vice versa (i.e. the boot encryption prompt was working on a US
layout).
My /etc/