I changed it using root account, since like you correctly told
init=/bin/bash dropped me directly to root account.
2012/9/2 John Moser :
> did you change your password from your account or using the root account?
>
> It looks like pam actually stores encryption keys in /var/lib/ somewhere and
> ca
did you change your password from your account or using the root account?
It looks like pam actually stores encryption keys in /var/lib/ somewhere
and can re-cypher them. That only works if you enter the previous
password when changing passwords, though (which I hadn't considered,
since norma
Hi John,
I appreciate your fast answer!
So what can I do to prevent this default behaviour? e.g if password
gets changed data is unreadable unless to have the secret key?
Wouldn't this be a more reasonable default?
Best regards,
Damian
2012/9/2 John Moser :
> Yes that would indicate that there's
Hi folks,
I just did an ubuntu 12.04 fresh install and I wanted to test
something in ecryptfs. So basically I selected during install to
require password to login and to encrypt home folder. I logged in and
created secret.txt on my desktop and shut down. I booted up again but
in bootloader I appen