Name¶
mount.crypt - mount a dm-crypt encrypted volume
Syntax¶
mount.crypt [
-nrv] [
-o options]
device
directory
Options¶
- -o options
- Set further mount options. mount.crypt will take out its
own options it recognizes and passes any remaining options on to the
underlying mount program. See below for possible options.
- -n
- Do not update /etc/mtab. Note that this makes it impossible
to unmount the volume by naming the container - you will have to pass the
mountpoint to umount.crypt.
- -r
- Set up the loop device (if necessary) and crypto device in
read-only mode. (The mount itself will necessarily also be read-only.)
Note that doing a remount using `mount /mnt -o remount,rw` will not
make the mount readwrite. The crypto and loop devices will have to be
disassociated first.
- -v
- Turn on debugging and be a bit more verbose.
Mount options¶
- cipher
- The cryptsetup cipher used for the encrypted volume. This
option is mandatory for PLAIN (non-LUKS) volumes. pmt-ehd(8) defaults to
creating volumes with "aes-cbc-essiv:sha256" as a cipher.
- crypto_name
- Select the name for the crypto device (optional). This
option is currently only usable with dm-crypt systems.
- fsck
- Run fsck on the container before mounting it.
- fsk_cipher
- The OpenSSL cipher used for the filesystem key. The special
keyword "none" can be used to bypass decryption and pass the
file contents directly to libcryptsetup.
- fsk_hash
- The OpenSSL hash used for producing key and IV.
- fstype
- The exact type of filesystem in the encrypted container.
The default is to let the kernel autodetect.
- hash
- The cryptsetup hash used for the encrypted volume. This
defaults to no hashing, because pam_mount assumes EHD volumes with strong
and simple fskey generation.
- keyfile
- The path to the key file. This option is mandatory for
"normal" crypto volumes and should not be used for LUKS
volumes.
- remount
- Causes the filesystem to be remounted with new options.
Note that mount.crypt cannot switch the underlying loop device (if
applies) or the crypto device between read-only and read-write once it is
created; only the actual filesystem mount can be changed, with limits. If
the loop device is read-only, the crypto device will be read-only, and
changing the mount to read-write is impossible. Similarly, going from rw
to ro will only mark the mount read-only, but not the crypto or loop
device, thus making it impossible to set the filesystem the crypto
container is located on to read-only.
- ro
- Same as the -r option.
- verbose
- Same as the -v option.
Obsolete mount options¶
This section is provided for reference.
- loop
- This option used to set up a loop device, because
cryptsetup(8) expects a block device. The option is ignored because
mount.crypt can figure this out on its own.