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CRYPTSETUP(8)		     Maintenance Commands		 CRYPTSETUP(8)

NAME
       cryptsetup  -  setup cryptographic volumes for dm-crypt (including LUKS
       extension)

SYNOPSIS
       cryptsetup <options> <action> <action args>

DESCRIPTION
       cryptsetup is used to conveniently setup dm-crypt managed device-mapper
       mappings.   For	basic (plain) dm-crypt mappings, there are four opera‐
       tions.

ACTIONS
       These strings are valid for <action>, followed by their <action args>:

       create <name> <device>

	      creates a mapping with <name> backed by device <device>.

	      <options> can be [--hash, --cipher, --verify-passphrase,	--key-
	      file, --key-size, --offset, --skip, --readonly]

       remove <name>

	      removes an existing mapping <name>.

       status <name>

	      reports the status for the mapping <name>.

       resize <name>

	      resizes an active mapping <name>.

	      If  --size (in sectors) is not specified, the size of the under‐
	      lying block device is used.

LUKS EXTENSION
       LUKS, Linux Unified Key Setup, is a standard for hard disk  encryption.
       It  standardizes	 a partition header, as well as the format of the bulk
       data. LUKS can manage multiple passwords, that can  be  revoked	effec‐
       tively and that are protected against dictionary attacks with PBKDF2.

       These are valid LUKS actions:

       luksFormat <device> [<key file>]

	      initializes  a  LUKS  partition and sets the initial key, either
	      via prompting or via <key file>.

	      <options> can  be	 [--cipher,  --verify-passphrase,  --key-size,
	      --key-slot,  --key-file  (takes  precedence over optional second
	      argument)].

       luksOpen <device> <name>

	      opens the LUKS partition <device> and sets up a  mapping	<name>
	      after  successful	 verification  of  the	supplied  key material
	      (either via key file by --key-file, or via prompting).

	      <options> can be [--key-file, --readonly].

       luksClose <name>

	      identical to remove.

       luksSuspend <name>

	      suspends active device (all IO operations are frozen) and	 wipes
	      encryption  key  from  kernel. Kernel version 2.6.19 or later is
	      required.

	      After that operation you have to	use  luksResume	 to  reinstate
	      encryption key (and resume device) or luksClose to remove mapped
	      device.

	      WARNING: never try to suspend device  where  is  the  cryptsetup
	      binary itself.

       luksResume <name>

	      Resumes suspended device and reinstates encryption key. You will
	      need provide passphrase identical	 to  luksOpen  command	(using
	      prompting or key file).

	      <options> can be [--key-file]

       luksAddKey <device> [<new key file>]

	      add  a  new  key	file/passphrase. An existing passphrase or key
	      file (via --key-file) must be supplied.  The key file  with  the
	      new material is supplied as a positional argument.

	      <options> can be [--key-file, --key-slot].

       luksRemoveKey <device> [<key file>]

	      remove supplied key or key file from LUKS device

       luksKillSlot <device> <key slot number>

	      wipe  key	 with  number <key slot> from LUKS device. A remaining
	      passphrase or key file (via --key-file) must be supplied.

	      <options> can be [--key-file].

       luksDelKey <device> <key slot number>

	      identical to luksKillSlot, but deprecated action name.

       luksUUID <device>

	      print UUID, if <device> has a LUKS header.

       isLuks <device>

	      returns true, if <device> is a LUKS partition. Otherwise, false.

       luksDump <device>

	      dumps the header information of a LUKS partition.

       luksHeaderBackup <device> --header-backup-file <file>

	      Stores binary backup of LUKS header and keyslot areas.

	      WARNING: Please  note  that  with	 this  backup  file  (and  old
	      passphrase   knowledge)	you  can  decrypt  data	 even  if  old
	      passphrase was wiped from real device.

	      Also note that anti-forensic splitter is not used during manipu‐
	      lation with backup file.

       luksHeaderRestore <device> --header-backup-file <file>

	      Restores	binary	backup	of  LUKS header and keyslot areas from
	      specified file.

	      WARNING: All the keyslot	areas  are  overwritten,  only	active
	      keyslots	form backup file are available after issuing this com‐
	      mand.

	      This command allows restoring header if device  do  not  contain
	      LUKS  header  or	if the master key size and data offset in LUKS
	      header on device match the backup file.

       For more information about  LUKS,  see  http://code.google.com/p/crypt‐
       setup/wiki/Specification

OPTIONS
       --verbose, -v
	      Print more verbose messages.

       --debug
	      Run in debug mode with full diagnostic logs.

       --hash, -h
	      For create action specifies hash to use for password hashing.

	      For  luksFormat  action  specifies  hash	used in LUKS key setup
	      scheme and volume key digest.

	      WARNING: setting hash other than sha1 causes LUKS device	incom‐
	      patible with older version of cryptsetup.

	      The  hash	 string is passed to libgcrypt, so all hashes accepted
	      by gcrypt are supported.	Default	 is  set  during  compilation,
	      compatible values with old version of cryptsetup are "ripemd160"
	      for create action and "sha1" for luksFormat.

	      Use cryptsetup --help to show defaults.

       --cipher, -c
	      set cipher specification string.

	      Default mode is configurable during  compilation,	 you  can  see
	      compiled-in  default  using  cryptsetup --help.  If not changed,
	      the default is for plain dm-crypt and  LUKS  mappings  "aes-cbc-
	      essiv:sha256".

	      For pre-2.6.10 kernels, use "aes-plain" as they don't understand
	      the new  cipher  spec  strings.  To  use	ESSIV,	use  "aes-cbc-
	      essiv:sha256".

	      For  XTS mode, kernel version 2.6.24 or more recent is required.
	      Use "aes-xts-plain" cipher specification and set key size to 256
	      (or 512) bits (see -s option).

       --verify-passphrase, -y
	      query for passwords twice. Useful when creating a (regular) map‐
	      ping for the first time, or when running luksFormat.

       --key-file, -d
	      use file as key material.

	      With LUKS, key material supplied in key files via -d are	always
	      used for existing passphrases, except in luksFormat action where
	      -d is equivalent to positional key file argument.	 If  you  want
	      to  set  a  new key via a key file, you have to use a positional
	      arg to luksAddKey.

	      If the key file is "-", stdin will be used.  With	 the  "-"  key
	      file  reading will not stop when new line character is detected.
	      See section NOTES ON PASSWORD PROCESSING for more information.

       --master-key-file
	      Use pre-generated master key stored in file. For	luksFormat  it
	      allows LUKS header reformatting with the same master key (if all
	      other parameters are the same existing  encrypted	 data  remains
	      intact).

	      For  luksAddKey it allows adding new passphrase with only master
	      key knowledge.

       --key-slot, -S
	      For LUKS operations that add key material, this  options	allows
	      to  you specify which key slot is selected for the new key. This
	      option can be used for luksFormat and luksAddKey.

       --key-size, -s
	      set key size in bits.

	      Has to be a multiple of 8 bits. The key size is limited  by  the
	      used  cipher.  See  output of /proc/crypto for more information.
	      Can be used for create or luksFormat,  all  other	 LUKS  actions
	      will  use key-size specified by the LUKS header.	Default is set
	      during compilation, if not changed it is 256 bits.

	      Use cryptsetup --help to show defaults.

	      For luksOpen this option specifies number of bits read from  the
	      key-file (default is exhaustive read from key-file).

       --size, -b
	      force the size of the underlying device in sectors.  This option
	      is only relevant for create and resize action.

       --offset, -o
	      start offset in the backend device.  This option is  only	 rele‐
	      vant for create action.

       --skip, -p
	      how many sectors of the encrypted data to skip at the beginning.
	      This is different from the --offset options with respect	to  IV
	      calculations.  Using  --offset  will shift the IV calculation by
	      the same negative amount. Hence, if --offset n, sector n will be
	      the  first  sector  on the mapping with IV 0. Using --skip would
	      have resulted in sector n being the first sector also, but  with
	      IV n.  This option is only relevant for create action.

       --readonly
	      set up a read-only mapping.

       --iter-time, -i
	      The  number  of  milliseconds to spend with PBKDF2 password pro‐
	      cessing. This option is only relevant to the LUKS operations  as
	      luksFormat or luksAddKey.

       --batch-mode, -q
	      Do  not ask for confirmation. Use with care! This option is only
	      relevant for luksFormat, luksAddKey, luksRemoveKey or  luksKill‐
	      Slot.

       --timeout, -t
	      The  number  of  seconds	to wait before timeout. This option is
	      relevant every time a password is asked, like create,  luksOpen,
	      luksFormat  or  luksAddKey. It has no effect if used in conjunc‐
	      tion with --key-file.

       --tries, -T
	      How often the input of the passphrase  shall  be	retried.  This
	      option  is relevant every time a password is asked, like create,
	      luksOpen, luksFormat or luksAddKey. The default is 3 tries.

       --align-payload=value
	      Align payload at a boundary  of  value  512-byte	sectors.  This
	      option  is  relevant for luksFormat.  If your block device lives
	      on a RAID, it is useful to align the filesystem at  full	stripe
	      boundaries so it can take advantage of the RAID's geometry.  See
	      for instance the sunit and swidth options in the mkfs.xfs manual
	      page.  By	 default,  the payload is aligned at an 8 sector (4096
	      byte) boundary.

       --version
	      Show the version.

NOTES ON PASSWORD PROCESSING
       From a terminal: Password processing is new-line sensitive, meaning the
       reading will stop after encountering \n. It will process the read mate‐
       rial (without newline) with the default	hash  or  the  hash  given  by
       --hash. After hashing, it will be cropped to the key size given by -s.

       From  stdin: Reading will continue until EOF (so using e.g. /dev/random
       as stdin will not work), with the trailing newline stripped. After that
       the read data will be hashed with the default hash or the hash given by
       --hash and the result will be cropped to the keysize given  by  -s.  If
       "plain"	is used as an argument to the hash option, the input data will
       not be hashed.  Instead, it will be zero padded (if  shorter  than  the
       keysize) or truncated (if longer than the keysize) and used directly as
       the key. No warning will be given if the amount of data read from stdin
       is less than the keysize.

       From  a	key file: It will be cropped to the size given by -s. If there
       is insufficient key material in the key file, cryptsetup will quit with
       an error.

       If  --key-file=-	 is  used  for reading the key from stdin, no trailing
       newline is stripped from the input.  Without  that  option,  cryptsetup
       strips trailing newlines from stdin input.

NOTES ON PASSWORD PROCESSING FOR LUKS
       LUKS uses PBKDF2 to protect against dictionary attacks (see RFC 2898).

       LUKS will always do an exhaustive password reading. Hence, password can
       not be read from /dev/random, /dev/zero or any other stream  that  does
       not terminate.

       For  any password creation action (luksAddKey, or luksFormat), the user
       may specify how much the time the password processing  should  consume.
       Increasing  the time will lead to a more secure password, but also will
       take luksOpen longer to complete. The default setting of one second  is
       sufficient for good security.

INCOHERENT BEHAVIOUR FOR INVALID PASSWORDS/KEYS
       LUKS  checks for a valid password or key when an encrypted partition is
       unlocked. Thus the luksOpen action fails with invalid password or  key,
       contrary to the plain dm-crypt create action.

       Please  also  be sure that you are using the same keyboard and language
       setting as during device format.

NOTES ON SUPPORTED CIPHERS, MODES, HASHES AND KEY SIZES
       The available combinations of ciphers,  modes,  hashes  and  key	 sizes
       depend  on  kernel  support.  See  /proc/crypto for a list of available
       options. You might need to load additional  kernel  crypto  modules  in
       order to get more options.

       For --hash option all algorithms supported by gcrypt library are avail‐
       able.

NOTES ON PASSWORDS
       Mathematics can't be bribed. Make sure you keep	your  passwords	 safe.
       There  are a few nice tricks for constructing a fallback, when suddenly
       out of (or after being) blue, your brain refuses	 to  cooperate.	 These
       fallbacks  are  possible	 with LUKS, as it's only possible with LUKS to
       have multiple passwords.

AUTHORS
       cryptsetup is written by Christophe Saout <christophe@saout.de>
       LUKS extensions, and man	 page  by  Clemens  Fruhwirth  <clemens@endor‐
       phin.org>

COMPATABILITY WITH OLD SUSE TWOFISH PARTITIONS
       To  read	 images	 created with SuSE Linux 9.2's loop_fish2 use --cipher
       twofish-cbc-null -s 256 -h sha512, for images created with  even	 older
       SuSE Linux use --cipher twofish-cbc-null -s 192 -h ripemd160:20

DEPRECATED ACTIONS
       reload <name> <device>

	      modifies	an  active mapping <name>. Same options as for create.
	      WARNING: Do not use this for LUKS devices, as the semantics  are
	      identical	 to  the create action, which are totally incompatible
	      with the LUKS key setup.

	      This action is deprected because it proved to be rarely  useful.
	      It  is  uncommon to change the underlying device, key, or offset
	      on the fly. In case, you really want to do this,	you  certainly
	      know  what  you  are  doing and then you are probably better off
	      with the swiss knive tool for device mapper, namely dmsetup.  It
	      provides you with the same functionality, see dmsetup reload.

       luksDelKey <device> <key slot number>

	      identical	 to  luksKillSlot,  but	 deprecated  action name. This
	      option was renamed, as we	 introduced  luksRemoveKey,  a	softer
	      method for disabling password slots. To make a clear distinction
	      that luksDelKey was more brutal than luksRemoveKey

       --non-exclusive

	      This option is ignored. Non-exclusive access to the  same	 block
	      device  can  cause  data	corruption thus this mode is no longer
	      supported by cryptsetup.

REPORTING BUGS
       Report bugs to <dm-crypt@saout.de> or Issues section on	LUKS  website.
       Please attach output of failed command with added --debug option.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright © 2004 Christophe Saout
       Copyright © 2004-2006 Clemens Fruhwirth
       Copyright © 2009-2010 Red Hat, Inc.

       This is free software; see the source for copying conditions.  There is
       NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR	 A  PARTICULAR
       PURPOSE.

SEE ALSO
       dm-crypt website, http://www.saout.de/misc/dm-crypt/

       LUKS website, http://code.google.com/p/cryptsetup/

       dm-crypt TWiki, http://www.saout.de/tikiwiki/tiki-index.php

cryptsetup							 CRYPTSETUP(8)
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