Ubuntu – Install Ubuntu 19.10 with encrypted swap/home partitions, specifying manually the swap partition

encryptionhibernatepartitioningswap

I would like to install ubuntu 19.10 with encrypted home and swap partitions, specifying manually the size of the swap partition.

I struggled with gparted and the installer to have something working, without success… For instance:

  • the EFI and a /boot (ext4) partitions + a single encrypted container containing 3 partitions (system/swap/home): the installer crashes
  • the EFI an system partitions + 2 encrypted containers for the swap and the home: error "an unsafe swap has been created" or "the creation of the swap space in partition #1 of encrypted volume (xxx) failed"
  • the EFI an system partitions + a single encrypted container containing 2 partitions (swap/home), it manage to install and run, but the system starts without asking the password, the encrypted volume is not mounted…
  • modifying the recipe files in /lib/partman to increase the minimum swap partition size: error "An error occurred while configuring encrypted volumes."

Is there a simple way, mainly using the installer gui, to do that?

Many thanks!

Best Answer

LVM with LUKS encryption

The method with encrypted home and swap is deprecated (after problems to keep things secret with that method). I suggest that you use the method that is now the only encryption method in Ubuntu's installer, LVM with LUKS encryption.

  • In the installer, at the partitioning window 'Installation type', select Erase disk and install Ubuntu

  • Encrypt the new Ubuntu installation for security

    enter image description here

  • Write the changes to the target drive

    enter image description here

  • Continue with the installation

    The partition structure seen from the live system after installation shows that there is LVM with LUKS encryption.

    enter image description here

  • After reboot you must enter the passphrase, that should be long, difficult to guess but easy for you to remember.

    There is no back-door, so it is important to have a good backup routine.

  • This is the partition structure seen from the installed system,

    enter image description here

Swap file /swapfile

Add a swap file if you need more swap. This swap file should be in the root directory

tester@tester-Lenovo-V130-14IKB:~$ sudo fallocate -l 8G /swapfile

tester@tester-Lenovo-V130-14IKB:~$ sudo mkswap /swapfile
mkswap: /swapfile: insecure permissions 0644, 0600 suggested.
setting up swapspace version 1, size = 8 GiB (8589930496 bytes)
no label, UUID=d34cc88f-0b25-4366-9f61-e477c87f5581

tester@tester-Lenovo-V130-14IKB:~$ sudo chmod 0600 /swapfile

tester@tester-Lenovo-V130-14IKB:~$ sudo nano /etc/fstab

I suggest that you add the following line to /etc/fstab

/swapfile                   none            swap    sw              0       0

Then you can swap it on

tester@tester-Lenovo-V130-14IKB:~$ sudo swapon -a

and check the result

tester@tester-Lenovo-V130-14IKB:~$ swapon
NAME      TYPE      SIZE USED PRIO
/dev/dm-2 partition 976M   0B   -2
/swapfile file        8G   0B   -3

/swapfile will work after reboot because it is in /etc/fstab (and with higher priority)

/swapfile file        8G   0B   -2
/dev/dm-2 partition 976M   0B   -3

This should be enough for hibernation with 8 GiB RAM and for running rather big tasks, that need heavy swapping.