Hi, and thanks for help. Some hacking on fstab did the trick:)
Now I'm able to mount at boot, I'm just entering my passwd for the cryptofile and when I'm entering my files and folders the permission is also set right. /ernst On 13 Dec 2002, Matthias Hentges wrote: > Am Don, 2002-12-12 um 21.01 schrieb ernst: > > Nop, can't do. > > > > I have an crypted fil created with 'dd' and ciper blowfish. this file is > > mounted at loop0. > > > > when I mount with the 'mount' command, debian understand that this is my > > /folder/cryptfile. > > > > when I try to do this in fstab, it doesn't understand that loop0 is > > cryptfile or vice versa, so it need to know about them bouth. and that's > > where my problem is, how to put 'cryptfile' 'loop0' and mountpoint in > > fstab so that debian understands it, and with the right permission. > > > > so what I did was that I just created a couple of scripts, one that mounts > > and set the right permission, and one that umount and detach the loop > > device, this is working fine. > > > > the odd thing was when I tryed your solution, it didn't even give me an > > error:) > > > > That's because it works ;) I've been using this setup with encrypted > files for +2 years now. You don't have to care about loopX anymore, > fstab will do anything needed. > > I do something like that: > > +mhentges@mhcln01:/etc/ssh >mount /home/mhentges/.safe > Available keysizes (bits): 128 192 256 > Keysize: 256 > Passwort: > +mhentges@mhcln01:/etc/ssh > > > And then it's mounted. All you need is the crypto-enabled mount, and > losetup tools. > > +mhentges@mhcln01:/etc/ssh >mount > [...] > /home/mhentges/.safe on /home/mhentges/Data/Safe type reiserfs > (rw,noexec,nosuid,nodev,loop=/dev/loop1,encryption=twofish) > +mhentges@mhcln01:/etc/ssh > > > Dunno why it doesn't work for you.... > > -- > > Matthias Hentges > [www.hentges.net] -> PGP + HTML are welcome > ICQ: 97 26 97 4 -> No files, no URLs > > My OS: Debian Woody: Geek by Nature, Linux by Choice > > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]