It seems like my problem may have been a different underlying cause with
similar symptoms.
In my case, the entry in /etc/crypttab didn't match the location of the
encrypted partition. Partition is on sda3, but /etc/crypttab read:
sda6_crypt UUID={uuid} none luks,discard
It appears that when the
(Correction: previously it asked to decrypt sda3_crypt, not /dev/sda3.)
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1986623
Title:
cryptsetup fails to decrypt root partion during boot
Success?
Based only on the error message, I tried defining tmpData in
/etc/crypttab. Previously, the file consisted of one line:
sda6_crypt UUID={uuid} none luks,discard
I added a second line:
tmpData UUID={uuid} none luks,discard
and re-ran update-initramfs. It still produced the other mess
I'm getting a bit over my head, but it is seeming like there's a problem
with creating a new initrd.
When I decrypt (using unmkinitramfs) the initrd.img file, I see that the
"good" version has a /main/cryptroot/crypttab file which appears
identical to /etc/crypttab. The "bad" version has an empty
Correction: It is not the kernel itself I was talking about, above.
It's the initrd.img file associated with the kernel.
Note also that replacing that file with the old version eliminates the
problem (at least until some update changes it again).
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I am able to reproduce the error when I install the new 5.19.0-32
kernel.
Also, when I install the package "Firmware for Linux kernel drivers," it
modifies the files for the older kernels (5.15.0-60 and 5.15.0-43),
making them have the same problem. The 5.15.0-60 file goes from
111,616,247 bytes
Fresh install worked until I did today's recommended updates, then the
problem recurred. Not sure exactly what was updated; I thought
/var/log/dpkg.log was supposed to be human-readable, but mine isn't.
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I have an Intel Core i5-4590.
Also just tried a fresh install (Ubuntu 22.04) on a spare hard drive,
and it boots fine using kernel 5.15.0-60-generic. Note that spare is a
traditional hard drive and main drive is an SSD; next I'll try
reinstalling on the SSD.
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Here's a new bug: There doesn't seem to be a way to mark comments as
spam.
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/344878
Title:
file name too long when creating new file (ecryptf
@baltic (bugsgenerator) You're right, but the powers that be have for
years refused to see the distinction between changing the way filenames
are handled (which they have, I think, adequately explained the
technical reasons for not doing) and providing adequate documentation
and error handling (whi
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