#!html ==File Systems==
Fedora 25
provides basic support for encrypted swap partitions and non-root
file systems. To use it, add entries to /etc/crypttab
and reference the
created devices in /etc/fstab
.
New in Fedora 9, the installer Anaconda has support for creating encrypted file systems during installation. For more information on that, refer to the Fedora Installation Guide:
http://docs.fedoraproject.org/install-guide
Installing to encrypted volumes, including the root file system, is now supported. There is no configuration tool for adding or removing keys from volumes at a later time, or otherwise doing modification of the encryption. Refer to this feature page for more information:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/FeatureEncryptedFilesystems
For full instructions on using encrypted file systems, refer to the Fedora Encryption and Privacy Guide:
http://docs.fedoraproject.org/encryption-privacy-guide
Ext4 Preview
The new ext4 file system is available in Fedora 9 as a nearly feature complete preview. While an ext3 file system can be mounted as ext4, an ext3 to ext4 conversion tool is planned that converts existing ext3 on-disk format to ext4.
Fedora 9 may be installed onto an ext4 file system by adding the ext4
option to the installer boot parameters and selecting custom partitioning.
The e2fsprogs userspace tools shipping with Fedora 9 are not yet fully ext4-capable. In particular, fsck ability is limited.
|
For more information about this feature: