It contains obsolete initrd and lilo based instructions Signed-off-by: Askar Safin --- Documentation/power/index.rst | 1 - Documentation/power/swsusp-dmcrypt.rst | 140 ------------------ .../translations/zh_CN/power/index.rst | 1 - 3 files changed, 142 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 Documentation/power/swsusp-dmcrypt.rst diff --git a/Documentation/power/index.rst b/Documentation/power/index.rst index a0f5244fb427..9f1758c92e48 100644 --- a/Documentation/power/index.rst +++ b/Documentation/power/index.rst @@ -22,7 +22,6 @@ Power Management suspend-and-cpuhotplug suspend-and-interrupts swsusp-and-swap-files - swsusp-dmcrypt swsusp video tricks diff --git a/Documentation/power/swsusp-dmcrypt.rst b/Documentation/power/swsusp-dmcrypt.rst deleted file mode 100644 index afb29a58fdf8..000000000000 --- a/Documentation/power/swsusp-dmcrypt.rst +++ /dev/null @@ -1,140 +0,0 @@ -======================================= -How to use dm-crypt and swsusp together -======================================= - -Author: Andreas Steinmetz - - - -Some prerequisites: -You know how dm-crypt works. If not, visit the following web page: -http://www.saout.de/misc/dm-crypt/ -You have read Documentation/power/swsusp.rst and understand it. -You did read Documentation/filesystems/ramfs-rootfs-initramfs.rst and know how an initrd works. -You know how to create or how to modify an initrd. - -Now your system is properly set up, your disk is encrypted except for -the swap device(s) and the boot partition which may contain a mini -system for crypto setup and/or rescue purposes. You may even have -an initrd that does your current crypto setup already. - -At this point you want to encrypt your swap, too. Still you want to -be able to suspend using swsusp. This, however, means that you -have to be able to either enter a passphrase or that you read -the key(s) from an external device like a pcmcia flash disk -or an usb stick prior to resume. So you need an initrd, that sets -up dm-crypt and then asks swsusp to resume from the encrypted -swap device. - -The most important thing is that you set up dm-crypt in such -a way that the swap device you suspend to/resume from has -always the same major/minor within the initrd as well as -within your running system. The easiest way to achieve this is -to always set up this swap device first with dmsetup, so that -it will always look like the following:: - - brw------- 1 root root 254, 0 Jul 28 13:37 /dev/mapper/swap0 - -Now set up your kernel to use /dev/mapper/swap0 as the default -resume partition, so your kernel .config contains:: - - CONFIG_PM_STD_PARTITION="/dev/mapper/swap0" - -Prepare your boot loader to use the initrd you will create or -modify. For lilo the simplest setup looks like the following -lines:: - - image=/boot/vmlinuz - initrd=/boot/initrd.gz - label=linux - append="root=/dev/ram0 init=/linuxrc rw" - -Finally you need to create or modify your initrd. Lets assume -you create an initrd that reads the required dm-crypt setup -from a pcmcia flash disk card. The card is formatted with an ext2 -fs which resides on /dev/hde1 when the card is inserted. The -card contains at least the encrypted swap setup in a file -named "swapkey". /etc/fstab of your initrd contains something -like the following:: - - /dev/hda1 /mnt ext3 ro 0 0 - none /proc proc defaults,noatime,nodiratime 0 0 - none /sys sysfs defaults,noatime,nodiratime 0 0 - -/dev/hda1 contains an unencrypted mini system that sets up all -of your crypto devices, again by reading the setup from the -pcmcia flash disk. What follows now is a /linuxrc for your -initrd that allows you to resume from encrypted swap and that -continues boot with your mini system on /dev/hda1 if resume -does not happen:: - - #!/bin/sh - PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin - mount /proc - mount /sys - mapped=0 - noresume=`grep -c noresume /proc/cmdline` - if [ "$*" != "" ] - then - noresume=1 - fi - dmesg -n 1 - /sbin/cardmgr -q - for i in 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 - do - if [ -f /proc/ide/hde/media ] - then - usleep 500000 - mount -t ext2 -o ro /dev/hde1 /mnt - if [ -f /mnt/swapkey ] - then - dmsetup create swap0 /mnt/swapkey > /dev/null 2>&1 && mapped=1 - fi - umount /mnt - break - fi - usleep 500000 - done - killproc /sbin/cardmgr - dmesg -n 6 - if [ $mapped = 1 ] - then - if [ $noresume != 0 ] - then - mkswap /dev/mapper/swap0 > /dev/null 2>&1 - fi - echo 254:0 > /sys/power/resume - dmsetup remove swap0 - fi - umount /sys - mount /mnt - umount /proc - cd /mnt - pivot_root . mnt - mount /proc - umount -l /mnt - umount /proc - exec chroot . /sbin/init $* < dev/console > dev/console 2>&1 - -Please don't mind the weird loop above, busybox's msh doesn't know -the let statement. Now, what is happening in the script? -First we have to decide if we want to try to resume, or not. -We will not resume if booting with "noresume" or any parameters -for init like "single" or "emergency" as boot parameters. - -Then we need to set up dmcrypt with the setup data from the -pcmcia flash disk. If this succeeds we need to reset the swap -device if we don't want to resume. The line "echo 254:0 > /sys/power/resume" -then attempts to resume from the first device mapper device. -Note that it is important to set the device in /sys/power/resume, -regardless if resuming or not, otherwise later suspend will fail. -If resume starts, script execution terminates here. - -Otherwise we just remove the encrypted swap device and leave it to the -mini system on /dev/hda1 to set the whole crypto up (it is up to -you to modify this to your taste). - -What then follows is the well known process to change the root -file system and continue booting from there. I prefer to unmount -the initrd prior to continue booting but it is up to you to modify -this. diff --git a/Documentation/translations/zh_CN/power/index.rst b/Documentation/translations/zh_CN/power/index.rst index bc54983ba515..4ee880e65107 100644 --- a/Documentation/translations/zh_CN/power/index.rst +++ b/Documentation/translations/zh_CN/power/index.rst @@ -32,7 +32,6 @@ TODOList: * suspend-and-cpuhotplug * suspend-and-interrupts * swsusp-and-swap-files - * swsusp-dmcrypt * swsusp * video * tricks -- 2.47.2