Note: This page is horribly out of
date.
You can find the current pages for the dm-crypt
project (the Linux kernel part) here:
https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup/wikis/DMCrypt
and the project page for the command line tool
cryptsetup (with Linux Unified Key
Setup - LUKS) here: https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup.
Old page:
Device-mapper is a new infrastructure in the Linux 2.6 kernel that provides
a generic way to create virtual layers of block devices that can do different
things on top of real block devices like striping, concatenation, mirroring,
snapshotting, etc... The device-mapper is used by the
LVM2 and
EVMS 2.x tools.
dm-crypt is such a device-mapper target that provides transparent encryption of
block devices using the new Linux 2.6 cryptoapi. The user can basically specify
one of the symmetric ciphers, a key (of any allowed size), an iv generation mode
and then the user can create a new block device in /dev. Writes to this device
will be encrypted and reads decrypted. You can mount your filesystem on it as usual.
But without the key you can't access your data.
It does basically the same as cryptoloop only that it's a much cleaner code and
better suits the need of a block device and has a more flexible configuration
interface. The on-disk format is also compatible. In the future you will be able
to specify other iv generation modes for enhanced security (you'll have to
reencrypt your filesystem though).
I've set up a Wiki.
There's a mailing list at .
If you want to subscribe, use the mailman
web interface or its
archive.
Gmane provides a NNTP interface and also a
web archive
for this mailing list.
There is support for dm-crypt in the latest official kernel
2.6.4
which you can find on kernel.org.
Please use the mirrors for downloads.
There is a HIGHMEM cryptoapi bug in kernels before 2.6.4-rc2, please
upgrade if you were using such a kernel.
The latest version of the native userspace setup tool is cryptsetup 0.1.
Clemens Fruhwirth is maintaining an
enhanced
version of cryptsetup with the LUKS extension that allows you to have an
on-disk block of metadata which is superior to the current mechanism and was
my long term plan anyway but I didn't find the time to implement that yet...
Bong Joon-ho’s is widely regarded as a "masterpiece" of global cinema, serving as both a gripping police procedural and a searing critique of 1980s South Korean society. Unlike traditional Hollywood thrillers, it focuses on the profound frustration and moral decay of its characters as they fail to solve a real-life serial murder case. Narrative Core & Tone
Bong Joon Ho is one of the most celebrated film directors of the modern era. Long before his historic Academy Award wins for Parasite (2019), he established his brilliant filmmaking voice in South Korea.
A young girl mentions that another man recently visited the spot, reminiscing about his past actions. When Park asks what the man looked like, the girl replies that he looked completely ordinary.
The opening scene features vibrant, golden-hued fields that sharply contrast with the dark, claustrophobic drainage ditches where death hides. Standard definition compression often turns these vast wide shots into a muddy blur. Memories Of Murder -2003- -720p- -BluRay- -YTS-...
The heart of the film lies in the friction between two clashing investigators:
Bong Joon Ho does not just document the crimes. He creates an atmospheric portrait of a society in transition, where institutional incompetence allows evil to slip through the cracks. Why Visual Quality Matters: The Power of 720p and BluRay
The film centers on two local detectives, and Cho Yong-koo (Kim Roi-ha) , who are completely out of their depth. They rely on violence, intuition, and fraudulent evidence rather than scientific investigation. Their chaotic methods are challenged by Detective Seo Tae-yoon (Kim Sang-kyung) , a methodical detective transferred from Seoul. 2. A Study of Failure and Frustration Bong Joon-ho’s is widely regarded as a "masterpiece"
The ending is perhaps the most famous in modern cinema. By having Detective Park look directly into the camera years later, Bong turns the lens on the audience. At the time of the film’s release, the killer had never been caught. That final gaze was a direct confrontation with the murderer, who Bong assumed would eventually watch the film. It transforms the movie from a historical recreation into a living, breathing act of remembrance. Memories of Murder
Disclaimer: This article discusses the film and does not provide direct links to copyrighted content. Share public link
: The legal Blu-ray release of Memories of Murder is not a simple port of the original film elements. It is the result of a painstaking 4K digital restoration , which was supervised by the film's cinematographer, Kim Hyung Ku, and personally approved by Bong Joon-ho. The Criterion Collection’s director-approved two-Blu-ray special edition is a treasure trove for cinephiles, packed with hours of new and archival supplements. These include two 2003 commentary tracks featuring Bong and members of the cast and crew; a new commentary by critic Tony Rayns; a new interview with filmmaker Guillermo del Toro; a 2004 making-of documentary; deleted scenes with optional audio commentary; Incoherence , a 1994 student film by Bong; and an essay by critic and novelist Ed Park. This is the definitive version of the film, presented in its best possible quality. Long before his historic Academy Award wins for
The film serves as a harsh critique of the Korean police force during the late 1980s—a time of military dictatorship, where police were often preoccupied with suppressing student protests rather than solving actual crime. 3. Atmospheric Cinematography (720p BluRay Quality)
: The film centers on the friction between Park Doo-man (Song Kang-ho), a local cop who relies on "shamanic eyes" and intuition, and Seo Tae-yoon (Kim Sang-kyung), a methodical detective from Seoul who relies on logic and evidence. Desperate Methods
Bong Joon-ho highlights the inadequacy of the police force during the late 1980s in Korea. The pressure to close cases leads to forced confessions and tragic errors, suggesting that the system itself was partly responsible for the failure to catch the killer. 2. A Haunting Ending
While Memories of Murder is available legally on platforms like Criterion Channel, Hulu, and BluRay, many users still turn to torrent sites using YTS queries. Reasons include:
Memories of Murder is often ranked among the greatest films of the 2000s (Criterion Collection, #4 on Sight & Sound ’s 2012 poll for Korean cinema). It directly influenced Zodiac (Fincher), True Detective S1, and even Parasite ’s class tension.
The on-disk layouts used by the current 2.6 cryptoloop are supported by dm-crypt.
Cryptoloop also uses cryptoapi so the name of the ciphers are the same. Cryptoloop also
supports ECB and CBC mode. Use <cipher>-ecb and
<cipher>-plain accordingly with dm-crypt. If you didn't
explicitly specify either -ecb or -cbc before you don't need it now, the default plain
IV generation will be used. There will be additional (incompatible, but more secure) possibilites
in the future because the unhashed sector number as IV is too predictible.
You'll need to figure out how your passphrase was turned into a key to use for losetup.
There are several patches floating around doing things differently. But usually cryptsetup
will provide a working solution to recreate the same key from your passphrase.
If you want to migrate from 2.4 cryptoloop please take a look at Clemens Fruhwirth's
Cryptoloop
Migration Guide. He describes the differences between 2.4 and 2.6 cryptoapi (or basically
the bugs in 2.4 cryptoapi...). If you need to cut the key size you can use the -s
option instead of playing with dd.
(BTW: Clemens has a i586 optimized version of the aes and serpent cipher on his page,
about twice as fast as the kernel implementation.)
Why dm-crypt?
Originally it started as a fun project because I wanted to play with the new Linux 2.6 internals.
I got a lot of great help from the device-mapper guys at Sistina (now Redhat). Thank you very
much!
It turned out that this implementation worked great and is very clean compared to the hacked
loop device. The device-mapper core provides much better facilities to stack block devices.
dm-crypt uses mempools to assure we never run into out-of-memory deadlocks when allocating
buffers.
Also the device-mapper configuration interface provides much more flexibility than the losetup
ioctl. And you can create as many devices as you want with any names you want and combine them
with other dm targets. Online device resizing is also possible, e.g. if you use dm-crypt on top
of a logical volume. There might perhaps even be LVM or EVMS support for device encryption
in the future.
But I don't want to use LVM!
You don't need LVM. Device-mapper is an all-purpose kernel feature,
not tied to LVM in any way.
What if I want to encrypt a filesystem and keep it in a file?
You can use dm-crypt on top of a normal loop device, call losetup and cryptsetup.
I'm going to add loop support to cryptsetup so it can do this for you.
I created my filesystem on the encrypted device. How can I keep it across reboots?
Very simple. Call cryptsetup again and supply the same passphrase. It only creates
a mapping, not a filesystem.
What if I want to change my passphrase?
At the moment you'll need to reencrypt your device because the passphrase is directly
tied to the key.
There are plans to write a tool that stores the master key on disk
and encrypted so it can be unlocked using a passphrase. You can then
change your passphrase on a regular basis.
If you want to reencrypt your filesystem you'll have to recreate a new one and move your files.
(I've got an experimantal tool in the works that allows you to reencrypt your block device on the fly,
assuming you don't reboot your machine...)
I've read about security problems.
Yes, the IV schemes currently supported by dm-crypt are the same as the ones supported by
cryptloop. There's the ECB mode which is a catastrophe (no IV at all) and the "plain"
mode, which is already a lot better. Older cryptoloops used ECB by default, but with dm-crypt
the default is "plain" (which is the unhashes sector number used as IV).
Since dm-crypt is extensible there will be better possibilities in the future, but they will be
on-disk incompatible with cryptoloop so you'll have to reencrypt.
Help! I can't figure out how to use my old encrypted data! I was using...
There are different implementations out there. Some are non-cryptoapi and/or
broken implementations. SuSE uses its own loop-twofish implementation which
makes dangerous assumptions and is broken when changing the blocksize
("timebomb crypto"). You cannot use this with dm-crypt.
Can I reencrypt my data without copying all the files?
There's an experimental and unfinished dmconvert program
that can reencrypt the data while the filesystem is mounted. If you can get it running it should
be safe enough to not eat your data, but make sure you don't interrupt it or crash your system
while it is running. Don't blame me if something goes wrong.
Can I use encrypted swap?
Yes. You can specify a key file /dev/random and run mkswap afterwards, so the device will be
created with a different key each time and the data is not accessible at all after a reboot.
Is there a mailing list?
I've set up a Wiki.
There's a mailing list at .
If you want to subscribe, use the mailman
web interface or its
archive.
Gmane provides a NNTP interface and also a
web archive
for this mailing list.
My system hangs for some time in regular intervals when writing to encrypted disks.
You are probably using Linux 2.6.4. Du to the introduction of kthread pdflush is running at nice level -10,
which means that the kernels treats dm-crypt writes as a real time task and doesn't allow scheduling.
Solution: Switch to 2.6.5 or later or renice pdflush manually.
Can I use the mount command itself to do all the magic needed?
I've written an experimental patch for this, see
my post
in the mailing list archive.
Where can I send my contributions?
Because maintaining a web page takes time and people keep mailing me a lot of
things I could integrate they can enter it into this nice Wiki.
Please contact the mailing list: dm-crypt@saout.de. Or in case there is a problem with the mailing list, me: .