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1.
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Record your encryption passphrase
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Name
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Record your encryption passphrase
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Translated by
Andi Chandler
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Reviewed by
Stephan Woidowski
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In upstream: |
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Record your encryption passphrase
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Suggested by
Andi Chandler
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Located in
../src/desktop/ecryptfs-record-passphrase:1
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2.
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To encrypt your home directory or "Private" folder, a strong passphrase has been automatically generated. Usually your directory is unlocked with your user password, but if you ever need to manually recover this directory, you will need this passphrase. Please print or write it down and store it in a safe location. If you click "Run this action now", enter your login password at the "Passphrase" prompt and you can display your randomly generated passphrase. Otherwise, you will need to run "ecryptfs-unwrap-passphrase" from the command line to retrieve and record your generated passphrase.
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Description
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To encrypt your home directory or "Private" folder, a strong passphrase has been automatically generated. Usually your directory is unlocked with your user password, but if you ever need to manually recover this directory, you will need this passphrase. Please print or write it down and store it in a safe location. If you click "Run this action now", enter your login password at the "Passphrase" prompt and you can display your randomly generated passphrase. Otherwise, you will need to run "ecryptfs-unwrap-passphrase" from the command line to retrieve and record your generated passphrase.
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Translated by
Andi Chandler
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Reviewed by
Stephan Woidowski
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In upstream: |
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To encrypt your home directory or "Private" folder, a strong passphrase has been automatically generated. Usually your directory is unlocked with your user password, but if you ever need to manually recover this directory, you will need this passphrase. Please print or write it down and store it in a safe location. If you click "Run this action now", enter your login password at the "Passphrase" prompt and you can display your randomly generated passphrase. Otherwise, you will need to run "ecryptfs-unwrap-passphrase" from the command line to retrieve and record your generated passphrase.
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Suggested by
Andi Chandler
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Located in
../src/desktop/ecryptfs-record-passphrase:8
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3.
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Access Your Private Data
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Access Your Private Data
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Translated by
Chris Woollard
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Reviewed by
Stephan Woidowski
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In upstream: |
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Access Your Private Data
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Suggested by
Chris Woollard
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Located in
../src/desktop/ecryptfs-mount-private.desktop.in.h:1
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4.
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Setup Your Encrypted Private Directory
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Setup Your Encrypted Private Directory
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Translated by
Chris Woollard
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Reviewed by
Stephan Woidowski
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In upstream: |
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Setup Your Encrypted Private Directory
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Suggested by
Chris Woollard
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Located in
../src/desktop/ecryptfs-setup-private.desktop.in.h:1
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