I hope you won’t mind my beginner question: would that have any advantage for a single home user like myself? I mean would it help to do backup easier (I backup my home folder already) and accelerate a restore in case I have to reinstall Linux? Or is it just a seemingly great tool for sysadmins, for some specific use cases?
One important benefit will be, that it discards the key when locking the screen (when integrated in the DE). So the drive is protected when you are not at your machine. The the old mechanism only discards the key when restarting the computer. But who shuts his/hers laptop down…
I hope you won’t mind my beginner question: would that have any advantage for a single home user like myself? I mean would it help to do backup easier (I backup my home folder already) and accelerate a restore in case I have to reinstall Linux? Or is it just a seemingly great tool for sysadmins, for some specific use cases?
One important benefit will be, that it discards the key when locking the screen (when integrated in the DE). So the drive is protected when you are not at your machine. The the old mechanism only discards the key when restarting the computer. But who shuts his/hers laptop down…
Thx for the clarification.
I’m one of those persons that (tries to) shut their computer off every time they’re not using it — waste less energy, you know, stuff like that ;)
May s.b. will steal your laptop, when you are at lunch 😀
In general I’m with, but the standby current is really low, especially when writing the memory to disk…
when locking the screen, or when logging out?
if it’s the former, how will running programs not crash?
When locking the screen. The running programs will freeze until you unlock it again.
oh. is this optional? on a laptop it’s a good idea, but on my desktop I wouldn’t want it