Hi,
I’m trying to encrypt the root filesystem /
of a raspberry pi 4 device running under Devuan rpi ( custom kernel )
I’m following LUKS on Raspberry Pi 2021 guide
That explain step by step how achieve this.
But the guide use initramfs
and my distro seem to use initrd
So the question, is: should I migrate to initramfs
? and how check whats is inside my current initrd
or keep-up with initrd
but then how insert the necessary to enable LUKS drive to be mounted by it ( initrd ) ?
Thanks.
So, firstly, about the nomenclature: initrd (initial ram disk) and initramfs (initial ram file system) are usually used interchangeably as far as I know. For example, even though my Debian uses
initramfs-tools
, the generated images are called/boot/initrd.img-*
.For example, when installing a kernel,
apt
shows this output on my Debian machine:linux-image-6.12.6-amd64 (6.12.6-1) wird eingerichtet ... /etc/kernel/postinst.d/initramfs-tools: update-initramfs: Generating /boot/initrd.img-6.12.6-amd64
What you’re talking about is probably the software used to generate this initial ramdisk, which on Debian is done using
initramfs-tools
(which contains themkinitramfs
command), while on other distrosdracut
(command:mkinitrd
) might be used.I will say it strikes me as weird that Devuan doesn’t use
initramfs-tools
since it’s a Debian derivative. Maybe you are mistaken about this? Possibly no initrd/initramfs is used at all on this specific Pi version of Devuan? IDK.Yes, seems like Devuan also use update-initramfs (discussion link) as expected. So I think process will be similar to upstream Debian.
The boot process (e.g. initrd initramfs) is specific to your distro and cannot be changed. Follow a guide for Devuan/Debian.
AFAIK initramfs is the same thing as initrd. But do you have
update-initramfs
command available?Nope, both do the same thing but they are not the same thing.
If so what is the difference?
That they are 2 different tools. Here
Based on first result
We can use initrd for Linux kernels 2.4 and lower. Conversely, initramfs is for kernels 2.6 and above.
Since on all modern system initial filesystem is tmpfs sometimes it is confused and initramfs is called initrd (for example: in grub to load initramfs you use
initrd
command).deleted by creator