Provided by: systemd_249.11-0ubuntu3.16_amd64 bug

NAME

       systemd-cryptsetup@.service, systemd-cryptsetup - Full disk decryption logic

SYNOPSIS

       systemd-cryptsetup@.service

       system-systemd\x2dcryptsetup.slice

       /lib/systemd/systemd-cryptsetup

DESCRIPTION

       systemd-cryptsetup@.service is a service responsible for setting up encrypted block devices. It is
       instantiated for each device that requires decryption for access.

       systemd-cryptsetup@.service instances are part of the system-systemd\x2dcryptsetup.slice slice, which is
       destroyed only very late in the shutdown procedure. This allows the encrypted devices to remain up until
       filesystems have been unmounted.

       systemd-cryptsetup@.service will ask for hard disk passwords via the password agent logic[1], in order to
       query the user for the password using the right mechanism at boot and during runtime.

       At early boot and when the system manager configuration is reloaded, /etc/crypttab is translated into
       systemd-cryptsetup@.service units by systemd-cryptsetup-generator(8).

       In order to unlock a volume a password or binary key is required.  systemd-cryptsetup@.service tries to
       acquire a suitable password or binary key via the following mechanisms, tried in order:

        1. If a key file is explicitly configured (via the third column in /etc/crypttab), a key read from it is
           used. If a PKCS#11 token, FIDO2 token or TPM2 device is configured (using the pkcs11-uri=,
           fido2-device=, tpm2-device= options) the key is decrypted before use.

        2. If no key file is configured explicitly this way, a key file is automatically loaded from
           /etc/cryptsetup-keys.d/volume.key and /run/cryptsetup-keys.d/volume.key, if present. Here too, if a
           PKCS#11/FIDO2/TPM2 token/device is configured, any key found this way is decrypted before use.

        3. If the try-empty-password option is specified it is then attempted to unlock the volume with an empty
           password.

        4. The kernel keyring is then checked for a suitable cached password from previous attempts.

        5. Finally, the user is queried for a password, possibly multiple times, unless the headless option is
           set.

       If no suitable key may be acquired via any of the mechanisms describes above, volume activation fails.

SEE ALSO

       systemd(1), systemd-cryptsetup-generator(8), crypttab(5), systemd-cryptenroll(1), cryptsetup(8)

NOTES

        1. password agent logic
           https://systemd.io/PASSWORD_AGENTS/

systemd 249                                                                       SYSTEMD-CRYPTSETUP@.SERVICE(8)