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Operating Systems Linux Ubuntu Cannot access or boot encrypted drive (gave up waiting for root device...) Post 302962312 by David4321 on Friday 11th of December 2015 04:44:33 PM
Old 12-11-2015
Hammer & Screwdriver Cannot access or boot encrypted drive (gave up waiting for root device...)

I cannot access or boot from my C drive. I'm running Zorin 9 and the drive is a Samsung SSD. The disk was encrypted on install, and that has not given me any problems before.


When I start the system it gets to the memory test page, and does not then load the password prompt, which it used to. I can go to password manually by pressing "Enter (Boot)", but it does not accept correct password. I have tried cap lock. I know keyboard is good, I have tried wired and wireless keyboards. I checked the disk recently with GSmartControl, and it passed with no comments. Upon attempting password I get "cryptsetup failed". After several attempts I get an error "gave up waiting for boot device". Image


When plugged into windows externally, this drive with the data I want doesn't show up in the drive list as searchable, but it does show up in "safely remove hardware", and in drive management. In drive management, it shows as 2 partitions, both reporting as healthy, one at 243mb, the other at 232.65gb. The drive is formatted to ext2, and with windows drivers, the smaller partition (with grub) displays in drive list, but not the data partition, formatted to raw.


Questions:
1) Does this seem most likely to be a software or hardware problem?
If a software problem:
2) I noticed that it lists the OS it is looking for as being on sda5_crypt, not sure how there could be 5 partitions on that device (it's only 250gb) unless that is part of the encryption protocol. I never noticed the partition designation before, the only thing I put on that drive is the OS, I never manually created any other partitions. Could it just be looking for the wrong partition? Is there a way to check this?
3) Is there a way to repair the boot sector, change the encryption key, or reinstall the OS from DVD without booting up, AND preserve all existing personal data? (fortunately, there's not that much on this drive)
4) I've been thinking of moving from Zorin to Ubuntu OS anyway, and my first thought was that this is an opportunity for that. Is there a way to install Ubuntu and preserve the data?
If a hardware problem:
5) Is there a way to back up and salvage the encrypted data on this disk?

Thanks for any help!
 

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SD(4)							     Linux Programmer's Manual							     SD(4)

NAME
sd - driver for SCSI disk drives SYNOPSIS
#include <linux/hdreg.h> /* for HDIO_GETGEO */ #include <linux/fs.h> /* for BLKGETSIZE and BLKRRPART */ CONFIGURATION
The block device name has the following form: sdlp, where l is a letter denoting the physical drive, and p is a number denoting the parti- tion on that physical drive. Often, the partition number, p, will be left off when the device corresponds to the whole drive. SCSI disks have a major device number of 8, and a minor device number of the form (16 * drive_number) + partition_number, where drive_num- ber is the number of the physical drive in order of detection, and partition_number is as follows: partition 0 is the whole drive partitions 1-4 are the DOS "primary" partitions partitions 5-8 are the DOS "extended" (or "logical") partitions For example, /dev/sda will have major 8, minor 0, and will refer to all of the first SCSI drive in the system; and /dev/sdb3 will have major 8, minor 19, and will refer to the third DOS "primary" partition on the second SCSI drive in the system. At this time, only block devices are provided. Raw devices have not yet been implemented. DESCRIPTION
The following ioctls are provided: HDIO_GETGEO Returns the BIOS disk parameters in the following structure: struct hd_geometry { unsigned char heads; unsigned char sectors; unsigned short cylinders; unsigned long start; }; A pointer to this structure is passed as the ioctl(2) parameter. The information returned in the parameter is the disk geometry of the drive as understood by DOS! This geometry is not the physical geometry of the drive. It is used when constructing the drive's partition table, however, and is needed for convenient operation of fdisk(1), efdisk(1), and lilo(1). If the geometry information is not available, zero will be returned for all of the parameters. BLKGETSIZE Returns the device size in sectors. The ioctl(2) parameter should be a pointer to a long. BLKRRPART Forces a reread of the SCSI disk partition tables. No parameter is needed. The SCSI ioctl(2) operations are also supported. If the ioctl(2) parameter is required, and it is NULL, then ioctl(2) will fail with the error EINVAL. FILES
/dev/sd[a-h]: the whole device /dev/sd[a-h][0-8]: individual block partitions COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.44 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. Linux 2012-05-03 SD(4)
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