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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Restore .dmg containing multiple partitions to bootable USB flash drive Post 303031335 by Don Cragun on Tuesday 26th of February 2019 12:35:32 PM
Old 02-26-2019
Quote:
Originally Posted by paulcristo
You are correct. The device names were install_osx and EFI, and the device I believe was /dev/disk1


I didn't format the USB drive because I was hoping to not have to prep a drive before restoring it. Is this possible? I know I can restore the two volumes with two separate commands but would rather just have it completely clone the drive in one fell swoop.


I didn't use command line to mount the image. I used the built-in Disk Utility mounting feature in Mac OS by double-clicking the image. After double-clicking, the two volumes are present and mount correctly.
OK. So if after double-clicking both volumes are present and mount correctly, what did you mean by:

Quote:
Originally Posted by paulcristo
... ... ...

I used:
Code:
sudo dd if=/image_filename of=/dev/USBFLASHDRIVE

This only restores the first volume and ignores the second.
???
 

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mount.crypt(8)							     pam_mount							    mount.crypt(8)

Name
       mount.crypt - mount a dm-crypt encrypted volume

Syntax
       mount.crypt [-nrv] [-o options] device directory

Options
       -o options
	      Set further mount options. mount.crypt will take out its own options it recognizes and passes any remaining options on to the under-
	      lying mount program. See below for possible options.

       -n     Do not update /etc/mtab. Note that this makes it impossible to unmount the volume by naming the container - you will  have  to  pass
	      the mountpoint to umount.crypt.

       -r     Set  up  the loop device (if necessary) and crypto device in read-only mode.  (The mount itself will necessarily also be read-only.)
	      Note that doing a remount using `mount /mnt -o remount,rw` will not make the mount readwrite. The crypto and loop devices will  have
	      to be disassociated first.

       -v     Turn on debugging and be a bit more verbose.

Mount options
       cipher The  cryptsetup  cipher used for the encrypted volume. This option is mandatory for PLAIN (non-LUKS) volumes. pmt-ehd(8) defaults to
	      creating volumes with "aes-cbc-essiv:sha256" as a cipher.

       crypto_name
	      Select the name for the crypto device (optional). This option is currently only usable with dm-crypt systems.

       fsck   Run fsck on the container before mounting it.

       fsk_cipher
	      The OpenSSL cipher used for the filesystem key. The special keyword "none" can be used to bypass decryption and pass the	file  con-
	      tents directly to libcryptsetup.

       fsk_hash
	      The OpenSSL hash used for producing key and IV.

       fstype The exact type of filesystem in the encrypted container. The default is to let the kernel autodetect.

       hash   The  cryptsetup  hash  used for the encrypted volume. This defaults to no hashing, because pam_mount assumes EHD volumes with strong
	      and simple fskey generation.

       keyfile
	      The path to the key file. This option is mandatory for "normal" crypto volumes and should not be used for LUKS volumes.

       remount
	      Causes the filesystem to be remounted with new options. Note that mount.crypt cannot switch the underlying loop device (if  applies)
	      or the crypto device between read-only and read-write once it is created; only the actual filesystem mount can be changed, with lim-
	      its. If the loop device is read-only, the crypto device will be read-only, and changing the mount to read-write is impossible.  Sim-
	      ilarly,  going from rw to ro will only mark the mount read-only, but not the crypto or loop device, thus making it impossible to set
	      the filesystem the crypto container is located on to read-only.

       ro     Same as the -r option.

       verbose
	      Same as the -v option.

Obsolete mount options
       This section is provided for reference.

       loop   This option used to set up a loop device, because cryptsetup(8) expects a block device. The option is  ignored  because  mount.crypt
	      can figure this out on its own.

pam_mount							    2011-12-15							    mount.crypt(8)
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