Users of the alternate/server installation who choose a password containing a "%" or a "-" will end up with an encrypted ~/Private directory that will not mount on reboot and subsequent logins. To fix this, affected users will need to do the following in the newly installed system:
- Update ecryptfs-utils to the latest available in the archive, and then run:
$ ecryptfs-setup-private --force
Updated blurb for the release notes:
Users of the alternate/server installation who choose a password containing a "%" or a "-" will end up with an encrypted ~/Private directory that will not mount on reboot and subsequent logins. To fix this, affected users will need to do the following in the newly installed system: setup-private --force
- Update ecryptfs-utils to the latest available in the archive, and then run:
$ ecryptfs-
:-Dustin