this post was submitted on 31 May 2024
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Hello,

Suppose you have a PC with 2 separate SSDs. One is an install of Windows 11. The other is an install of a Linux distro, encrypted at time of installation (for example, with LUKS). Obviously you would only boot into one or the other at a time.

So a dual-boot, but each boot portion is on its own SSD (not sure if this matters, but its a relevant scenario).

Can the Windows 11 portion somehow get through the Linux encryption and access / read data on the Linux portion?

Sorry if this is a stupid or obvious question.

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[โ€“] glouriousgouda@lemmy.myserv.one 8 points 5 months ago (4 children)

Sure you can. Here's one way that looks similar how I do it using wsl. This assumes you're on an EXT4 file system.

https://superuser.com/questions/584883/how-can-i-access-volumes-encrypted-with-luks-dm-crypt-from-windows#936284

There's quite a few options for this but this should at least get you closer to your goal.

I use btrfs on my Linux installs now and there's a windows driver that is phenomenal for that here.

https://github.com/maharmstone/btrfs

Good luck!

Heck just read the updates on that post linked above and it looks like someone wrote something just for this. My bad for missing it earlier. It is linked in the 4th-ish answer down.

https://github.com/AlexSSD7/linsk

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