I’ve made the effort to secure mine and am aware of how the trusted protection module works with keys, Fedora’s Anaconda system, the shim, etc. I’ve seen where some here have mentioned they do not care or enable secure boot. Out of open minded curiosity for questioning my biases, I would like to know if there is anything I’ve overlooked or never heard of. Are you hashing and reflashing with a CH341/Rπ/etc, or is there some other strategy like super serious network isolation?

  • @[email protected]
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    -223 days ago

    You have to turn off Secure Boot to enable hibernation, and I value hibernation enough to do so.

      • @[email protected]
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        422 days ago

        Not mutually exclusive, but it’s highly probable that if you’re running a mainstream distro, the default kernel is in lockdown mode, preventing hibernation while secure boot is enabled.

        • @wildbus8979
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          22 days ago

          It’s a kernel build config. Debian for one ships with support disabled due to security concerns.

          • @[email protected]
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            622 days ago

            So I’d have to rebuild the kernel, not just provide a kernel argument? That’s definitely not a step I’m ready for.

    • @[email protected]
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      1022 days ago

      I believe if your swap partition is on an encrypted LVM, you can still hibernate with kernel lockdown enabled.