| ▲ | kubik369 6 days ago | |
Uuh, I am not sure. I believe that he was talking about having full disk encryption which means that he needs to input the password to unlock the boot partition. | ||
| ▲ | drnick1 6 days ago | parent [-] | |
You can use TPM2 to automatically unlock the root partition and not have to input a password manually at boot. This is how my laptop (running Arch, btw) is setup. Whether or not disk encryption is necessary for a system that is physically secure at home or elsewhere is debatable however. But a laptop can be easily left somewhere and disk encryption seems necessary unless it never leaves home. | ||