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Wed, Nov 19, 2025 3:35 pm

Changing the password for a LUKS encrypted partition on Linux

If you need to change the password, i.e., the encryption key, used to encrypt a partition with Linux Unified Key Setup (LUKS) on a Linux system, you can open a terminal window and use the command sudo cryptsetup luksChangeKey /dev/sdaX where sdaX is the relevant partition. E.g., I needed to change the password on a Ubuntu Linux system where the user's data was stored on /dev/sda3.

jim@Firefly:~$ sudo cryptsetup luksChangeKey /dev/sda3
Enter passphrase to be changed:
Enter new passphrase:
Verify passphrase:
jim@Firefly:~$

If you don't know the designation for the encrypted partition, e.g., if I didn't know it was sda3, I could use the lsblk command (it is part of the util-linux package) to determine it. E.g.:

jim@Firefly:~$ lsblk
NAME                      MAJ:MIN RM   SIZE RO TYPE  MOUNTPOINTS
loop0                       7:0    0     4K  1 loop  /snap/bare/5
loop1                       7:1    0  73.9M  1 loop  /snap/core22/2133
loop2                       7:2    0  11.8M  1 loop  /snap/desktop-security-center/59
loop3                       7:3    0 247.6M  1 loop  /snap/firefox/6966
loop4                       7:4    0  11.1M  1 loop  /snap/firmware-updater/167
loop5                       7:5    0  91.7M  1 loop  /snap/gtk-common-themes/1535
loop6                       7:6    0  14.4M  1 loop  /snap/prompting-client/104
loop7                       7:7    0 516.2M  1 loop  /snap/gnome-42-2204/226
loop8                       7:8    0  17.5M  1 loop  /snap/snap-store/1300
loop9                       7:9    0  50.8M  1 loop  /snap/snapd/25202
loop10                      7:10   0   576K  1 loop  /snap/snapd-desktop-integration/315
loop11                      7:11   0 226.2M  1 loop  /snap/thunderbird/812
sda                         8:0    0 953.9G  0 disk
├─sda1                      8:1    0     1G  0 part  /boot/efi
├─sda2                      8:2    0     2G  0 part  /boot
└─sda3                      8:3    0 950.8G  0 part
  └─dm_crypt-0            252:0    0 950.8G  0 crypt
    └─ubuntu--vg-ubuntu--lv
                          252:1    0 950.8G  0 lvm   /
jim@Firefly:~$

From the above output, I can see that the disk drive in the system is designated as sda and the encrypted partition is sda3 (it is listed as type "crypt").

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