Linux has a richer set of security features available than OpenBSD, in some areas. One is the mandatory access control of SELinux, used extensively in Android (probably the most widely-used Linux distribution of them…
It protects against data being directly copied off the disk, or modified, by anyone who may have physical access to the machine, but who lacks credentials to log in.
Is there any support in OpenBSD, or indeed any Unix-based desktop/server operating system, for storing key material in a TPM? Windows has this, and it permits booting without a passphrase being entered, but the disk…
Linux has a richer set of security features available than OpenBSD, in some areas. One is the mandatory access control of SELinux, used extensively in Android (probably the most widely-used Linux distribution of them…
It protects against data being directly copied off the disk, or modified, by anyone who may have physical access to the machine, but who lacks credentials to log in.
Is there any support in OpenBSD, or indeed any Unix-based desktop/server operating system, for storing key material in a TPM? Windows has this, and it permits booting without a passphrase being entered, but the disk…