cryptsetup-luksChangeKey(8) — Linux manual page

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | REPORTING BUGS | SEE ALSO | CRYPTSETUP

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NAME         top

       cryptsetup-luksChangeKey - change an existing passphrase

SYNOPSIS         top

       cryptsetup luksChangeKey [<options>] <device> [<new key file>]

DESCRIPTION         top

       Changes an existing passphrase. The passphrase to be changed must
       be supplied interactively or via --key-file. The new passphrase
       can be supplied interactively or in a file given as the positional
       argument.

       If a keyslot is specified (via --key-slot), the passphrase for
       that keyslot must be given, and the new passphrase will overwrite
       the specified keyslot. If no keyslot is specified and there is
       still a free keyslot, then the new passphrase will be put into a
       free keyslot before the keyslot containing the old passphrase is
       purged. If there is no free keyslot, then the keyslot with the old
       passphrase is overwritten directly.

       WARNING: If a keyslot is overwritten, a media failure during this
       operation can cause the overwrite to fail after the old passphrase
       has been wiped, making the LUKS container inaccessible. LUKS2
       mitigates that by never overwriting the existing keyslot area as
       long as there’s a free space in the keyslots area at least for one
       more LUKS2 keyslot.

       If you need to use both luksChangeKey and reencrypt (e.g., to
       recover from a key leak), you need to use them in that order to
       avoid leaking the new volume key.

       Some parameters are effective only if used with the LUKS2 format
       that supports per-keyslot parameters. For LUKS1, the PBKDF type
       and hash algorithm are always the same for all keyslots.

       <options> can be [--key-file, --keyfile-offset, --keyfile-size,
       --new-keyfile-offset, --iter-time, --pbkdf,
       --pbkdf-force-iterations, --pbkdf-memory, --pbkdf-parallel,
       --new-keyfile-size, --key-slot, --force-password, --hash,
       --header, --disable-locks, --type, --keyslot-cipher,
       --keyslot-key-size, --timeout, --verify-passphrase].

OPTIONS         top

       --batch-mode, -q
           Suppresses all confirmation questions. Use with care!

           If the --verify-passphrase option is not specified, this
           option also switches off the passphrase verification.

       --debug or --debug-json
           Run in debug mode with full diagnostic logs. Debug output
           lines are always prefixed by #.

           If --debug-json is used, additional LUKS2 JSON data structures
           are printed.

       --disable-locks
           Disable lock protection for metadata on disk. This option is
           valid only for LUKS2 and is ignored for other formats.

           WARNING: Do not use this option unless you run cryptsetup in a
           restricted environment where locking is impossible to perform
           (where /run directory cannot be used).

       --force-password
           Do not use password quality checking for new LUKS passwords.

           This option is ignored if cryptsetup is built without password
           quality checking support.

           For more info about password quality check, see the manual
           page for pwquality.conf(5) and passwdqc.conf(5).

       --hash, -h <hash-spec>
           The specified hash is used for PBKDF2 and the AF splitter.

       --header <device or file storing the LUKS header>
           Use a detached (separated) metadata device or file where the
           LUKS header is stored. This option allows one to store the
           ciphertext and LUKS header on different devices.

           For commands that change the LUKS header (e.g., luksAddKey),
           specify the device or file with the LUKS header directly as
           the LUKS device.

       --help, -?
           Show help text and default parameters.

       --iter-time, -i <number of milliseconds>
           The number of milliseconds to spend with PBKDF passphrase
           processing. Specifying 0 as a parameter selects the
           compiled-in default.

       --key-file, -d file
           Read the passphrase from the file.

           If the name given is "-", then the passphrase will be read
           from stdin. In this case, reading will not stop at newline
           characters.

           The passphrase supplied via --key-file is always the
           passphrase for the existing keyslot requested by the command.

           If you want to set a new passphrase via a key file, you have
           to use a positional argument.

           See section NOTES ON PASSPHRASE PROCESSING in cryptsetup(8)
           for more information.

       --keyfile-offset value
           Skip value bytes at the beginning of the key file.

       --keyfile-size, -l value
           Read a maximum of value bytes from the key file. The default
           is to read the whole file up to the compiled-in maximum that
           can be queried with --help. Supplying more data than the
           compiled-in maximum aborts the operation.

           This option is useful to cut trailing newlines, for example.
           If --keyfile-offset is also given, the size count starts after
           the offset.

       --key-slot, -S <0-N>
           For LUKS operations that add key material, this option allows
           you to specify which keyslot is selected for the new key.

           The maximum number of keyslots depends on the LUKS version.
           LUKS1 can have up to 8 keyslots. LUKS2 can have up to 32
           keyslots based on keyslot area size and key size, but a valid
           keyslot ID can always be between 0 and 31 for LUKS2.

       --keyslot-cipher <cipher-spec>
           This option can be used to set specific cipher encryption for
           the LUKS2 keyslot area.

       --keyslot-key-size <bits>
           This option can be used to set a specific key size for the
           LUKS2 keyslot area.

       --new-keyfile-offset value
           Skip value bytes at the start when adding a new passphrase
           from the key file.

       --new-keyfile-size value
           Read a maximum of value bytes when adding a new passphrase
           from the key file. The default is to read the whole file up to
           the compiled-in maximum length that can be queried with
           --help. Supplying more than the compiled-in maximum aborts the
           operation. When --new-keyfile-offset is also given, reading
           starts after the offset.

       --pbkdf <PBKDF spec>
           Set Password-Based Key Derivation Function (PBKDF) algorithm
           for LUKS keyslot. The PBKDF can be: pbkdf2 (for PBKDF2
           according to RFC2898), argon2i for Argon2i or argon2id for
           Argon2id (see Argon2
           <https://www.cryptolux.org/index.php/Argon2> for more info).

           For LUKS1, only PBKDF2 is accepted (no need to use this
           option). The default PBKDF for LUKS2 is set during compilation
           time and is available in the cryptsetup --help output.

           A PBKDF is used for increasing the dictionary and brute-force
           attack cost for keyslot passwords. The parameters can be time,
           memory and parallel cost.

           For PBKDF2, only the time cost (number of iterations) applies.
           For Argon2i/id, there is also memory cost (memory required
           during the process of key derivation) and parallel cost
           (number of threads that run in parallel during the key
           derivation.

           Note that increasing memory cost also increases time, so the
           final parameter values are measured by a benchmark. The
           benchmark tries to find iteration time (--iter-time) with
           required memory cost --pbkdf-memory. If it is not possible,
           the memory cost is decreased as well. The parallel cost
           --pbkdf-parallel is constant and is checked against available
           CPU cores.

           You can see all PBKDF parameters for a particular LUKS2
           keyslot with the cryptsetup-luksDump(8) command.

           If you do not want to use benchmark and want to specify all
           parameters directly, use --pbkdf-force-iterations with
           --pbkdf-memory and --pbkdf-parallel. This will override the
           values without benchmarking. Note it can cause extremely long
           unlocking time or cause out-of-memory conditions with
           unconditional process termination. Use only in specific cases,
           for example, if you know that the formatted device will be
           used on some small embedded system.

           MINIMAL AND MAXIMAL PBKDF COSTS: For PBKDF2, the minimum
           iteration count is 1000 and the maximum is 4294967295 (maximum
           for 32-bit unsigned integer). Memory and parallel costs are
           not supported for PBKDF2. For Argon2i and Argon2id, the
           minimum iteration count (CPU cost) is 4, and the maximum is
           4294967295 (maximum for a 32-bit unsigned integer). Minimum
           memory cost is 32 KiB and maximum is 4 GiB. If the memory cost
           parameter is benchmarked (not specified by a parameter), it is
           always in the range from 64 MiB to 1 GiB. Memory cost above
           1GiB (up to the 4GiB maximum) can be setup only by the
           --pbkdf-memory parameter. The parallel cost minimum is 1 and
           maximum 4 (if enough CPU cores are available, otherwise it is
           decreased by the available CPU cores).

           WARNING: Increasing PBKDF computational costs above the
           mentioned limits provides negligible additional security
           improvement. While elevated costs significantly increase
           brute-force overhead, they offer negligible protection against
           dictionary attacks. The marginal cost increase for processing
           an entire dictionary remains fundamentally insufficient.

           The hardcoded PBKDF limits represent engineered trade-offs
           between cryptographic security and operational usability. LUKS
           maintains portability and must be used within a reasonable
           time on resource-constrained systems.

           Cryptsetup deliberately restricts maximum memory cost (4 GiB)
           and parallel cost (4) parameters due to architectural
           limitations (like embedded and legacy systems).

           PBKDF memory cost mandates actual physical RAM allocation with
           intensive write operations that must remain in physical RAM.
           Any swap usage results in unacceptable performance
           degradation. Memory management often overcommits allocations
           beyond available physical memory, expecting most allocated
           memory to remain unused. In such situations, as PBKDF always
           uses all allocated memory, it frequently causes out-of-memory
           failures that abort cryptsetup operations.

       --pbkdf-force-iterations number
           Avoid the PBKDF benchmark and set the time cost (iterations)
           directly. It can be used only for a LUKS/LUKS2 device. See
           --pbkdf option for more info.

       --pbkdf-memory number
           Set the memory cost for PBKDF (for Argon2i/id, the number
           represents kilobytes). Note that it is the maximal value;
           PBKDF benchmark or available physical memory can decrease it.
           This option is not available for PBKDF2.

       --pbkdf-parallel number
           Set the parallel cost for PBKDF (number of threads, up to 4).
           Note that it is the maximal value; it is decreased
           automatically if the CPU online count is lower. This option is
           not available for PBKDF2.

       --timeout, -t seconds
           The number of seconds to wait before a timeout on passphrase
           input via terminal. It is relevant every time a passphrase is
           asked. It has no effect if used in conjunction with
           --key-file.

           This option is useful when the system should not stall if the
           user does not input a passphrase, e.g., during boot. The
           default is a value of 0 seconds, which means to wait forever.

       --type type
           Specifies required device type, for more info, read the BASIC
           ACTIONS section in cryptsetup(8).

       --usage
           Show short option help.

       --verify-passphrase, -y
           When interactively asking for a passphrase, ask for it twice
           and complain if both inputs do not match. Ignored on input
           from file or stdin.

       --version, -V
           Show the program version.

REPORTING BUGS         top

       Report bugs at cryptsetup mailing list
       <cryptsetup@lists.linux.dev> or in Issues project section
       <https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup/-/issues/new>.

       Please attach the output of the failed command with --debug option
       added.

SEE ALSO         top

       Cryptsetup FAQ
       <https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup/wikis/FrequentlyAskedQuestions>

       cryptsetup(8), integritysetup(8) and veritysetup(8)

CRYPTSETUP         top

       Part of cryptsetup project
       <https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup/>. This page is part of
       the Cryptsetup ((open-source disk encryption)) project.
       Information about the project can be found at 
       ⟨https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup⟩. If you have a bug
       report for this manual page, send it to dm-crypt@saout.de. This
       page was obtained from the project's upstream Git repository
       ⟨https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup.git⟩ on 2025-08-11. (At
       that time, the date of the most recent commit that was found in
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       (which is not part of the original manual page), send a mail to
       man-pages@man7.org

cryptsetup 2.8.1-git            2025-08-09     CRYPTSETUP...SCHANGEKEY(8)

Pages that refer to this page: cryptsetup(8)