I had a Host with Ubuntu 12.10 installed, and the entire harddrive was encrypted (with LUKS it appears), I remember the passphrase, but I have trouble to "open it".
I am now on a beta version of Ubuntu 14.04, installed on a new harddrive. the old hard-drive is also still connected. the new drive is sda and the old drive is sdb
when I try to open the drive in "files" it ask for the passphrase, and when entered says that it does not find a filesystem.
I googled it and found this:
sudo cryptsetup luksOpen /dev/sdb5 myopen
and
sudo mount /mnt/open
with a fstab like this
/dev/mapper/myopen /mnt/open ext4 defaults,noauto 0 1
but I get this error:
mount: wrong fs type, bad option, bad superblock on /dev/mapper/myopen,
missing codepage or helper program, or other error
In some cases useful info is found in syslog - try
dmesg | tail or so
After some trial and error, and some more google, I came accross the solution. I think others might enjoy this, so I answer myself:
it turns out that the drive is a LVM (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logical_Volume_Manager_(Linux))
so, to fix this I do the following:
install LVM (this is for ubuntu)
scan the disks for volume groups
change volume group to the one I just found above, in my case ubuntu-vg
find out about my locical volumes:
create a place to mount it:
then use the above information to mount the volume
then you can go to the open disk like this
in my case I just want to recover some important files, then reformat. so case closed