How To Install dislocker on Fedora 34

dislocker is Utility to access BitLocker encrypted volumes

Introduction

In this tutorial we learn how to install dislocker on Fedora 34.

What is dislocker

Dislocker has been designed to read BitLocker encrypted partitions (“drives”) under a Linux system. The driver has the capability to read/write partitions encrypted using Microsoft Windows Vista, 7, 8, 8.1 and 10 (AES-CBC, AES-XTS, 128 or 256 bits, with or without the Elephant diffuser, encrypted partitions); BitLocker-To-Go encrypted partitions (USB/FAT32 partitions). The file name where the BitLocker encrypted partition will be decrypted needs to be given. This may take a long time, depending on the size of the encrypted partition. But afterward, once the partition is decrypted, the access to the NTFS partition will be faster than with FUSE. Another thing to think about is the size of the disk (same size as the volume that is tried to be decrypted). Nevertheless, once the partition is decrypted, the file can be mounted as any NTFS partition and won’t have any link to the original BitLocker partition.

We can use yum or dnf to install dislocker on Fedora 34. In this tutorial we discuss both methods but you only need to choose one of method to install dislocker.

Install dislocker on Fedora 34 Using dnf

Update yum database with dnf using the following command.

sudo dnf makecache --refresh

The output should look something like this:

Fedora 34 - x86_64                               20 kB/s | 6.6 kB     00:00
Fedora 34 openh264 (From Cisco) - x86_64        1.4 kB/s | 989  B     00:00
Fedora Modular 34 - x86_64                       68 kB/s | 6.5 kB     00:00
Fedora 34 - x86_64 - Updates                    3.5 kB/s | 6.2 kB     00:01
Fedora Modular 34 - x86_64 - Updates             17 kB/s | 5.9 kB     00:00
Metadata cache created.

After updating yum database, We can install dislocker using dnf by running the following command:

sudo dnf -y install dislocker

Install dislocker on Fedora 34 Using yum

Update yum database with yum using the following command.

sudo yum makecache --refresh

The output should look something like this:

Fedora 34 - x86_64                               20 kB/s | 6.6 kB     00:00
Fedora 34 openh264 (From Cisco) - x86_64        1.4 kB/s | 989  B     00:00
Fedora Modular 34 - x86_64                       68 kB/s | 6.5 kB     00:00
Fedora 34 - x86_64 - Updates                    3.5 kB/s | 6.2 kB     00:01
Fedora Modular 34 - x86_64 - Updates             17 kB/s | 5.9 kB     00:00
Metadata cache created.

After updating yum database, We can install dislocker using yum by running the following command:

sudo yum -y install dislocker

How To Uninstall dislocker on Fedora 34

To uninstall only the dislocker package we can use the following command:

sudo dnf remove dislocker

dislocker Package Contents on Fedora 34

/usr/bin/dislocker-bek
/usr/bin/dislocker-file
/usr/bin/dislocker-find
/usr/bin/dislocker-metadata
/usr/lib/.build-id
/usr/lib/.build-id/32
/usr/lib/.build-id/32/fbd957b5789ef5cbbc39f1f26741c580d88c94
/usr/lib/.build-id/90
/usr/lib/.build-id/90/5fcba5c298b0eae8811805e681bd983b51a119
/usr/lib/.build-id/d7
/usr/lib/.build-id/d7/cb4df3ebb061a33d306217860e59d02d7ef9ae
/usr/share/man/man1/dislocker-file.1.gz
/usr/share/man/man1/dislocker-find.1.gz

References

Summary

In this tutorial we learn how to install dislocker on Fedora 34 using yum and dnf.