Okay, I think I've found the source of this problem.  Looks like 'keyctl
show' is broken, which causes the ecryptfs-setup-private internal
testing to fail:

f...@x200:~$ ecryptfs-setup-private 
Enter your login passphrase: 
ERROR: Your login passphrase is incorrect
Enter your login passphrase: 
Enter your mount passphrase [leave blank to generate one]: 

************************************************************************
YOU SHOULD RECORD THIS MOUNT PASSPHRASE AND STORE IT IN A SAFE LOCATION:
THIS WILL BE REQUIRED IF YOU NEED TO RECOVER YOUR DATA AT A LATER TIME.
************************************************************************


Done configuring.

Testing mount/write/umount/read...
keyctl_unlink: Invalid argument
ERROR: Could not unmount private ecryptfs directory (2)
f...@x200:~$ keyctl show
Session Keyring
       -3 --alswrv   1001  1001  keyring: _ses
f...@x200:~$ keyctl list @u
2 keys in keyring:
873330432: --alswrv  1001  1001 user: 0da32a6c73733d7d
189980458: --alswrv  1001  1001 user: b6d731657a532554


** Changed in: ecryptfs-utils (Ubuntu)
       Status: Confirmed => In Progress

** Changed in: ecryptfs-utils (Ubuntu)
       Status: In Progress => Fix Committed

-- 
No sudo access after installing of Ubuntu amd64 from July 2 daily.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/395082
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